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calendar_month Jul 08, 2026

Apple Raised Prices, Samsung Raised Profits — Micron Predicted Both

Weeks before Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) blamed soaring memory costs for raising prices on several products—and before Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (OTC:SSNLF) forecast a blockbuster jump in quarterly profit—Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ:MU) told investors exactly where the memory market was headed.

The company warned that surging demand for artificial intelligence would keep memory supplies tight for years, fundamentally reshaping an industry long known for boom-and-bust cycles.

Now, two of the technology industry’s biggest names appear to be illustrating different sides of that same story.

For Micron investors, Apple’s pricing decision and Samsung’s latest profit outlook aren’t isolated events. Together, they suggest the AI memory thesis Micron outlined is beginning to play out across the broader technology ecosystem.

Apple Showed the Cost of Tight Supply

Last month, Apple raised prices on several hardware products, citing higher costs for memory and storage components as AI infrastructure spending tightened supply.

The move surprised many investors because it highlighted something rarely seen in consumer electronics: memory costs becoming significant enough to influence retail pricing.

For Micron, however, it echoed what management had already been saying.

During its fiscal third-quarter earnings call, CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said the company still had “no line of sight” to when memory supply would catch up with AI-driven demand, adding that tight market conditions were expected to persist beyond calendar 2027.

Samsung Showed Who Benefits

If Apple demonstrated where those higher costs ultimately land, Samsung’s latest outlook illustrated where much of the pricing power is flowing.

This week, the South Korean electronics company forecasted a sharp year-over-year increase in second-quarter operating profit, driven largely by continued strength in AI memory demand.

While Samsung and Micron report on different fiscal calendars, the guidance reinforces the broader industry dynamic Micron has been describing: AI infrastructure spending is creating a more favorable environment for memory suppliers.

One Thesis, Two Outcomes

The contrast is striking. On one side, device makers such as Apple are paying more for memory and, in some cases, passing those costs on to consumers.

On the other hand, memory manufacturers are reporting stronger profitability as tighter supply improves pricing power.

Micron argued weeks ago that AI had transformed memory from a cyclical commodity into a strategic technology bottleneck.

Recent developments at Apple and Samsung suggest that transformation is becoming increasingly visible beyond Micron’s own earnings reports.

Why It Matters for Investors

Micron also disclosed roughly $22 billion in long-term customer commitments for its high-bandwidth memory products, underscoring confidence that AI-driven demand will remain strong as hyperscale cloud providers continue to expand their infrastructure.

Apple’s price increases showed the downstream effects of tighter memory markets.

Samsung’s profit forecast highlighted the upstream benefits.

Taken together, they reinforce a thesis Micron has been making for months: as AI spending accelerates, memory is no longer simply another semiconductor component—it’s becoming one of the industry’s most valuable constraints.

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