The story usually goes like this. A new chip drops, big tech firms gobble up the supply, and shoppers shrug.
This one broke a different way. Indie coders buying $4,000 Mac Minis to run AI agents at home wiped Apple's top-end stock in about six weeks.
The Real Driver Is Local AI
Apple stopped taking orders for the 32GB and 64GB Mac Mini in early April. The 128GB and 256GB Mac Studio went the same way.
What is left is shipping 16 to 18 weeks out in the US.
The buyer mix shifted. People who used to ask if 16GB was enough are now buying 64GB boxes as full-time AI agent servers.
The reason is OpenClaw. It is a free open tool that runs Claude Code and other AI agents on models that live on your machine, not in the cloud.
A 64GB Mac Mini is the cheapest way to run it well. A Mac Studio with 128GB or 256GB is the not-cheap-but-sane option. Both got sold out.
For investors, the signal is the same one in Anthropic's big numbers. Real demand for AI agents is here, and it is showing up in the form of empty Mac shelves.
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Memory Prices Are Doing The Damage
Apple flagged this on its earnings call. Tim Cook told analysts the firm saw "less flexibility in the supply chain than normal" and that wholesale memory pricing was "increasing significantly."
The signs were there earlier. Last month Apple pulled the 512GB Mac Studio. The 256GB upgrade went up by 25%. Both moves look like early cleanup before the crunch.
This matters beyond Apple. The same memory squeeze is one reason cloud bills are climbing. It is also one reason a one-time Mac Mini still pencils out for some coders.
For investors, the chain is clear. DRAM is tight, so Apple has to raise prices. Apple raises prices, so coders look elsewhere. And the cloud gets a bid.
What To Watch
Mark Gurman said Apple is prepping M5 Mac Minis and Mac Studios around WWDC in June. The top tiers will likely come back - at higher prices.
The used market already moved. eBay listings for 96GB and 192GB Mac Studios are running 15% to 20% above where they sat in February.
If you own a Mac with lots of memory and were on the fence about a sale, that window just opened up. Resale prices are running better than they were two months ago.
For investors, the read is broad. Memory stocks are in the same trade as Apple. The squeeze that hit Mac Mini buyers is the same one pushing cloud bills up.
The first real shopper-side AI crunch just hit Mac shelves.
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