Memory shortage shaking Apple to the core

Memory shortage shakes Apple to the core

Apple’s sharp share-price drop recently (June 2026) wasn’t the result of a single misstep, but a sudden collision between global supply‑chain pressure and investor expectations.

The company’s stock slid roughly 6% in one session – its steepest fall in more than a year – after Apple pushed through sweeping price increases across Macs, iPads, HomePods, Apple TV and even Vision Pro.

For a company that normally adjusts pricing with surgical caution, the breadth and scale of these rises jolted the market.

Unprecedented price surge

The trigger sits outside Cupertino. Memory‑chip prices have surged at a pace industry veterans describe as unprecedented, driven by AI data‑centre expansion that is consuming vast quantities of DRAM and NAND.

Apple’s suppliers have passed on extraordinary cost increases, and Apple, unusually, has chosen not to absorb them.

Some Mac configurations rose by hundreds of pounds; certain high‑end models jumped by more than a thousand. Investors interpreted this as a sign that Apple’s margins – already under scrutiny given its premium valuation – are being squeezed harder than expected.

Concerning

The concern is not simply higher prices, but what they imply. If Apple is forced to raise hardware prices now, analysts fear the same pressure could extend to the iPhone later this year.

That would test the limits of consumer tolerance at a time when upgrade cycles are already lengthening. The market’s reaction reflects a deeper anxiety: Apple’s pricing power is formidable, but not infinite.

A modest rebound followed the initial sell‑off, suggesting the drop may have been an overreaction. But prices for Apple products have increased whatever the markets tell us.

Even so, the episode underscores how sensitive Apple’s valuation is to any hint of margin compression in its hardware business.

The Great Memory Squeeze: Why the AI Boom Is Reshaping the Entire Hardware Industry

AI memory RAM shortage

A global shortage of DRAM is rippling through the technology sector, exposing a stark divide between the giants of consumer electronics and the smaller firms that rely on stable component pricing to survive.

What was once a cheap, predictable commodity has become the industry’s most volatile input, with prices rising several hundred per cent in under a year.

Feeding AI

The cause is simple: artificial intelligence systems now consume extraordinary volumes of high‑performance memory, and suppliers are prioritising the biggest buyers.

For companies like Apple, Microsoft and Samsung, the surge in memory costs is disruptive but manageable. These firms have the scale, cash reserves and supply‑chain leverage to secure allocation and pass higher costs on to consumers.

Apple has already raised prices across several product lines, while Microsoft has increased the price of its Xbox Series S and warned that memory costs may double again by 2027. Their margins will tighten, but their market positions remain secure.

Smaller manufacturers face a far harsher reality. Start‑ups, niche hardware makers and mid‑tier consumer electronics brands are being pushed to the back of the queue, forced to pay inflated prices or accept long delays. Some may simply be unable to ship products at all

Pressure.

Companies such as GoPro have already warned investors of existential pressure, and others in the audio, camera and budget‑device sectors are quietly preparing for cancelled launches or reduced specifications.

The stock market has responded unevenly. Memory suppliers like Micron and SK Hynix have seen extraordinary rallies, with margins soaring and investors betting on prolonged demand.

Meanwhile, smaller hardware firms are experiencing sharp declines as profitability evaporates.

Longer term, the memory crunch may accelerate consolidation. If supply remains tight, the industry could tilt even further towards a handful of dominant players, with innovation increasingly concentrated among those able to afford the rising cost of participation.