Apple rethinking iPhone pricing for next year
While the likelihood of Apple releasing new iPhones this year is all but a certain thing, a discussion between analysts and Apple’s top brass has also dropped clues that the iPhone’s pricing may not be static this year. Perhaps a $99 iPhone of some kind?

Toni Sacconaghi of Bernstein Research mentions in a research note that a discussion with Apple COO Tim Cook, CFO Petter Oppenheimer and worldwide marketing senior VP Phil Schiller point both to an upgrade to the touchscreen device as well as to the possibility of “different pricing/price points” this year, with Cook “examining iPhone’s business model” for possible changes.
Cook and Schiller in particular have teased a “very exciting” 2009 for iPhones, with more competitive pricing.
What these possible price changes would entail isn’t divulged by the Apple executives, although Sacconaghi is quick to dampen rumors of an iPhone nano or a similar low-budget cellphone. Without naming any one of the executives as a source, he gathers from his investigations that the company isn’t presently chasing such a concept.
Any future iPhone, he says, will probably have at least a web browser and access to the App Store, the latter of which has Cook, Oppenheimer and Schiller particularly optimistic about the iPhone’s success as it gives Apple an advantage over rival smartphone makers.
Related posts:
- AT&T “bending” contracts and allowing early upgrade pricing on iPhone 3G
- iPhone seen as “cannibalizing” iPod market, and Apple expected it?
- 80 million iPhones sold by 2012? It could happen


Skype for iPad supports video calling and will be released very soon.
By next year you mean 2009…?