Apple has the deepest pockets in tech, but the artificial intelligence boom is proving that even a trillion-dollar war chest has its limits.
For years, Apple wielded its massive volume orders like a cudgel, dictating prices and locking down supply chains. But the explosive demand for AI hardware has fundamentally broken that leverage. The iPhone maker can easily afford the memory chips it needs, but the fact that it is struggling to secure them underscores a brutal reality: the current memory crunch is so severe that raw cash no longer guarantees front-of-the-line privileges.
The strain is already forcing historic pivots within Cupertino. After months of industry speculation over how Apple would absorb soaring component costs, the company has conceded defeat to inflation. Chief Executive Tim Cook confirmed that Apple will be raising retail prices across its product lineup to offset the chip premium—a rare admission of vulnerability for a company famous for its ironclad supply chain.
Behind the scenes, the pressure is falling squarely on veterans like John Ternus, Apple’s hardware engineering chief, who has been with the company’s product design ecosystem since 2001. Navigating this architecture crisis will require more than just engineering acumen; it will require a complete redesign of how Apple values and sources its hardware in an AI-first world.

