Apple's laptop price cuts a concession to recession, say analysts
Apple's price reductions in its notebook line this week show that the company, which has historically been leery of dropping prices, is not immune to the crumbling economy, analysts said today.
On Monday, Apple reduced prices of its MacBook Pro and MacBook Air laptops by between 6.3% and 28%, with the smallest cuts at the low end for the 13-in. MacBook Pro and the largest for the high-end MacBook Air.
"The cuts show that Apple isn't immune to the way the market is moving," said Charles Smulders, an analyst with Gartner.
"They were a concession to the economy," added Ross Rubin, an analyst with retail market research firm NPD Group. "I see this as more of a defensive move."
The two 13-in. MacBook Pro models -- the revamped and renamed MacBook -- received cuts of $100, to $1,199 and $1,499, or reductions of 7.7% and 6.3%, respectively. The mid-range models, which sport a 15-in. screen, are now priced at $1,699, $1,999 and $2,299, representing cuts of 15%, 13% and 8%. And the 17-in. MacBook Pro dropped from $2,799 to $2,499, a 10.7% cut.
Reductions on the MacBook Air brought prices for that thinner model down to $1,499 and $1,799. Apple trimmed $300 and $700, or 16.7% and 28%, respectively, from the Air's price tags.
The larger cuts in the mid- and upper ranges was predictable, said both analysts.
"It's not surprising that we saw the price reductions on the most expensive hardware," said Rubin. "That's where Apple has more margin to adjust."
"Margins are more generous in the higher-end products," echoed Smulders. "They're significant there, given the way the market is moving."
But Smulders was disappointed at the lack of attention to the lower end, where Apple retained the $999 price point of the last-generation, plastic-cased MacBook, now the only model under that nameplate. "What we didn't see was a sub-$999 product," he noted. "That was disappointing, but at some point we'll have to see Apple lowering that entry point."
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