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Apple is not expecting an iPhone 16 upgrade super cycle, says analyst

Renders of the forthcoming iPhone 16 range

Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo claims that Apple has ordered fractionally fewer iPhone 16 models than the iPhone 15, going against the idea that Apple Intelligence will prompt upgrades.

Other analysts have previously said that Apple Intelligence will drive up iPhone 16 upgrades into a super cycle, and there have even been reports of Apple ordering more iPhones to be manufactured in expectation of such a super cycle.

One source arguing against a super cycle, though, has been Ming-Chi Kuo. In July 2024, he reported that suppliers such as Largan and TSMC had not seen an increase in orders that would indicate Apple expecting high sales.

Now in a new report, Kuo has doubled down on this and even said that Apple is expecting marginally fewer sales of the iPhone 16 range, at least initially.

In his full blog post, Kuo says that Apple has ordered between 88 million and 89 million of the iPhone 16 range, compared to approximately 91 million of the iPhone 15 models.

He further reports that, based on his forecasts, the breakdown of different iPhone 16 model sales is expected to be:

  • iPhone 16 on 26%
  • iPhone 16 Plus on 6%
  • iPhone 16 Pro on 30%
  • iPhone 16 Pro Max on 38%

Kuo says that it's believed Apple has prepared between 15 million and 17 million iPhone 16 units for the pre-order demand. Over the whole of 3Q24, he predicts a growth of around 10% year over year compared to the iPhone 15 series.

However, this is not from increasing demand for the iPhone 16 Pro Max over its predecessor. It's because the iPhone 15 Pro Max had issues with its tetraprism camera that delayed initial shipments of the device.

Overall, Kuo predicts that then 1Q25 iPhone 16 sales will decline dramatically, by 53% to 55%. He says that is partially the normal seasonal decline, but that it may be exacerbated by the launch of a new iPhone SE 4.



7 Comments

retrogusto 17 Years · 1144 comments

As Apple diversifies its manufacturing beyond China, I would expect Ming-Chi Kuo’s analysis to become less accurate and less bullish, since his existing contacts will have access to a smaller proportion of the overall picture, and he may have more trouble developing new contacts in other countries. 

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VictorMortimer 1 Year · 239 comments

That's really unsurprising.
There's nothing new or exciting about the 16.  Same old iPhone, not really any more interesting than what already exists.

Not really anything interesting happening until Apple complies with EU law and puts easily swappable batteries in, they've gotta do that by 2027.

MacPro 19 Years · 19853 comments

As Apple diversifies its manufacturing beyond China, I would expect Ming-Chi Kuo’s analysis to become less accurate and less bullish, since his existing contacts will have access to a smaller proportion of the overall picture, and he may have more trouble developing new contacts in other countries. 

Fingers crossed you are correct.  Wall Street will not like it if this is true.

1 Like · 0 Dislikes
mpantone 19 Years · 2280 comments

That's really unsurprising.

There's nothing new or exciting about the 16.  Same old iPhone, not really any more interesting than what already exists.

Not really anything interesting happening until Apple complies with EU law and puts easily swappable batteries in, they've gotta do that by 2027.

Apple has a history of doing a tick-tock approach to product generation releases. Typically one generation has most of the obvious visual improvements (often the display panel) and the following generation is about internal improvements. The iPhone 4 and 4S was one excellent example, so was the iPhone X and iPhone XS generations.

My guess is that several years from now, iPhone 16 will be largely defined by what it was able to do mostly from a software perspective. These software differentiating features maybe largely be enabled by adequate system RAM (to accommodate larger AI/ML models) as well as increased NPU cores (Neural Engine). The Megahertz Wars have been over for 20+ years, it's not really about massive leaps in CPU specs.

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