New York, Feb 8, 2026, 07:15 EST — Market shut for the day
- Apple finished the previous session at $275.97. The stock was recently showing a 0.8% gain, trading at $278.12.
- Apple faces renewed scrutiny over its next move: will it hike iPhone prices or swallow the extra costs, as a worldwide memory-chip shortage drags on?
- Traders are on edge ahead of this week’s U.S. payrolls and inflation numbers, data that could shake up rate-cut expectations.
Apple stock faces the week ahead with an old headache under a fresh name—climbing component costs and how Apple responds.
The stock wrapped up Friday at $275.97. In late moves, it was quoted at $278.12, up roughly 0.8%.
Timing’s a factor here. Big tech’s been unsettled, and Apple’s decisions send waves through the smartphone supply chain—and the larger market—given its heavyweight status in key indexes.
Wall Street snapped back Friday, bouncing hard after tech stocks took a hit earlier in the week—chipmakers were out in front, driving the gains. 1
Apple jumped back into focus late this week as DRAM supply tightened — the memory chips powering phones and PCs — making investors wonder if iPhone prices are headed up, or if Apple will absorb the hit to margins to keep its grip on market share. CEO Tim Cook warned that memory chip prices are set to surge, but didn’t spell out how Apple plans to play it. 2
A surge in AI infrastructure projects is eating into memory supplies, with manufacturers shifting focus toward more profitable data-center orders. That leaves smaller phone brands at a disadvantage when negotiating with suppliers. Apple, on the other hand, is generally viewed as having enough clout to lock in components—though it may have to pay more for them. 2
Nabila Popal at IDC summed it up as “the biggest question for the industry,” cautioning that holding firm on prices could force the company to choose between hanging onto market share or testing investor patience. 2
What Apple does with pricing lands on rival desks too. Hold prices steady while competitors hike, and suddenly iPhones look like the bargain. If Apple bumps prices, everyone else gets cover to follow up—no fingers pointed their way.
A rougher chip shortage could hit shipments harder, and pricier iPhones might send budget-minded shoppers over to Android. If consumers suddenly hesitate on premium upgrades after such a strong run, the impact could bite.
Macro risks aren’t going away. With a loaded U.S. data slate on deck this week—Wednesday brings the postponed January jobs print, while CPI for January lands Friday—traders are bracing for fresh rate jitters. Heavyweight growth names usually take the first punch when rates jump. 3
Apart from the data, investors are watching for fresh signs on memory prices, supplier capacity, and just how much the AI build-out is diverting components from consumer devices.
Apple’s next big date is the annual shareholder meeting, set for Feb. 24. Investors will be tuning in for any word on capital return, strategy updates, and whatever new challenges execs decide to highlight. 4