The markets have been bracing for the inevitable. Apple, the darling of the tech sector, has finally blinked. The Cupertino giant is preparing to raise prices across its product range, a direct consequence of the soaring costs of AI chips that are rippling through the global supply chain. In the City, we have a word for this: pass-through inflation. And it is a phenomenon that investors ignore at their peril.
The arithmetic is brutal but simple. Advanced AI chips, the ones powering everything from data centres to the latest iPhone features, have seen their prices surge by over 30% in the past twelve months. This is not a transitory blip, as some central bankers would have you believe. It is a structural shift driven by an insatiable demand for computing power and a supply chain that remains stubbornly constrained. Apple, for all its pricing power, cannot absorb these costs indefinitely. The company’s gross margins, the focus of every analyst’s spreadsheet, are under siege.
Let us be clear: this is not an Apple problem. It is a symptom of a broader tech squeeze that is gripping the global economy. The AI revolution, for all its promise, is turning inflationary. Every data centre built, every model trained, every inference run consumes chips that are becoming dearer by the day. And those chips require vast amounts of energy, another input whose cost is climbing. The result is a classic cost-push shock, the kind that leaves central bankers with a migraine.
The timing could not be worse. The gilt market is already jittery, with the 10-year yield flirting with levels that make finance ministers wince. A price hike from the world’s most valuable company will only add to the inflationary psychology. Consumers, already squeezed by higher mortgage costs and food bills, will feel the pinch. And if Apple can pass on costs, rest assured others will follow. This is how inflation becomes entrenched, not through wage-price spirals alone, but through the quiet mechanics of corporate pricing decisions.
Fiscal responsibility, or the lack thereof, is a key part of this story. Governments have spent lavishly in recent years, pouring subsidies into domestic chip production and AI research. The US CHIPS Act and the EU’s Digital Decade programme are well-intentioned, but they are also inflationary. They add demand to an already tight market, pushing prices higher. And when governments borrow to fund these initiatives, they crowd out private investment, driving up the cost of capital. Apple’s response is a market signal that this fiscal stimulus is not without consequence.
For investors, the implications are clear. The era of low-cost computing is over. Tech stocks, long the darlings of the bull market, face a margin squeeze. Apple’s price hike may protect its margins in the short term, but it risks alienating consumers at a time when disposable incomes are under pressure. The company’s services revenue, a high-margin bright spot, may also suffer if hardware sales slow. The market’s reaction will be telling. A stock that trades on a premium valuation cannot afford to disappoint.
Capital flight is another risk to consider. If the UK and Europe see tech costs rising faster than in other regions, we could see investment flow elsewhere. The US, with its deeper capital markets and more generous subsidies, remains the safe haven. But even there, the cost of chips is a headwind. The Bank of England and the Federal Reserve have been fighting the last war, focusing on energy and food prices. They should be looking at the semiconductor supply chain. This is where the next inflationary battle will be fought.
What is to be done? In the short term, not much. The chip shortage is a supply-side problem that requires time and capital to resolve. In the medium term, the answer lies in fiscal discipline. Governments cannot continue to bid up the price of scarce resources without consequences. They must also resist the temptation to cap prices, a move that would only create shortages and distort markets. The market, for all its imperfections, is the most efficient mechanism for allocating scarce resources. Let it work.
Apple’s price hike is a canary in the coal mine. It tells us that the AI revolution, for all its transformative potential, comes with a cost. The question for investors and policymakers is whether they are prepared to pay it. My bet is that the market will demand a discount on tech stocks until clarity emerges on the supply side. Until then, buckle up. The next quarter’s earnings calls will be a lesson in inflationary reality.








