--- title: "Apple is becoming more and more like Zijin Mining" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/277873400.md" description: "Similar Trajectories" datetime: "2026-03-05T03:48:35.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/277873400.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277873400.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/277873400.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/277873400.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/277873400.md) # Apple is becoming more and more like Zijin Mining The current state of consumer electronics is somewhat uncomfortable. The demand for AI servers has surged, leading to rising prices for memory and storage, which has quickly elevated the cost structure of terminal devices. Many manufacturers' first reaction is to raise prices, as profit margins are already low, and the increase in a few chips can easily consume profits. **However, Apple has done something that seems a bit counterintuitive.** **The newly released iPhone 17e is priced at 4,499 yuan, nearly the same as the previous generation; the MacBook Neo is priced directly at 4,599 yuan. With an additional 15% national subsidy, the effective price in some regions has dropped to less than 4,000 yuan.** The problem is that this is not an era of declining costs. The price of LPDDR5X memory supplied to Apple by Samsung has once doubled, and the entire industry is under pressure from rising component prices. **In other words, Apple's price reduction is not a response to the trend, but a counter-trend move.** In cyclical industries, this kind of action has a familiar name: **Counter-cyclical expansion.** **Expanding when others are contracting, lowering prices when others are raising them, is essentially a strategy to use one's safety cushion to gain market share.** The resource industry has the most experience with this. When gold and copper prices are low, many mining companies are forced to sell assets, and the most pessimistic market sentiment often coincides with the cheapest prices for mines. **The expansion history of Zijin Mining is largely written during such times.** **Chen Jinghe of Zijin Mining has a frequently quoted saying: "Mines are bought in a bear market."** When metal prices are high, mines are expensive and competition is fierce; when prices are low, assets tend to flow out. The logic of the resource industry is simple—**whoever survives longer in the cycle can acquire resources at the bottom.** Consumer electronics may seem far from mining, but the cyclical logic is actually the same. **Mining looks at cost curves, while consumer electronics look at gross margin buffers; both are fundamentally about who has a thicker safety cushion.** When memory prices rise, the pressure on Android phone and PC manufacturers quickly translates to terminal prices. Many manufacturers have single-digit profit margins, and even a slight cost fluctuation necessitates a price increase, or profits will be directly consumed. Apple's structure is completely different. With a long-term gross margin of around 40% and substantial cash reserves, it has the ability to withstand profit pressure in the short term. **When the industry is forced to raise prices due to rising costs, Apple can instead stabilize or even lower prices.** This creates a typical counter-cyclical competition. **When others raise prices and you do not, the price gap will automatically narrow; when others contract and you expand, market share will gradually shift.** **For Apple, the true goal of this price war is not hardware, but the operating system.** Once users switch from Android to iOS, or from Windows to macOS, many years of subsequent device upgrades, application consumption, and service revenue will remain within the Apple ecosystem. **In other words, Apple's strategy is not about products, but about users. Resource companies buy mines in a bear market, while Apple buys users during industry pressure; both are fundamentally a form of long-term capital allocation.** This also explains why the MacBook Neo has a pricing of 4599, pulling the MacBook into a price range it has rarely entered in the past. If subsidies are added, this machine could even fall into the price range of many mini PCs and second-hand office laptops. In the AI circle, this price has a special meaning. With the popularity of OpenClaw (lobster), many developers have become accustomed to deploying agents locally, allowing computers to run tasks for long periods to farm lobsters. Farming lobsters does not require particularly powerful machines, but it does need stability, low power consumption, and reasonable pricing. A computer running an agent year-round essentially becomes a small computing node. In the past, many people used small hosts or second-hand PCs. The Mac mini, due to its stability and energy efficiency advantages, has gradually become a type of "lobster machine." When the price of the MacBook Neo drops to over 3000, the MacBook suddenly enters this device category. **The Mac mini is a desktop lobster machine, while the MacBook is likely to give rise to another type: portable lobster.** The computer is in the backpack, the agent is running in the background, and while writing documents in a café, the lobster in the background might be executing tasks, even solving debugging issues at any time. This is certainly not the original intention of Apple's product design, but changes in price structures often create new usage methods. Many changes in technology ecosystems do not start from functionality, but from pricing. **From a longer-term perspective, Apple's move is actually not uncommon. Resource companies acquire mines in bear markets, internet companies expand their user base in downturns, and tech companies expand their ecosystems during industry pressures.** Cycles are not terms that belong solely to the resource industry. In the consumer electronics industry, they manifest in another form: **When others have no profits, it still has profits; when others dare not lower prices, it can still lower prices.** In longer cycles, the most important factor has never been who has a larger scale, but who can survive longer. Because those who survive longer often can buy the future when others are contracting ### Related Stocks - [Apple Inc. 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