Apple has reportedly lowered expectations for the standard iPhone 17 significantly – allegedly because rising component costs are impacting pricing. The report is unconfirmed, but it fits into a larger picture of storage shortages and announced price increases.
For months, one issue has plagued Apple's hardware business: rapidly rising memory prices, driven by the AI industry's enormous demand for data centers. Apple has long resisted this pressure, but has now openly admitted that price increases are unavoidable. Against this backdrop, a leaker from China is now reporting that Apple has significantly lowered its demand forecast for the current iPhone 17.
What the report claims
According to a post on Weibo, individual production lines for the standard iPhone 17 have reportedly switched this week from a previously planned 15 percent reduction to suspending around a third of their capacity. Additionally, Apple has internally "very seriously" assessed how much higher hardware costs could dampen demand.
The report itself does not resolve one key limitation: whether the adjustment applies to the entire iPhone 17 production or only to individual production lines remains unclear.
Why caution is advised
The information comes from a single, unconfirmed source and cannot be independently verified. Furthermore, production adjustments are normal business practice – they can indicate weaker demand, but also a reallocation of capacity, for example in favor of other models. A reduced production volume alone is therefore not proof of a drop in demand.
The basic logic is nevertheless plausible: If components become more expensive and Apple eventually passes on the additional costs, this can dampen demand for the current model – especially in a phase where the model change in autumn is approaching.
The cost pressure as the real issue
The core of the news lies less in the specific production detail than in the underlying cause. Prices for memory and flash chips have doubled within a year because a large portion of production is now concentrated in AI data centers. Apple has already reacted to this by raising prices for Macs, iPads, Apple TV, HomePods, and the Vision Pro – the iPhone has so far remained unaffected.
That's exactly what's likely to change: It's considered probable that Apple will use the unveiling of the iPhone 18 Pro models in September to raise the prices of the entire smartphone range.
The price outlook for the German market
For Germany, the outlook is particularly relevant. Currently, iPhones available here are exempt from the recent price increases. Anyone considering a purchase is therefore faced with a sobering calculation: the current iPhone 17 is likely to remain price-stable over the coming weeks, while the new generation expected in the fall could, based on current information, be more expensive than its predecessors. A possible, but unconfirmed, production cut will initially have little impact – it would only become noticeable if the availability of individual models were to change significantly.
An early indicator for Apple's price round
Whether Apple is actually reducing iPhone 17 production as significantly as described cannot be definitively stated at this time. However, the report reflects a tense situation in which the storage crisis is gradually impacting the company's best-selling product, starting with its high-end devices. The pricing of the new iPhones this fall will reveal how seriously Apple is taking the situation. (Image: Shutterstock / Azulblue)
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