The hardware component shortage continues, and Apple may consider dropping its cheapest MacBook Neo notebook configuration as a result.
According to Taiwan-based tech columbisat and former Bloomberg contributor Tim Culpan, Apple is considering dropping its $599, 256GB MacBook Neo model, thereby making its cheapest notebook the 512GB version, which retails for $699.
Writing in his latest Culpium newsletter, Culpan says cutting the entry-level 256GB model is among the options Apple is weighing as component costs climb. Such a move would push the Neo’s effective starting price up by $100 without raising the price of any individual configuration.
Apple recently executed a similar move with two of its desktop Mac models. The company stopped offering the 512GB version of the Mac Studio in March, and dropped the Mac mini’s lowest 256GB storage option last week, making the latter’s starting price increase from $599 to $799 in the United States. The moves come as a result of a worldwide shortage of memory chips, which are being purchased and used for the construction of AI data centers.
Culpan’s article states that Apple is pushing to ramp up manufacturing. Shipping estimates on Apple’s website currently put delivery times at two to three weeks across the lineup given stronger-than-expected demand, and Apple is said have instructed suppliers to increase production capacity to 10 million units, roughly double the original forecast of 5 to 6 million.
Apple is also said to be up against the fact that the initial Neo batch used lower-end A18 Pro chips, which had one GPU core disabled. A fresh production run would produce more fully functional chips, increasing the per-unit cost even before any expedited manufacturing premiums are applied. Should Apple decide against dropping the $599 MacBook Neo configuration, the company may consider introducing new color options for the current-generation Neo to help justify a potential price hike.
Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.
Via MacRumors and Culpium.com




