The City of London is waking up to a familiar spectre. Apple, the tech titan that often sets the tone for global pricing, has announced a price hike across its product lines, citing the soaring cost of AI chips. For those of us who keep a close eye on the bond markets, this is not just a corporate press release. It is a signal. The Bank of England, no doubt, is watching with hawkish intent.
Let us strip away the marketing spin. The cost of cutting-edge semiconductors, particularly those designed for artificial intelligence workloads, has risen sharply. Nvidia's latest chips are in high demand, and the supply chain is strained. Apple, which designs its own chips but relies on a complex global network of fabricators, is passing those costs to consumers. An iPhone that cost £999 yesterday might now cost £1,049. A MacBook Pro? Add another £150. This is not speculation. It is fact.
The market reaction was swift. Gilt yields ticked up as traders priced in a higher probability of sustained inflation. The 10-year gilt yield rose three basis points to 4.21 per cent by midday. Sterling edged lower against the dollar, a classic sign of capital flight fears. Investors are asking: if Apple, a company with immense pricing power, is raising prices, what does that say about the broader economy?
Let us examine the Bank of England's position. Governor Andrew Bailey has repeatedly stressed that inflation is not yet vanquished. The core CPI remains stubbornly above the 2 per cent target. Now we have a new input cost shock originating from the very sector that is supposed to drive productivity growth. AI chips are the new oil. Higher chip prices mean higher costs for everything from data centres to smartphones. It is a supply-side inflation that monetary policy struggles to contain.
The market is already pricing in a lower probability of rate cuts this year. The first cut might now be pushed to the fourth quarter, if at all. The doves on the Monetary Policy Committee will have a harder time arguing for loosening when corporate pricing power is on the rise. Fiscal responsibility? The Chancellor will be sweating. Higher rates mean higher debt servicing costs for the Treasury. The Autumn Statement is looking more challenging by the day.
What about capital flight? The yield on US Treasuries is also rising, but the Fed is seen as more aggressive. The dollar attracts capital in a risk-off environment. Sterling is vulnerable. If UK inflation expectations become unanchored, foreign investors will demand higher yields to hold British gilts. That is a vicious cycle the Bank of England wants to avoid.
Apple's move is a canary in the coal mine. Other tech companies will follow. Samsung, Dell, and even automakers that rely on AI chips for autonomous driving features will soon adjust their prices. This is not a one-off shock. It is a structural shift. The AI revolution is real, but its cost is being passed to consumers.
In my 20 years in the City, I have learned that the market punishes denial. The Bank of England cannot afford to look the other way. They must signal readiness to act. If inflation expectations rise, they will have to hike again. That would be painful for a economy already skirting recession. But the alternative uncontrolled inflation, higher bond yields, a weaker currency is worse.
For investors, the playbook is clear. Defensive positions. Short duration bonds. Long on commodities that benefit from AI demand. And a close watch on the MPC's next meeting. The bottom line is this: Apple's price hike is a reminder that inflation is not dead. It is just resting. And it may wake up with a vengeance.









