Bart Yee on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - '“Interesting that apple has Top 5 in Japan without a pro model. What to make of that?” See the Japan Data below for Sept. 2025, when iPhone 17 launched, the 17 Pro did take a substantial portion of sales. My sense is Japanese user are conservative and don’t like the largest models due to size, cost, and ostentatious appearance, unlike China and Korea who are very status conscious and willing to show off. By March Quarter, those who wanted a Pro model got them already, and sales of smaller value models then predominated. Apple continues to hone and address each market’s specific needs and is happy to let the market decide which models work best, as long as they are iPhones and Apple devices. The trust and loyalty that Apple has developed over the years speaks to how well they have delivered in user satisfaction and performance.'
on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'Continued Top 5 March 2026 UK 1 Apple iPhone 17 5G 29% 2 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 5G 11% 3 Samsung Galaxy S25 5G 10% 4 Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max 8% 5 Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra 6% Apple 48% Samsung 16% 3:1 ratio, all premium models. UK Affluence abounds. France 1 Apple iPhone 17 5G 13% 2 Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max 11% 3 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 5G 9% 4 Samsung Galaxy S25 5G 6% 5 Samsung Galaxy A16 5G 4% (Oct 2024 $100-$250 older budget model) Apple 33% Samsung 10% 3:1 Korea 1 Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra 5G 43% (Pretty astounding 1st month demand) 2 Samsung Galaxy S26 5G 12% 3 Apple iPhone 17 5G 6% 4 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 5G 6% 5 Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max 5G 6% Samsung 55% Apple 18% This is in a Galaxy S launch month. For perspective, here’s the Korea stats for Sept. 2025, first full month of newest Z Foldables sales vs iPhone 16 & early 17 sales: Korea Sept. 2025 1 Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 17% 2 Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 9% 3 Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max 8% 4 Apple iPhone 17 8% 5 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 7% Here the race is tighter: Samsung 26% Apple 23% I have suspicions that Counterpoint chooses these specific launch month dates to give Samsung a fighting chance during or immediate following launch months, otherwise even at late dates, the iPhone models could potentially come close to Samsung models in its home territory. Japan Mar 2026 1 Apple iPhone 17 5G 25% 2 Apple iPhone 17e 5G 16% 3 Apple iPhone 16 5G 8% 4 Apple iPhone 16e 5G 8% 5 Google Pixel 9A 5G 7% (April 2025 $260-$550 USD) Apple 57% Google 7% 8:1 Note: most popular smartphones are 6.3”, smallest and least expensive Flagships available. The Google Pixel 9A is a midrange value model. The newest 10 series didn’t make much impact. For perspective, here’s the Sept. 2025 Japan stats: 1 Apple iPhone 16e 16% 2 Apple iPhone 16 15% 3 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 11% 4 Apple iPhone 17 10% 5 Samsung Galaxy A25 Japan 5G 6% Apple 52% Samsung 6% 8.7:1 Again, most all are smaller smartphones, a Japanese user preference. The fact that Apple iPhones are the persistent front runners in most regions is rather astounding, yet speaks to how well the iPhone resonates with users and buyers, it delivers what is expected, despite “lagging” in AI. Some Android fans claim there’s so much Android competition that few models will standout and sell in mass quantities while Apple has a “monopoly” on iOS and only sells a few models, hence concentrating sales. Well, maybe Android should try that, sell fewer models optimized for more regions. But when you’re racing to the bottom in price vs features, there’s always the temptation that the newest, latest release will somehow hit and sell well. With the memory price crunch, Android makers will be forced to trim cheapest models and increase prices if they want to preserve any margins, leading to probably a 20% decline in sales, but maybe slightly higher profits? Not a great business model.'
