In the midst of the 2026 memory crisis dubbed #RAMageddon, DRAM and NAND prices have surged 80-95% quarter-over-quarter in early 2026, with projections of even steeper increases throughout the year. AI demand has redirected fab capacity, squeezing supply for consumer devices. PC and smartphone makers face a stark choice: absorb massive cost hikes that crush margins, cut specs (goodbye to generous RAM configs in budget models), or pass the pain on to buyers. The big question: Whose customers are more likely to absorb price increases without blinking — Apple’s… or those of Dell, Samsung, Lenovo, and Xiaomi? The answer is clear: Apple’s. The RAMageddon Reality Check Memory now accounts for a far larger share of device bills-of-materials — up to 23% or more in PCs. Analysts forecast PC prices rising 17% and smartphone prices 13% on average, with steeper jumps in entry-level and midrange segments. Lenovo, Dell, HP, and others have already signaled or implemented hikes of 15-20% or more. Budget PCs risk disappearing, and cheaper phones will either cost more or ship with less memory. OEMs with razor-thin margins and price-sensitive buyers — especially in the Android/PC space — have little room to maneuver. They must either eat the costs or risk losing volume in highly competitive, elastic markets. Apple’s Secret Weapon: Pricing Power Through Loyalty Apple operates in a different universe: • Sky-high retention rates: iPhone loyalty hovers around 92%, significantly above Samsung’s ~77%. Overall Apple ecosystem retention often exceeds 84% intent to repurchase. • Premium positioning: Apple customers expect (and accept) higher prices as the cost of premium design, high-quality operating systems, ecosystem advantages, status, and reliability. They’re far less sensitive to incremental increases. • Scale and supply chain mastery: Long-term contracts, massive purchasing power, and the ability to optimize designs (e.g., efficient silicon that may mitigate some memory needs) give Apple better cost control than smaller or more commoditized rivals. • Historical precedent: Apple has absorbed tariff and component costs before rather than immediately hiking U.S. prices, then selectively raised them when needed — with minimal backlash. In short, Apple fans treat price hikes as the price of staying in the walled garden. They upgrade to Pro models anyway and grumble less about $100–200 jumps. The Competition’s Much Tougher Road • Dell, Lenovo, HP: These PC peddlers serve enterprise, education, and value-conscious consumers. Many buyers are highly price-elastic and quick to switch or delay purchases. They’ve already warned of hikes and may need to reduce RAM configs in lower-end lines to stay competitive. • Samsung: The South Korean dishwasher maker is strong in midrange and premium, but faces more competition and lower loyalty than Apple. Flagships can absorb some pain, but volume-driven segments suffer. • Xiaomi and other Android players: Masters of affordable devices with thin margins. They’ll likely pass costs aggressively or cut features, alienating their core price-sensitive audience. Budget phones could see the biggest relative price jumps or spec downgrades. For these brands, raising prices risks volume drops in a market already facing shipment declines of 8-10% due to the memory crunch. Why This Matters for Investors, Buyers, and the Industry Apple’s resilience highlights the enduring value of brand moats in hardware. While competitors fight margin wars and potential market share erosion, Apple can maintain profitability, hold pricing steadier on flagships, and even gain relative ground as “good enough” alternatives become less attractive. Note on iPhone: Crucially, Apple has kept its primary cash cow exempt from these immediate retail price hikes for the time being, leaning on its massive supply chain leverage to shield its most critical product line. MacDailyNews Take: RAMageddon won’t last forever — new capacity should ease pressures eventually — but it’s exposing fundamental differences in business models. In a world of rising component costs, customer loyalty isn’t just nice-to-have marketing fluff. It’s a competitive superpower. Apple isn’t totally immune, but its customers are, by far, the least likely to blink. Support MacDailyNews at no extra cost to you by using this link to shop at Amazon. The post Apple customers won’t blink at RAMageddon price increases – but Dell, Lenovo, and Samsung’s will appeared first on MacDailyNews. You're currently a free subscriber to MacDailyNews. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription.
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Thursday, June 25, 2026
Apple customers won’t blink at RAMageddon price increases – but Dell, Lenovo, and Samsung’s will
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