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Apple Bucks China's Smartphone Slump With 23% Sales Jump

Apple saw a 23% year-over-year increase in iPhone sales in China during the first nine weeks of 2026, significantly outperforming a broader market decline driven by weak demand and rising component costs, according to Counterpoint Research.

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China smartphone sales apparently fell by 4% year-over-year in the first nine weeks of 2026. Within this environment, Apple emerged as the fastest-growing major vendor, with iPhone sales rising 23% compared to the same period in 2025. Counterpoint attributed Apple's impressive performance partly to a combination of e-commerce discounts and the inclusion of the standard iPhone 17 in government subsidy programs aimed at stimulating consumer electronics purchases.

Counterpoint noted that the rising cost of memory components has been passed on to vendors, forcing several Android brands to adjust pricing strategies. Chinese smartphone makers OPPO and vivo have announced notable price increases for some existing models, with those changes set to take effect this month.

In contrast, Apple has not announced any comparable price increases and is unlikely to follow competitors in raising prices, instead absorbing some of the margin pressure from higher component costs to maintain pricing stability. The firm added that Apple's control over its supply chain leaves it better positioned than rivals to withstand rising memory costs.

Rising memory prices are expected to persist throughout 2026. The research firm expects China's smartphone market to remain under pressure in the coming months, with potential improvement in June driven by the country's mid-year "618" shopping festival. Counterpoint's findings are based on its China Weekly Smartphone Sell-Out Tracker, which monitors retail sales across the market.

Top Rated Comments

2 weeks ago
Apple (I would guess) has large, long-term contracts. $100–$200 phones will be hit hard by the RAM and storage shortage. Samsung could, in theory, keep prices the same since it manufactures its own RAM, but it prefers to make higher profits by selling RAM to others rather than keeping it cheap for its own phones, or so it's said. So far, neither Samsung nor Apple has increased prices, and Samsung still offers budget models. However, the next generation of Samsung’s cheaper phones may be affected.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
knappeduivel Avatar
1 week ago

China's everything is slumping, not just Apple or phones.

Companies should minimize their business dealings with China henceforth. You can sell your stuff to China, but the manufacturing and investments should move out of it, as much as possible.
China is doing great. The economy is expanding despite hefty tariffs from USA, they invest more in green energy than the rest of the world put together. The goverment is stable and stick to their ambitieous 5-year plans. They seem to have the future.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
michaeljk Avatar
2 weeks ago
Maybe Apple didn't need to change its pricing because its margins were already so much higher than its competitors?
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
DocMultimedia Avatar
2 weeks ago
Guess that means the stock will go down. 😉
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 week ago
China's everything is slumping, not just Apple or phones.

Companies should minimize their business dealings with China henceforth. You can sell your stuff to China, but the manufacturing and investments should move out of it, as much as possible.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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