Foxconn’s main iPhone assembly plant has cut around 50,000 contract jobs since October, says a new report.

As iPhone demand is seasonal, ramping up when new models are released and through the holiday season, and then reducing later, the company relies on a large influx of temporary workers to meet the changing production requirements. But this time it is said to have cut many of those contract jobs months earlier than usual …

Nikkei reports that the move is in response to one of the most severe downturns in a decade, with other suppliers taking similar steps.

The report stresses that the number of Foxconn workers affected is no different to usual, but the timing is.

Pegatron, Apple’s second-biggest iPhone assembler, began canceling monthly labor contracts in November […] Other important iPhone suppliers have let workers go much earlier than usual as they struggle with slower-than-expected demand for Apple’s iconic product […]

One key component supplier based in Shenzhen had asked 4,000 workers to take an extended “vacation” from October to March, a person with knowledge of the situation said. “The company has not actively laid off those workers yet. It will decide whether or not to lay them off after March 1,” the source said.

Foxconn is said to be taking a number of additional cost-reduction steps in response, including slashing around 50% of its back office and managerial posts. The company recently merged its MacBook and iPad assembly operations with another division working for Dell and Acer, in order to benefit from reduced support headcount.

Foxconn carries out assembly work for a number of global tech brands, but Apple is its biggest customer.

The company recently announced that its December revenue fell by 8% due to reduced demand in the ‘consumer product category.’ While much of that will reflect reduced iPhone demand signalled by Apple slashing its holiday quarter guidance by between $5B and $9B, some of it may reflect Apple shifting more iPhone production to Pegatron.

Other Apple suppliers – including A-Series chipmaker TSMC – have been slashing their 2019 financial forecasts in response to an ‘extraordinary’ drop in Chinese demand for the iPhone.

Apple itself is reported to be planning hiring reductions, though not layoffs.

Photo: Thomas Lee/Bloomberg