Tim Cook’s magic touch is about to cost you more. Apple Inc. is preparing to raise prices across its product lineup, from iPhones to MacBooks, as the soaring cost of advanced semiconductors for artificial intelligence eats into margins. For British consumers, already battered by double-digit inflation and a weakening pound, this spells another blow to disposable income. The City is watching gilt yields spike as the market prices in persistent price pressures.
The Cupertino giant has informed supply chain partners of a planned 5-8% price increase globally, with the UK expected to see even steeper rises due to currency depreciation. Apple’s reliance on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.’s (TSMC) 3-nanometer chips, critical for AI-driven features like improved Siri and on-device machine learning, has exposed the firm to a 20% rise in fabrication costs since last year. TSMC, the only manufacturer of these cutting-edge chips, has passed on higher energy and labour costs from its Taiwanese plants, where inflationary pressures are also mounting.
This is a classic case of cost-push inflation, and central banks are powerless to stop it. The Bank of England can raise rates until the cows come home, but it won’t lower the price of silicon. The new iPhone 16, expected this autumn, could start at £1,199, up from £1,099 for the current model. The high-end iPad Pro and MacBook Pro lines will see similar hikes. For a typical family upgrading two devices, that’s an additional £150-200 a year. That's a real squeeze, not just a statistical footnote.
Apple’s pricing power has been legendary, but even the mighty have limits. The company faces a delicate balancing act: maintain premium margins in a market where consumers are trading down to cheaper Android alternatives. In the UK, where inflation is stuck at 4.2%, wage growth at 3.5% and the pound at $1.26, Apple’s price hike risks triggering a substitution effect. British buyers may hold onto their iPhones for longer, or shift to refurbished models. Either way, Apple’s revenue per device will rise, but unit sales may stall.
The ripple effects will be felt across the tech sector. Competitors like Samsung and Google, which also use TSMC chips, will likely follow suit. The semiconductor shortage that plagued the pandemic has morphed into a high-end AI chip crunch, with demand from data centres and automakers outstripping supply. The market is tightening: TSMC expects its 3nm capacity to be fully allocated through 2025. This is not a temporary blip, it is a structural shift.
Investors have already punished Apple shares, down 12% in the past month on fears of margin compression. But the share buyback machine continues: Apple announced another $90 billion buyback last week, a manoeuvre that masks the underlying revenue problem. The bond market is less forgiving. UK gilt yields have risen 15 basis points this week alone, as the market bets that the Bank of England cannot cut rates into this kind of supply side shock. The 10-year gilt now yields 4.25%, a level that historically correlates with reduced consumer spending on durables.
For the British consumer, this is another act in a long running tragedy. The tech inflation crisis adds to rising energy bills, mortgage payments, and food costs. The Office for National Statistics will note this in the CPI basket, and the Bank of England will wring its hands. But the reality is simple: if the chips cost more, the phones cost more. There is no monetary policy solution to a semiconductor shortage. The only cure is time, capacity expansion, or a collapse in demand. None of these are imminent.
In the meantime, Apple’s price hike is a reminder that inflation is not just a macroeconomic indicator, it is a pain felt in every pocket. The bottom line for British households: your tech upgrade just got a lot more expensive.








