
Apple Seeks Access to Chinese Memory Chips as AI Boom Pushes Device Prices Higher
A global shortage of memory chips has grown severe enough that Apple is pursuing suppliers it would normally avoid. According to reporting published Wednesday, July 1, by Bloomberg, the iPhone maker is seeking approval to purchase memory chips from two Chinese semiconductor companies that appear on a U.S. Pentagon blacklist, as the artificial intelligence boom continues to tighten global supplies and drive up costs.
The companies are ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) and Yangtze Memory Technologies (YMTC), two of China’s largest memory-chip manufacturers. Apple is reportedly exploring the use of their memory products in devices sold within China while lobbying the Trump administration, including the Commerce Department and the White House, for permission to move forward.
The effort reflects just how strained the global memory market has become.
Demand for advanced memory chips has exploded as technology companies race to build artificial intelligence data centers. Massive orders from AI developers have absorbed much of the world’s available supply, leaving fewer chips for smartphones, tablets, laptops, and other consumer electronics.
Industry analysts estimate DRAM memory prices climbed roughly 60% during 2025 and could rise another 30% to 40% during 2026, with shortages expected to continue well into 2027.
Apple has already begun passing some of those higher costs to consumers.
Earlier this year, the company increased prices on several MacBook models by between $100 and $300 while raising prices on selected iPads, HomePods, and Apple TV products. Although iPhone prices have remained unchanged, analysts say the continuing memory shortage could place additional pricing pressure on future devices if supply conditions fail to improve.
For consumers, the story extends well beyond Apple.
Memory chips are essential components inside virtually every modern electronic device. When prices rise, manufacturers throughout the technology industry face higher production costs, increasing the likelihood of more expensive laptops, smartphones, gaming systems, servers, and other connected products.
The shortage also highlights the growing impact of artificial intelligence on everyday consumers.
While AI investment has fueled record profits for many technology companies, it has also redirected enormous quantities of advanced semiconductors away from traditional consumer products. The same chips powering AI servers are competing with manufacturers building devices used by millions of households every day.
Apple’s negotiations also underscore the increasingly complex relationship between business and geopolitics.
Both CXMT and YMTC have been identified by the Pentagon as companies with alleged ties to China’s military. Although purchasing products from those companies is not automatically prohibited under every circumstance, Apple is seeking clear guidance from U.S. officials before moving ahead, hoping to avoid future regulatory complications or political backlash.
Some industry analysts believe Apple’s objective is not necessarily to lower costs but simply to secure an additional source of supply.
Supply-chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has noted that China’s own demand for memory chips already exceeds domestic production, suggesting Apple may gain only limited cost savings even if approval is granted. Instead, adding another supplier could reduce the risk of production delays as the global shortage continues.
For investors, the situation demonstrates how artificial intelligence is reshaping the technology supply chain in unexpected ways. Companies that manufacture memory chips have become some of the biggest beneficiaries of the AI boom, while device makers face mounting pressure from rising component costs.
For consumers, the takeaway is straightforward. As long as demand for AI infrastructure continues to outpace memory production, the cost of many electronic devices is likely to remain under upward pressure. Apple’s willingness to seek approval to purchase chips from previously avoided suppliers illustrates just how tight the global market has become.
The AI revolution may be transforming business, but it is also making the everyday technology Americans rely on more expensive—and even the world’s most valuable company is searching for new ways to secure the components it needs.
JBizNews Desk | New York
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