Apple's admission that memory cost increases are "unavoidable" has confirmed what memory-chip investors have been betting on for months — that even the world's most powerful consumer-electronics buyer can no longer hold the line.
Apple's admission that memory cost increases are "unavoidable" has confirmed what memory-chip investors have been betting on for months — that even the world's most powerful consumer-electronics buyer can no longer hold the line.

Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook told the Wall Street Journal that price increases across iPhone, Mac and iPad lines are "unavoidable," confirming that a historic memory-chip supply shortage has overwhelmed even the industry's most formidable negotiator.
"The world is being disrupted by AI and, at the same time, even before we start reaping the benefits of AI in our devices, we are already paying the bill," Francisco Jeronimo, an analyst at IDC, said.
SanDisk shares have surged more than 4,400% over the past 52 weeks, reaching $2,144.40 in Thursday trading, up 9.5% on the session. Micron Technology added 6.6% to $1,111.91, within striking distance of its own all-time high. The moves follow TrendForce data showing memory contract prices more than doubled in the first half of 2026, while Omdia projects global DRAM revenue will reach $372 billion this year, a 147% increase from 2025. Mizuho TMT specialist Jordan Klein estimates Apple's memory bill-of-materials cost has risen 80% to 90% since the end of 2025, pushing memory's share of total component cost to 25% to 30% from the mid-teens.
The disclosure marks a strategic reversal for Apple, whose chief financial officer flagged gross margin pressure in April but stopped short of quantifying the response. Cook declined to specify timing or which models would be affected, though analysts at BofA Securities expect increases across most Mac and iPad models, and IDC's Jeronimo projects a $100 bump on the $999 iPhone Pro and $1,199 iPhone Pro Max. For memory suppliers, Apple's capitulation functions as demand confirmation: if the buyer with the greatest scale in consumer electronics is publicly validating the pricing cycle, the structural advantage for Micron and SanDisk is unlikely to reverse soon.
The supply tightness traces directly to the AI buildout. Hyperscalers willing to offer large prepayments and enter long-term supply agreements have effectively crowded consumer-electronics buyers to the back of the DRAM and NAND queue. SK Hynix this week shipped samples of its 12-layer HBM4E chips to major customers, achieving 16 Gbps per-pin speeds — a reminder that leading-edge memory capacity continues flowing toward AI workloads rather than smartphones and laptops.
Gartner analyst Ranjit Atwal said the situation has exceeded Apple's ability to contain it. "Even Apple can't be safe, as much as they have all the expertise and long-term planning," Atwal said.
The key uncertainty hanging over Apple is demand elasticity. Klein acknowledged the core investor concern: higher prices could dampen unit growth, potentially offsetting any gross margin improvement. That calculus explains why Apple shares were little changed Thursday even as its memory suppliers surged. The iPhone 18 launch, expected in the fall, will provide the first hard test of whether consumers accept steeper pricing.
Some analysts see an opportunity for Apple to exploit the crisis. CCS Insight's Simon Bryant said Apple could use the memory shortage to squeeze market share from Android manufacturers that lack the scale to absorb or pass through cost increases. Apple has already been targeting budget-conscious consumers with the $599 MacBook Neo and $599 iPhone 16e, suggesting a two-tier strategy: absorb costs on entry-level devices while passing them through on premium models.
Cook told the Journal that Apple is willing to use its balance sheet to help increase supply, without providing details.
For Micron and SanDisk investors, the read-through is unambiguous. When a buyer of Apple's purchasing power gets pushed to the back of the supply line, the pricing leverage held by memory producers is unlikely to erode until new fabrication capacity comes online — a process that typically takes years. The next data point will come with contract pricing reports from TrendForce in the second half of 2026, which will either confirm or challenge the supercycle thesis that has driven SanDisk's extraordinary 4,800% rally.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.