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Apple and Samsung are best equipped to handle rising memory chip costs that could drive down global smartphone shipments by 2.1% in 2026, according to new data from Counterpoint Research.

ifixit-ram.jpeg
Image credit: iFixit

In its latest projection for the smartphone market next year, the firm has downgraded its forecast from a previously expected 0.45% growth, citing a memory shortage that has pushed component costs up 10% to 25%. Chinese brands like Honor and Oppo are said to face greater pressure due to lower profit margins, particularly in the entry-level segment where costs have jumped 20% to 30% since early 2025.

"Apple and Samsung are best-positioned to weather the next few quarters," said Counterpoint senior analyst Yang Wang. "But it will be tough for others that don't have as much wiggle room to manage market share versus profit margins."

The memory crunch is being caused by chip manufacturers prioritizing advanced memory for AI servers over basic DRAM used in smartphones. The shift has already created supply constraints, and Counterpoint expects they will persist through 2026.

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Based on the data, Counterpoint says average smartphone prices could rise 6.9% globally next year as manufacturers pass costs to consumers or push buyers toward premium models. Some brands may downgrade other specs like cameras or ship devices with less memory to offset the impact, but ultimately Apple's supply chain clout and vast cash reserves are expected to shield it from these more extreme compromises. Analysts expect Apple to absorb higher DRAM costs in the short term without immediately adjusting retail prices.

Article Link: Apple Best Positioned to Weather DRAM Price Surge, Says Counterpoint
 
Apple already charges a premium for RAM (and storage), hopefully this is true and they don't raise prices for it even more.
I am not that confident. Was willing to wait another 6 months for the $1.4k 2026 Mac mini M5 Pro 24GB 512GB to drive my the 2026 ASUS 32" 6K display bought last month but have decided to instead get the 9 month old $1.7k 2025 Mac Studio M4 Max 36GB 512GB instead.

Currently using the 32" 6K with my 2019 MBP 16" Core i7 16GB 512GB but with my currency weakening and likely price hike... unwilling to pay a potential extra 20% because of AI datacenter boom. It could last for up to the next 10 years if we are unlucky or be as short as 3 years.

Now some may point out to memory & storage contracts that allows Apple & other trillion dollar companies fixed pricing for certain volumes for certain timeframes.

It is true that this is an advantage of any forward thinking Supply Chain-1st companies with bottomless pits of cash located strategically around the world.

What many are unaware is that AI datacenter-driven RAM & SSD price hikes started pre-2024 but we fully felt the brunt within the last 3 months.

With that in mind these spare parts purchasing contracts do expire. Will it expire before AI data centers be done with or before SSD & RAM fabs planned today or built now have been completed to normalize supply?

If we were to look at the 2011 Thailand floods that impacted HDD & camera makers the pricing of HDDs levelled off and not go down further. I expect something similar to happen with RAM & SSD.
 
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Reactions: platinumaqua
Well Apple already charge a crazy amount of money for ram upgrades when buying a Mac lets hope they dont get greedy and put the prices up to keep their huge margin
Apple shouldn't need to. It will have ordered from its suppliers in sufficient quantities, even allowing for growth, months ahead. If the AI bubble doesn't burst soon, then towards the end of next year, Apple may be in the same boat as everyone else.
 
  • Disagree
Reactions: rezwits
RAM makers are chasing profit, same as everyone else. AI is taking as much as the market can offer so extra capacity, even if possible, would be wasted on the low margin consumer market

AI is associated with most of the Economic growth in the U.S. in the last year. If the AU thing fails it could nose dive the economy. So every one is trying to cash it in whole they can. Main question is if AI is a bubble or a new market. There will be downward corrections in coming years but how massive will they be?
 
The RAM price situations are weird. Just make more RAM.

RAM producers, and a lot of the market, seem pretty sure the AI demand for RAM is going to collapse soon(ish), so they don't want to increase production just for the bottom to fall out of the market. In the meantime, RAM producers are making a ton of money.

If you can, just wait it out.

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I really hope Apple is well prepared at least for 2026, because I’m planning to buy an M5 Mac mini with 24 or 32GB of RAM, and I wouldn’t like the price to skyrocket…

And no, I’m not buying an M4 now after knowing how much powerful the M5 is in terms of GPU and machine learning.
 
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Forgive my ignorance, but shouldn’t Macs be completely unaffected by this, as the RAM is on the CPU die and not a DRAM chip?
Theoretically yes, they shouldn’t, at least the M5 powered ones, because the production of the M5 chips started months ago and they probably have most of the M5 stock already. However… Apple might charge even more for the RAM upgrades just because “RAM is now more expensive”, even if they weren’t impacted by it. Hopefully they will not raise their M5 Mac prices in 2026…
 
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Reactions: Parowdy and abowlby
Folks in your opinion if I'm eyeing a 128GB studio should I grab the M4 Max now or wait for the M5 Max?
Tough decision, honestly. I’m also waiting for an M5 Mac mini, and I’m pretty sure I’m not getting an M4 Mac mini… the M5 Max Studio will be quite amazing GPU wise, especially now that both the Pro and the Max M5 chips will come with a physically separated GPU. So if you really want a powerful GPU, just wait for the M5 Max Studio, yeah.
 
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Reactions: Parowdy
Well Apple already charge a crazy amount of money for ram upgrades when buying a Mac lets hope they dont get greedy and put the prices up to keep their huge margin
My theory is some dude found an oil lamp on a beach and told the Genie they wished for "Apple's RAM and SSD upgrade pricing to reflect actual market prices" To which the Genie said "Granted"
 
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