By Stephen Nellis and Zaheer Kachwala
Feb 24 (Reuters) – Apple shareholders on Tuesday rejected a proposal to report on the company’s โdependence on China to manufacture most of its products.
The vote โcame after Apple has worked for nearly a decade to broaden its manufacturing base โto Vietnam, India and the U.S., where it said earlier that it would assemble some of its Mac mini computers to meet U.S. demand starting later this year.
During a question-and-answer session, Apple Chief Executive Tim โCook told shareholders that โ the company continues to plan for annual increases to its dividend but is prioritizing investments in technologies such โ as AI.
“We start by making all of the investments we believe are necessary to grow and manage our business, to innovate and to support โour roadmap โof products and services,” Cook โsaid. “That’s our highest priority. It’s what โdrives decisions around investments, and it’s what has the biggest impact when it comes to creating value for shareholders.”
Apple shareholders approved all four of the company’s proposals in addition to defeating the lone proposal from shareholders on the day’s ballot.
However, the portion of Apple investors voting against โthe company’s “say on pay” measure – a โmandatory vote for U.S. publicly traded companies โto approve executive compensation – crept up โslightly, with 8.6% of the more than 9 โbillion votes cast voting against it, โafter excluding abstentions and โbroker non-votes.
The previous year’s share of “against” votes for Apple’s pay proposal was 7.6%.
Cook’s pay stayed steady in 2025, coming in at $74.29 โmillion in 2025, versus $74.61 โmillion the previous year, according to the company’s proxy statement.
(Reporting โby Zaheer Kachwala and Stephen Nellis; Editing by Maju โSamuel, Lisa Shumaker and Stephen Coates)