The surprising Apple product that was spared from today’s price hikes
Here’s some news you don’t see every day: On Thursday, Apple raised the prices on several of its best-selling products, including Mac desktops, Mac Books, i Pads, and Home Pod devices. (See below for a listing of those products.) Apple’s online store was down briefly Thursday morning, before coming back online with updated Mac computers priced up by 15% to 20%, and i Pads up 15% to 25%, per the Wall Street Journal. What’s clearly missing from the lineup of price hikes is the iPhone, Apple’s most successful and profitable product. Why the price hike? The company is citing skyrocketing global AI-driven memory and storage costs. The move comes a week after outgoing Apple CEO Tim Cook told the Wall Street Journal that planned “price increases are unavoidable” and the tech giant was “doing [its] best to mitigate the huge increases that are being passed to us,” and that although the company has been trying to shield customers, “the situation has become unsustainable.” “This is a hundred-year flood,” Cook explained to the Journal. “I’ve never seen anything like it in any area in over 40 years.” Microsoft also recently raised prices for its Surface laptops, and announced Thursday it was increasing the price of its Xbox game consoles starting August 1. Shares of Apple Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL) were down 5.2% in afternoon trading at the time of this writing. Shares of Microsoft Corporation (Nasdaq: MSFT) were down over 3%. Prices for memory and storage chips have quadrupled over the past three quarters as a result of the demand for AI servers, according to Counterpoint Research, CNBC reported. As the backlash continues over AI data centers, the hikes are just another example of how artificial intelligence is both powering and changing the way businesses operate, resulting in a growing cost for consumers. Here is a look at some of Apple’s price increases, reported by Mac Rumors: HomePod mini: $129, up from $99 (+$30) Home