Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) shares remained resilient ahead of Monday’s trading session, even as investors weighed the benefits of the company’s massive share repurchase program against rising artificial intelligence-related memory costs and growing supply chain uncertainties.
The stock traded at approximately $284.34 in premarket activity on June 29, up slightly after posting a strong 3.14% gain during Friday’s session. Despite the rebound, Apple shares remain under pressure over a broader timeframe, declining 4.45% over the past five trading days and more than 7% over the last month.
Investor sentiment is increasingly focused on whether Apple’s aggressive capital return strategy can continue offsetting mounting cost pressures tied to the global AI infrastructure race.
Apple’s enormous share repurchase efforts continue to underpin earnings per share and support investor confidence.
The company repurchased roughly 135 million shares during the six months ended March 28, spending approximately $36 billion at an average price of $266.67 per share. As of that date, Apple still had $63.8 billion remaining under its existing authorization before announcing an additional $100 billion buyback program in late April.
Apple Inc., AAPL
At current premarket prices, a full deployment of the latest authorization could retire approximately 352 million shares, equivalent to roughly 2.4% of Apple’s outstanding share count.
The buyback strategy has historically helped Apple boost earnings on a per-share basis, even during periods of slower revenue growth. However, some market participants now question whether future cash deployment may increasingly be directed toward securing critical AI-related components rather than solely rewarding shareholders.
The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence infrastructure is reshaping the global memory market, creating fresh challenges for technology giants including Apple.
Industry-wide demand for DRAM and NAND memory chips has surged as AI applications require increasingly powerful hardware configurations. Memory suppliers have responded by raising prices, with some industry estimates showing contract DRAM prices nearly doubling during the first quarter.
Several memory manufacturers have already indicated that demand continues to exceed available supply, suggesting pricing pressures could persist for years.
Apple has acknowledged the strain created by escalating component costs. The company has recently increased prices on select Mac and iPad models, with some products seeing increases of several hundred dollars.
Analysts warn that future iPhone models could also face meaningful price hikes as memory and other AI-related component expenses continue climbing.
While Apple’s pricing power remains among the strongest in the technology sector, investors are closely monitoring whether persistent increases could eventually affect consumer demand.
Beyond cost inflation, Apple is also navigating growing geopolitical complexity within its supply chain.Reports indicate the company has sought approval from U.S. officials to source memory chips from Chinese manufacturer ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT). The move reflects Apple’s search for additional suppliers as memory shortages intensify.
However, the situation introduces significant political risk because CXMT has faced scrutiny from U.S. authorities. Any regulatory hurdles could complicate Apple’s efforts to diversify suppliers and secure lower-cost memory components.
The challenge is heightened by strong domestic demand within China itself. CXMT recently secured a multibillion-dollar long-term agreement to supply server memory products, underscoring how quickly available capacity is being absorbed.For Apple, securing dependable memory supply may prove just as important as managing costs.
The post Apple (AAPL) Stock; Holds Firm as $100B Buyback Faces AI Memory Cost Pressures appeared first on CoinCentral.

