By Stephen Nellis and Aditya Soni SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 6 (Reuters) – As the global memory chip shortage hits the smartphone market, a key question is echoing from Silicon Valley to Shenzhen: Will Apple raise prices, or sacrifice profit to gain new customers? The iPhone maker predicted strong sales growth last week, spurred by demand […]
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Pricier iPhones? Global memory chip crunch puts spotlight on Apple
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By Stephen Nellis and Aditya Soni
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 6 (Reuters) – As the global memory chip shortage hits the smartphone market, a key question is echoing from Silicon Valley to Shenzhen: Will Apple raise prices, or sacrifice profit to gain new customers?
The iPhone maker predicted strong sales growth last week, spurred by demand for its iPhone 17 models. CEO Tim Cook told investors he expected memory chip prices to increase sharply, but declined to answer analysts’ questions about whether Apple would raise prices in response.
“There are different levers that we can push, and who knows how successful they’ll be, but there’s just a range of options,” Cook said on the post-earnings call.
He did not address whether the shortage offered Apple a chance to increase its iPhone and Mac marketshare by maintaining prices at the expense of rivals who might have greater supply constraints.
Analysts assume that even amid a shortage, Apple has the clout with long-time suppliers such as Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and Micron to secure enough chips to make iPhones, unlike smaller phone makers.
A rapid build-out of AI infrastructure by tech firms such as Meta, Google and Microsoft has absorbed much of the supply of memory chips, lifting prices as manufacturers prioritize components for higher-margin data centers over consumer devices. Memory chips, or DRAM, are crucial to smartphones as they allow power-hungry applications to run smoothly.
APPLE’S DECISION WILL SHAPE INDUSTRY DECISIONS
Apple’s decision will likely have far-reaching consequences.
By some estimates, the company led the global smartphone market last year with a nearly 10% rise in shipments.
If it holds prices while smaller rivals raise theirs as analysts expect, iPhones would look more attractive. If Apple hikes prices, that would give competitors room to follow.
“This the biggest question for the industry now,” said Nabila Popal, a senior research director at IDC. “This is a two-sided sword because if Apple doesn’t raise prices, while it will help grow market share, it will also upset investors.”
The memory chip crunch faced by these competitors is in part expected to drive this year the first annual decline in the global smartphone market since 2023, according to IDC data.
Qualcomm, the world’s biggest designer of smartphone chips and a major supplier for high-end Android phones, fanned those fears on Wednesday with a forecast that missed Wall Street estimates due to a lack of memory chips at its handset customers.
The company’s finance chief, Akash Palkhiwala, said that key customers in China don’t have enough memory chips to build phones, despite robust demand from customers.
“We’ve seen several OEMs (device makers), especially in China, take actions to reduce their handset build plans and channel inventory,” Palkhiwala said.
On Qualcomm’s conference call, analysts again pointed to Apple. “It just seems like they are going to continue to get disproportionate share of the available DRAM,” said Ben Reitzes of Melius Research.
One veteran smartphone industry executive, who asked not to be named because was he was discussing sensitive supply matters, said Android phone makers are cautiously watching if Apple will increase prices.
“If Apple absorbs their whole memory increase and doesn’t change their phone price, then the Android phones become more expensive, and much volume they expect to have is going to be a question,” the executive said.
Some Apple investors think a price hike is coming.
“Apple generally holds priority over competitors … but is immune to market shortages,” said Dan Morgan, portfolio manager at Synovus Trust. “Apple will most likely continue to raise prices on newer iPhone model introductions,” Morgan added.
What Samsung does could also influence matters.
Analysts believe the South Korean company’s phone division may also be able to absorb memory price increases because it sources memory from another Samsung unit.
“We’re observing Apple and Samsung,” said Emarketer analyst Gadjo Sevilla. “If they raise prices, then they raise the ceiling and other manufacturers will likely need to adjust pricing.”
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco and Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

