Anticipate Enhanced Features and Innovation with the Slightly Later Release of the iPhone 18
We’ve already heard a few times that Apple aims to postpone the debut of the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max this fall in favor of releasing the vanilla variant in the spring.
Another article from Asia now verifies this highly rare delay, which represents a substantial shift in Apple’s distribution method.
The iPhone Fold will be announced simultaneously with the scheduled fall release of the iPhone 18 Pro and 18 Pro Max.
This recent report indicates that the iPhone 18 won’t be ready until sometime in the first half of next year.
According to numerous persons who talked to Nikkei Asia, the measure “is intended to optimize resources and maximize revenue and profits from premium models amid surging prices for memory chips.” The next iPhone Air may launch with the iPhone 18 in 2027.
The same persons also believe that Apple must “minimize any potential production hiccups while mass-producing its first-ever foldable iPhone.”
Apple may be able to better manage supply chain resources with the change in release method. looks to be choosing margin pain above sticker shock.
The persistent demand for AI data centers is pushing up memory prices, but Apple is attempting to avoid hiking iPhone pricing at any costs, even if it means suffering a financial loss.
According to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, who has been researching Apple’s supply chain for a number of years, the tech giant will continue to adopt this method when it delivers the eagerly expected iPhone 18, at least for the time being.
It is obvious from the enormous coverage of the memory region during the previous few months that suppliers will continue to have significant influence.
Bellwethers in the sector, such as Micron, are developing enormous facilities to ease supply shortages, but the bulk of these projects are long-term, hinting that difficulties may occur in the future years at the very least.
It goes without saying that most hardware manufacturers are obliged to boost expenses, but Apple isn’t your normal hardware company.
The fact that Apple is substantially more robust than any other hardware manufacturer in history may prove to be its greatest benefit during the memory crisis.
Kuo outlines Apple’s plan in three important phases.
Take it easy now: Apple is opting to depend on margin pressure rather than user fury as memory prices continue to grow at an amazing pace.
Lockdown supply: Even if the shortages grow, Apple’s scale enables it to effectively get components that others cannot.
Play the long game: Services income is anticipated to backfill over time, so any short-term margin damage will be seen as transient.
However, given that iPhone memory costs are still being renegotiated quarterly rather than semiannually, Kuo points out that there is a considerable chance that these pressures won’t be managed.
He feels that “the 2Q26 QoQ increase looks similar to 1Q26” for the time being.
Because of this dynamic, Apple’s upcoming earnings announcement is particularly crucial as its observations on memory, supply, and cost constraints may have an influence outside of the corporation.
Tomorrow, Apple will disclose its Q1 2026 numbers.
Tomorrow, Apple will report its holiday-quarter profitability, reflecting a well-known mix of pressure areas and growth.
Demand for the costlier Pro and a resurgence in China are set to produce the iPhone’s highest yearly rise in more than four years.
Despite the legal impediments in Europe, services will still bear the brunt of the financial strain. Apple’s willingness to withstand margin pressure from the escalating cost of memory may be the larger wild card.
AI is looming over everything, with significant breakthroughs in Siri following Apple’s relationship with Google’s Gemini.
The numbers from Apple’s most recent quarter (Q4 2025)
• Overall net sales were $102.47 billion, up over 8% from the previous year (compared to $94.93 billion), beyond the approximately $102.1 billion expected by the consensus.
• EPS (diluted): $1.85, better than consensus forecasts of $1.77 and down from $0.97 a year earlier (a one-time tax charge influenced the prior-year result).
• Despite cost issues, the gross margin (in dollars) grew from $43.9 billion in the previous year’s quarter to $48.34 billion, suggesting substantial operational leverage.
• Net income: $27.46 billion, which nearly quadrupled from $14.74 billion the previous year, underscoring Apple’s scale and mix’s capacity to make profits.
The iPhone 17 series has been an oddity for Apple, and the experts agree.
Apple is predicted to sell close to 247 million iPhones in 2025, up 6% year over year, thanks of strong demand, notably in China, according to IDC estimates that Reuters published.
In the earnings preview I highlighted, Bank of America boosted its prediction of iPhone unit sales for the quarter to 85 million, predicting 17% year-over-year growth, suggesting that it expects Apple to have a good December quarter.
Furthermore, BofA’s services growth is 13% year over year, which is excellent given the fall of China’s App Store trends.
Source: Apple Inc.,
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