Apple Just Made a Power Move to Gain Market Share

Written By Michael Gary Scott

Key Points

  • Apple introduced a host of new products at its spring event this week.

  • One of the big surprises was the surprisingly affordable price of its entry-level iPhone 17e, which was the same price as last year.

  • As some component prices skyrocket, Apple is likely leveraging price to gain market share.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Apple ›

When it comes to the smartphone market, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) has long been the biggest winner. Even when the company didn’t have the largest market share, it long commanded the largest share of the profits. The final gem in the company’s crown came in 2025, when the iPhone became the year’s top seller, accounting for 20% of the market, according to Counterpoint Research. The company is also the market leader in several other product categories.

Apple has long been known for its premium (read: high-priced) products that cater to the high end of the market, noted for their simplicity of design, superior technology, and ease of use. However, Apple is taking a different approach in 2026. In the face of memory shortages and high component prices, the company held the line on its lowest-priced iPhone, suggesting that Apple is determined to take market share from struggling competitors.

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A hand holding an iPhone showing the Apple logo.

Image source: Getty Images.

More for less

At Apple’s big spring event this week, the company introduced several entry-level products that turned heads for being surprisingly affordable, at least by Apple standards. The headliner was the iPhone 17e, which features double the starting storage capacity at 256 GB. Yet the device came with a starting price of $599 — the same as last year’s iPhone 16e — despite greater capabilities and higher input costs.

This was a surprising move by Apple, as the cost of memory and storage chips has skyrocketed this year, driven higher by the rising adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), which has fueled unprecedented demand for servers and data centers. Memory chips in smartphones play a crucial role in running apps, while storage is needed for photos, videos, and other files stored on the devices.

There are likely two factors at play here. First, Apple’s supply chain prowess is well documented, and the company has historically inked multi-year agreements with suppliers to secure capacity and manage price fluctuations over longer periods of time. Second, the company also has a history of keeping lower-end product prices stable while raising prices on its higher-end products to absorb higher input costs without losing market share. That said, CEO Tim Cook made clear that component prices would begin to weigh on margins in future quarters.

See also  Insights on an Upcoming Tech Giant's Accelerated GrowthEvolution of Valuations

In the vast landscape of American industry, some companies rise above the rest, breaking valuation barriers considered insurmountable. From United States Steel's historic $1 billion valuation in 1901 to Apple's groundbreaking $1 trillion milestone and beyond, the U.S. has been a breeding ground for financial superstars. Currently, only Microsoft, Nvidia, and Alphabet hold membership in the elite $2 trillion club alongside tech juggernaut Apple, but a bold prediction looms on the horizon.

Meta Platforms, the parent entity behind social media giants like Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, is not content with resting on its laurels. Harnessing the power of Artificial Intelligence (AI), Meta is positioning itself as a formidable player in the technology arena. By leveraging AI to optimize revenue streams within its social ecosystem and pioneering innovative AI models like the Large Language Model (LLM) dubbed Llama, Meta is primed for exponential growth. This trajectory potentially places Meta on track to reach a $2 trillion valuation within the next three years, promising substantial returns for savvy investors.

AI Revolutionizing Social Networking

Serving a staggering 3.2 billion individuals daily across its expansive suite of applications, Meta has transcended traditional social networking paradigms. What began as a conduit for interconnecting users has evolved into a multifaceted entertainment portal powered by AI-driven algorithms curating personalized content experiences. CEO Mark Zuckerberg heralds this shift as a boon for increasing user engagement, translating into enhanced ad views and heightened user value.

Meta's dedication to empowering advertisers with AI tools for crafting compelling content and pinpointing target audiences underscores its commitment to innovation. Zuckerberg envisions a future where businesses can entrust Meta's AI engine with end-to-end advertising processes, revolutionizing how marketing campaigns are conceptualized and executed. Moreover, Meta's foray into AI-driven chatbots like Meta AI exemplifies its ambition to revolutionize customer interactions, setting the stage for a new era of business-customer engagement.

Llama: The Engine of Innovation

At the crux of Meta's AI ecosystem lies Llama, a cutting-edge Large Language Model designed to propel the company's AI endeavors to new heights. Embracing an open-source model, Meta believes in the collaborative power of a widely adopted AI framework to accelerate innovation beyond solitary development efforts. With the recent launch of Llama 3.1 boasting a staggering 405 billion parameters, Meta is at the vanguard of AI advancement.

As Zuckerberg shifts focus towards the development of Llama 4, poised to set industry benchmarks, Meta anticipates significant investments in data center infrastructure to ensure seamless AI operations. Failure to uphold standards of AI excellence could jeopardize Meta's competitive edge, potentially driving users towards alternate AI platforms like OpenAI's ChatGPT or Alphabet's Gemini, thereby impeding revenue growth.

Financial Ascendancy Amid Technological Prowess

Meta's financial performance underscores its duality of technological prowess and fiscal acumen. Boasting a robust $39 billion revenue in Q2 with a substantial 22% year-over-year growth, Meta's strategic cost-saving measures have catapulted its profitability. By streamlining operations through strategic job cuts and prudent financial allocation, Meta witnessed a staggering 73% surge in net income to $13.4 billion, marking a sustained trajectory of exponential growth.

While Meta accelerates capital expenditure towards AI infrastructure, with Q2 capex soaring to $8.4 billion and an anticipated annual capex of $40 billion, the company remains bullish on expanding its AI capabilities. Anchored by CFO Susan Li's vision of exponential capex growth in 2025, Meta's unwavering commitment to fortifying its data infrastructure underscores its resolve to achieve technological supremacy.

Exploring Meta Platforms Potential - A Path to $2 Trillion Valuation Unveiling Meta Platforms' Journey Towards a $2 Trillion Valuation

The price of the iPhone 17e will make Apple much more competitive in foreign markets that have historically offered cheaper alternatives. In China, for example, Apple has lost market share in recent years, ceding ground to lower-priced offerings from rivals such as Vivo, Huawei, and Xiaomi. However, soaring memory and storage prices will likely force competitors to raise prices, giving Apple an opening. That opportunity is even more pronounced given Apple’s 24-month payment plans offered to customers in China. This advantage will translate to other price-sensitive markets as well.

Over the long term, this will be good news for Apple shareholders. Devices like the iPhone are just the beginning of customer relationships with Apple, as many users branch out to other devices and augment their purchases with ancillary products, services, and apps. Furthermore, once customers are locked into the Apple ecosystem, they are less likely to defect.

The stock has struggled over the past year, as investors have grown wary of Apple’s growth prospects. However, this helps to illustrate that the runway ahead is long for the iPhone maker. And at 28 times next year’s expected sales, Apple stock is attractively priced.

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Danny Vena, CPA has positions in Apple. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Apple. The Motley Fool recommends Xiaomi. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.