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The good times for Apple fans are about to end

By Funded4Trading — June 22, 2026  ·  7 views
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The good times for Apple fans are about to end

Macworld

Consumer technology, for some reason, lends itself to passionate, heavily partisan disagreement. And one of the most common arguments among tech fans centers on Apple’s prices, and whether or not they’re fair.

Here at Macworld Towers (a home for open-minded skeptics rather than fanboys), we’ve generally held the belief that the Apple Tax is a myth. Apple products tend to be at the upper end of the price range for their category, but they deliver a quality experience that justifies this. In recent months, the company has even learned the meaning of the word bargain.

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That’s not to say Apple never pushes its luck, price-wise. High-priced wheel kits, dongles, and polishing cloths are all good examples of its fondness for the high-margin add-on, a strategy which can sometimes look rather cheap. But on the big-ticket items, at least in recent years, Apple consistently delivers solid value for money.

Apple’s ability to do this while simultaneously making historic amounts of cash quarter after quarter is dependent on a great deal of logistical know-how. It’s no surprise that the CEO who has guided the company to unprecedented financial success came from the operations side, not product development. Apple’s success is built on the power of its supply chain and on its ability to secure the very best deals with suppliers, both strengths of Tim Cook.

Those deals, and that operational efficiency, are how Apple has managed to resist the effects of the ongoing RAM crisis for so long. While other companies have pushed up prices or simply run out of stock, Cupertino has largely held steady. In some cases, it’s had to withdraw certain product configurations, but through it all, Apple has managed to avoid the price rises which customers feared.

Until now.

Last week, Tim Cook, that very same operational wizard, gave an interview in which he discussed the RAM crisis. He compared it to a “hundred-year flood” and said he hasn’t seen anything like it in 40 years. And if that sounds like the sort of thing someone says to prepare you for bad news… well, it was. Apple price rises, Cook admitted, are unavoidable.

Now that we know price hikes are inevitable, the big question is when. According to Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, the answer is soon, and maybe very soon. His rationale is twofold: firstly, Cook has no reason to talk about this gloomy subject unless it’s both imminent and unavoidable, and secondly, Apple can use its summer back-to-school sale to tie in with the changes and somewhat ease the blow for customers. Last year, the school sale started in the U.S. on June 17, so we could be looking at price hikes as early as this week. (In fact, one of my colleagues suspects that the sale may have been delayed so that Apple can update prices across the board.)

It’s worth mentioning that while Gurman has an excellent track record as a leaker, he doesn’t seem to be basing this prediction on inside sources. He just seems to be thinking out loud based on the rationale above. But the thinking makes sense.

When the CEO admits that a company is about to do something that customers won’t like, it can be very disruptive. Shareholders will be unhappy, share prices will probably fall, and there will be pushback, gloating, and unhelpful chin-stroking commentary online. You can decide where to categorize the article you’re currently reading.

In the short term, a warning of upcoming problems may actually boost sales, as customers rush to make their purchases before the Bad Thing happens. (This may indeed turn out to be a blessing in disguise for a certain third-party retailer planning a slew of discounts on Apple products for Prime Day this week.) But this won’t last for long, and it makes very little sense for Cook to reveal the bad news, then have it hang over the company for months on end. If it’s got to the point where Cook feels he has to spill the beans, realistically, Gurman is probably right that price hikes are coming very soon.

The consolation for Apple customers is that, just as we were spoiled in the early phase of the RAM crisis, we’re likely to do better than most when it comes to an end. Those preferential supplier contracts haven’t evaporated overnight. Suppliers simply can’t deliver components at the same prices, even to their most favored clients. But when stock levels recover, it’ll be Apple at the front of the line for business-as-usual pricing.

So yes, the good times are about to end for Apple fans. But hopefully it won’t be too bad, or last too long. And for those who are angry about the global component shortage, at least we have the consolation that the RAM is going where it’s really needed: vast, environmentally damaging AI datacenters. Three cheers for that.

Foundry

Welcome to our weekly Apple Breakfast column, which includes all the Apple news you missed last week in a handy bite-sized roundup. We call it Apple Breakfast because we think it goes great with a Monday morning cup of coffee or tea, but it’s cool if you want to give it a read during lunch or dinner hours too.

Apple’s silence about HomePod and Apple TV at WWDC spoke volumes.

Is this fall’s folding iPhone already a flop? Apple needs to learn some lessons from the Mac Pro and MacBook Neo.

Apple took Gemini out of Google, writes the Macalope. But can it take Google out of Gemini?

Felipe Esposito explains how macOS 27 is going to help Apple sell a ton more MacBook Neos.

The secret’s out! Jason Cross explains how the OS 27 betas give the game away about Apple’s folding phone.

Podcast of the week

Apple unveiled watchOS 27 at WWDC earlier this month, and there wasn’t much to see—at least that’s the impression you’re left with after the presentation. So, on the latest Macworld Podcast, we’re talking about what you’ll find in watchOS 27.

You can catch every episode of the Macworld Podcast on YouTubeSpotifySoundcloud, the Podcasts app, or our own site.

The rumor mill

iPhone Air 2 will reportedly fix its two biggest problems.

Enjoy free Siri AI for now, because you might need to pay for it soon.

A crucial AI upgrade may be coming to the iPhone 18.

Honestly, we’re getting tired of these unreleased Apple headphone teasers. Just launch the thing, already!

Video of the week

@macworld.com

Folding iPhone hints in the OS 27 updates #apple #iphone

♬ original sound – Macworld – Macworld

Apple’s folding iPhone is definitely coming soon. For more short videos, follow us on TikTok and Instagram.

Software updates, bugs, and problems

Mahmoud Itani’s 17 favorite iOS 27 features have nothing to do with Siri or AI.

Where are the missing iOS 27 features? Don’t worry, they’re still coming.

This upcoming change could end up breaking iCloud+ Hide My Email.

Here’s why your Mac blocked that Terminal command you pasted.

And with that, we’re done for this week’s Apple Breakfast. If you’d like to get regular roundups, sign up for our newsletters, including our new email from The Macalope–an irreverent, humorous take on the latest news and rumors from a half-man, half-mythical Mac beast. You can also follow us on Facebook, Threads, Bluesky, or X for discussion of breaking Apple news stories. See you next Monday, and stay Appley.

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