Apple announced sweeping price increases across its hardware portfolio on Thursday, triggering a sharp investor selloff. AAPL shares plummeted roughly 6%, declining $18.78 to close near $274.30, wiping out almost $200 billion in market capitalization during a single trading session.
Apple Inc., AAPL
The pricing adjustments affect Macs, iPads, HomePods, Apple TV devices, and the Vision Pro mixed-reality headset. The M5 MacBook Pro base model now commands $1,999, representing a $300 premium. Mac Studio experienced the steepest adjustment with a $1,300 price escalation. Most mainstream products saw increases between $100 and $300.
The underlying driver is a worldwide memory semiconductor shortage. Explosive AI data center construction has absorbed enormous quantities of DRAM and NAND flash memory, creating severe supply constraints for consumer electronics manufacturers.
DRAM contract pricing surged approximately 90% during Q1 2026, followed by another 60% escalation in Q2, per TrendForce data. NAND flash memory has tracked a comparable trajectory. Memory and storage component expenses now stand at roughly quadruple their levels from three quarters prior.
While Apple shares were declining, Micron experienced a dramatic rally. The memory chip manufacturer reported all-time high revenue and an unprecedented 84.9% gross margin, exceeding analyst forecasts. Micron’s market capitalization expanded by more than $100 billion on Thursday.
This stark divergence illustrates the current market reality. The memory supply crisis has transferred pricing leverage decisively to chip manufacturers. For companies purchasing these components — including Apple — near-term relief appears unlikely. Micron projects its gross margin will expand further to approximately 86% in the coming quarter.
Apple’s Q2 2026 financial results, for the period ending March 28, demonstrated revenue growth of 17% year-over-year reaching $111.2 billion, with EPS advancing 22%. Gross margin reached 49.3%. However, these figures largely preceded the most severe phase of the memory price escalation.
Thursday’s pricing revisions notably excluded the iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods product lines. This reprieve may prove temporary. Next-generation iPhone models are anticipated this fall, and research firm Counterpoint projects the memory supply crisis could increase component costs by approximately $200 per device. Higher-capacity storage configurations face the most significant impact.
The iPhone generates approximately half of Apple’s consolidated revenue, making any pricing strategy for this product line substantially more consequential than Mac or iPad adjustments.
Apple currently trades at roughly 33 times earnings at the $275 price level. This valuation premium reflects investor confidence in the company’s margin structure and services revenue expansion — the services division achieved record revenue of approximately $31 billion in Q2. Margin compression diminishes the company’s margin for error.
The stock has retreated into its previous consolidation range, with the $275–$280 area emerging as a critical technical support zone for investors to monitor.
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