Bloomberg
Apple Inc.’s latest smartphones, the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus, have more expensive parts, but the company will still make significant profits because it raised prices for the devices, according to research firm IHS Markit. A base model iPhone 8 with a 4.7-inch screen and 64 gigabytes of storage includes material costs of $247.51, up from $237.94 for the 32 gigabyte base model iPhone 7 from last year, an analysis by IHS found.
However, the new device costs $699, while the previous year’s iPhone started at $649 for the 32 gigabyte version. That means the iPhone 8 bill of materials equals about 35 percent of the sales price—about the same as last year. That excludes other costs, including manufacturing, software and research and development.
“The added value went to memory, camera, and processing. That’s where we can materially identify where they’ve improved the overall product, and hence why they can command a higher price for it,†according to Wayne Lam, an analyst at IHS.
“The iPhone 8 represents an evolutionary upgrade to the tried-and-true iPhone business formula,†he added. “We anticipated very little changes inside the devices, so the bulk of changes will come with the iPhone X.†The iPhone X, Apple’s tenth anniversary phone, is a more-advanced device that’s expected to be in strong demand when it hits stores in November. The iPhone business represents about two-thirds of Apple’s revenue, and the product’s unit sales, margins, and average sales price are critical to the company’s results. Analysts estimate Apple’s gross margin across its businesses will be about 38 percent in coming quarters, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The story is similar with the iPhone 8 Plus. Its components cost $288.08, including a new camera system that costs $32.50. That’s up from $270.88 in the iPhone 7 Plus, IHS estimated. The most expensive components in the iPhone 8 models are the screens and mechanical enclosures, which were both upgraded from the iPhone 7 line. The glass backs on the new devices allow for inductive charging that requires a new controller inside that’s supplied by Broadcom Ltd. That part increases power-management costs by about $2.