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Microsoft raises Xbox prices in U.S. again amid tariff pressures

Microsoft announced on Friday that it will increase U.S. prices for its Xbox consoles for the second time this year, citing rising costs tied to tariffs and supply chain pressures. The hikes take effect October 3 and will see the Xbox Series S (1TB) priced at about $450, the Series X at $650, and the special edition 2TB Galaxy Black Series X close to $800.

The move follows a May round of price increases across the U.S., Europe, Australia, and the UK. Combined, the Xbox Series X has risen by $150 in six months, straining consumer budgets already squeezed by inflation.

Microsoft said the adjustments reflect “changes in the macroeconomic environment” rather than opportunism. Analysts agreed tariffs are the driving factor. “Hardware is being repriced to absorb new trade pressures,” said Joost van Dreunen, games professor at NYU Stern.

The hikes come as Sony raised U.S. prices on its PlayStation 5 consoles last month, with the PS5 Pro now retailing for $749.99. By contrast, Microsoft said it will not raise prices on controllers, headsets, or hardware in other global markets.

Industry forecasts had expected console sales to drive growth in 2025 alongside major game releases like Grand Theft Auto VI and Nintendo’s anticipated Switch 2. However, repeated price hikes and delayed titles may dampen momentum, clouding the near-term outlook for the video game sector.

India downplays Foxconn disruption from Chinese staff pullback

India’s government said Foxconn’s operations in the country remain largely unaffected despite the company recalling some of its Chinese engineers and technicians in recent months.

S. Krishnan, secretary at the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, told reporters in Taipei that Foxconn had managed the adjustment smoothly, relying on staff from Taiwan, the U.S., and local Indian workers to keep production stable. “Operations did not really suffer significantly,” he said.

Foxconn, Apple’s top iPhone assembler, has been expanding in India as part of efforts to diversify production away from China, particularly amid the risk of triple-digit U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods. The company already runs a plant near Chennai and is building another near Bengaluru.

Bloomberg previously reported that hundreds of Chinese employees were asked to return home, though the reasons remain unclear. Both Foxconn and Apple declined to comment.

The backdrop includes lingering India-China tensions since their 2020 border clash, which led New Delhi to tighten restrictions on Chinese firms and ban dozens of Chinese apps. Relations have warmed somewhat, with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi meeting President Xi Jinping last month in Beijing for the first time in seven years.

Krishnan emphasized that Foxconn is “committed to see through all the investments in India,” noting its expansion has been “very significant.”

U.S. Treasury’s Bessent to Meet China’s He Lifeng in Madrid on Trade, TikTok, and Money Laundering

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will meet Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng in Madrid next week for high-level talks covering trade, TikTok, and illicit finance, the Treasury said Thursday. The meetings, set for September 12–18, coincide with Bessent’s trip to Spain and Britain, ahead of his participation in President Donald Trump’s state visit to the UK (Sept. 17–19).

Focus Areas

  • Trade and Tariffs: The talks mark the fourth major in-person meeting between Bessent and He this year, as Washington and Beijing seek to uphold a fragile trade truce. A July meeting in Stockholm resulted in a 90-day tariff pause extension, approved by Trump until November 10. U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods remain steep at ~55%, with agriculture a sticking point. Washington accuses China of shifting farm imports to Brazil and Argentina, undercutting U.S. soybean farmers.

  • TikTok Deadline: ByteDance’s short-video platform faces a U.S. ban unless it is sold to U.S. ownership. Trump extended TikTok’s divestment deadline to September 17. Treasury confirmed the app will be discussed in Madrid, after not featuring in July’s talks.

  • Money Laundering Cooperation: Both sides will address illicit finance, which Washington links to Chinese banks allegedly enabling Russia’s access to military technologies amid the Ukraine war. Treasury retains the authority to sanction Chinese banks involved in such transfers, though it has not yet exercised it.

Broader Context

The Madrid meeting comes as the world’s two largest economies attempt to stabilize relations:

  • Rare earth exports from China to the U.S. were restored under the current truce.

  • However, agriculture and tariffs remain unresolved, with U.S. farmers facing a shrinking share of the Chinese market.

  • Trump has maintained high tariffs on Chinese goods, including those tied to fentanyl supply chain disputes.

The outcome of the Madrid talks remains uncertain, particularly on farm trade or tariff relief, but the inclusion of TikTok and money laundering suggests Washington is broadening the agenda beyond traditional trade disputes.