Apple shares fell 6.15% to close at $275.15 on the Nasdaq, marking the stock's worst single-day performance in more than a year, after the company announced price increases on MacBooks and iPads.
The selloff was sharp. During the session, Apple dropped as low as $273.75, a 6.59% intraday decline, the steepest intraday fall since April 10, 2025. That context matters: a 6%-plus drop in a company of Apple's scale moves significant capital, and signals a meaningful shift in how investors are pricing near-term risk.
Why the price hikes spooked the market
The immediate trigger was Apple's decision to raise prices on MacBooks and iPads. While Apple has not publicly detailed the exact scale or scope of the increases, the market reaction suggests investors see the move as a demand risk rather than a margin opportunity. Raising hardware prices in a cost-sensitive consumer environment can suppress unit volumes, and Apple's revenue is still heavily tied to its hardware business despite years of growing its services segment.
There is also a competitive dimension. Price hikes on premium devices at a time when consumers are already cautious about discretionary spending give rival hardware makers a window to compete on value. The concern is not just about one product cycle but about whether Apple is testing the limits of its pricing power, a quality investors have long rewarded it for.
What this means for Apple investors and the broader tech trade
A 6%-plus decline in a single session erases a substantial amount of market capitalisation at Apple's scale. The move also tends to have a gravitational pull on broader tech sentiment, given Apple's weight in major indices. Funds benchmarked to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 feel this kind of move directly.
The selloff is also a signal about how fragile confidence in big-tech valuations remains. Apple has traded at a premium multiple for years, justified in part by consistent earnings growth, strong margins, and reliable capital returns. Any sign that pricing power, which underpins those margins, is being deployed defensively rather than from strength tends to prompt a re-rating by institutional investors.
Tariff exposure adds another layer of complexity. Apple manufactures a significant portion of its devices in Asia, and price increases on hardware could reflect cost pressures from import tariffs as much as any strategic pricing decision. If that is the case, the hikes may not translate into improved margins, which would make the market's negative reaction more rational.
Investors will now focus on whether the price increases hold, whether they trigger a visible softening in consumer demand, and what Apple's guidance looks like in its next earnings call. Any downward revision to unit sales forecasts would likely extend the pressure on the stock.
For now, the April 10, 2025 comparison is instructive. That prior drop coincided with a period of sharp market volatility driven by tariff announcements. The fact that today's selloff matches that episode in magnitude, but is driven by a company-specific pricing decision, suggests the market is treating this as a meaningful fundamental concern, not just a macro-driven reaction.