Apple price hikes trigger selloff in Asian technology stocks

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Apple just did something it almost never does: raise prices across its product lineup. And the shockwave didn’t stop at Cupertino.

On June 25, Apple increased prices on its Mac, iPad, and home device lines, blaming soaring costs for memory and storage chips. The result was swift and brutal. Apple shares dropped between 4.8% and 6.1%, erasing roughly $250 billion in market capitalization. That makes it the company’s worst single-day performance since April 2025. By the next morning in Asia, the damage had spread across the Pacific.

The Asian tech rout

SoftBank led the carnage on June 26, plunging as much as 11%. Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and TSMC all posted notable declines as investors reassessed the outlook for component demand.

CEO Tim Cook said the rising memory costs had become “unsustainable,” framing the price increases as a necessary adjustment rather than a strategic choice.

The Micron exception

Not every chip stock got hammered. Micron, one of the world’s largest memory chip manufacturers, actually rallied during the same period on stronger-than-expected earnings. That creates an interesting, almost paradoxical dynamic.

Think of it like oil prices spiking. The companies buying oil suffer. The companies selling oil benefit. Memory chip suppliers are in a similar position right now. Apple’s pain is, at least temporarily, their gain.

Why this matters beyond Apple

Apple’s decision marks a meaningful strategic shift for a company that built its empire partly on predictable pricing. Historically, Apple maintained stable or lowering selling prices while packing more technology into each generation. Microsoft has also raised prices for its gaming consoles during this same period, signaling a broader trend across the tech industry.

For investors, two indicators warrant close attention. First, how consumers respond to Apple’s higher prices over the next quarter. Second, the memory chip pricing cycle, where AI demand pushing memory prices higher only works for suppliers as long as total demand across all end markets stays robust.

The $250 billion that evaporated from Apple’s market cap in a single session is a stark reminder that even the most dominant companies aren’t immune to supply chain economics. And the 11% drop in SoftBank shows how quickly that vulnerability can cascade across borders and sectors.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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