on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'Some more detail on March 2026 Top 5, omitting 5G designations for premium models: iPhone 17’s launched Sept. 2025 6 months into sales year Samsung Galaxy S debuted March 11, 2026 so right in first month of sales. (Per Counterpoint previous report, the Galaxy S26 outsold the S25 by 13% in its first 6 weeks of sales, they noted at 6 weeks demand dropped below S25 YoY levels, questioning whether sales momentum had faltered, especially in Europe’s where the MEA conflicts began to affect sales.) USA 1 Apple iPhone 17 13% 2 Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max 13% 3 Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra 12% 4 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 10% 5 Samsung Galaxy A17 5G 7% ($199 budget model) Apple 36% Samsung 19% China 1 Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max 6% 2 Apple iPhone 17 4% 3 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 4% 4 Honor X70 5G 3% (July 2025 $199 model) 5 Huawei Mate 80 5G 2% ($600 base flagship, released Nov 2025, Huawei reported the Mate 80 series sold 6M units by mid-May, about 6 months) Apple 14% Honor 3% Huawei 2% India 1 Apple iPhone 17 5G 4% 2 OPPO A6X 5G 2% ($150) 3 Apple iPhone 16 5G 2% 4 vivo Y19S 5G 2% ($125 Nov) 5 vivo T4X 5G 2% ($175-230) Apple 6% Vivo 4% Oppo 2% Fairly impressive for Apple value leaders considering regional price sensitivity, shows growing middle class. Germany 1 Apple iPhone 17 5G 11% 2 Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max 10% 3 Apple iPhone 17 Pro 5G 8% 4 Apple iPhone 16 5G 6% 5 Apple iPhone 17e 5G 5% Apple 40% clean sweep top 5 with 3 flagship models and 2 value models, even after 1 and 6-18 months. Continued'
on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - '” and then actual users (including normal ones LOL) will discover when it rolls out post-Developers period ” The beauty of 500+ Apple Stores will shine like never before, as Apple hosts AI classes for the masses. A seat at that table is going to be a prized possession for years. She could bring AI to the masses like that, excepting Apple. I’m going to be a frequent attendee, just to see what the hoopla is all about. I may even start to use it. Bravo MacBook Neo, public school classes and night school at community colleges. How much ya wanna bet Apple has already planned for this with teacher training materials and curriculums.'
on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - '” This evening Reuters is running a story on OpenAI possibly cutting its prices to compete for customers with Anthropic.” Didn’t we discuss exactly that happening just a short while ago? The data center cabal is about to learn that there is no moat surrounding data center LLM “AI”. Their revenue models were toast before the second shovel turned over a clod of dirt. Apple releases on device and in 3 years has a million+ Siri AI users, a great many of whom were previously Anthropic, Gemini or ChatGPT subscribers. In two years, maybe less, there won’t be a memory supply problem, as data center construction begins to slow and Nvidia back orders fade into history.'
on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'Great to see Apple crack 2 of the top 3 models in India. I assume that is no minor achievement. I am pretty sure Germany used to be a place where Android was pretty popular and would have a couple androids in the top 5. Interesting that apple has Top 5 in Japan without a pro model. What to make of that?'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'There was a minute where aapl rocketed at the announcement of siriAI and I saw a flicker of ATH at $317.40. This doesn’t seem to show up on graphs as I assume it shows the price last as at the 59th or 60th second of the minute. Still surprised how quick it dropped (plummeted) after that minute of exuberance.'
on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - 'The funniest part of this is that AI is in absolutely no way new. So really what we’re calling early adopters is just the front edge of mass adoption of consumer-grade products. It’s like calling the first people who bought PCs “early adopters” or even “innovators” in computing.'
on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'AAPL has recovered ~$9.00 since Monday.Close (average $3.xx per day). With 26 sessions remaining until July expiry all I require to achieve max value on my $305/$310 Call Spreads is ~55 cents per day. With July earnings around the corner from options expiry, I’m expecting an earnings run up to put me over the top. Fingers crossed.'
on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'Romeo Esparrago said: “could be the reason AAPL has recovered to 315+.” **Not $315+ yet…but soon! 🙂'
on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'Yes! Assuming the realization of how Apple Intelligence will really pay off as honest reviewers see it now and then actual users (including normal ones LOL) will discover when it rolls out post-Developers period could be the reason AAPL has recovered to 315+. Up up & away, my beautiful balloon, so we can fly into the Fifth Dimension!'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Well, after closing at the dip low of $290.55 onJune 9th, pretty much $25 down from the closing high of $315.20 on June 2, AAPL has recovered $5, 1/5th or 20% of the way back over the past 2 days to close at $295.63. Volume was a decent 40.5M shares, representing ~$11.87B worth of share trading hands. TTM PE is 35.4, FPE is 30.7, which is still quite reasonable IMO. As more reports of hands on experience with Siri AI and Apple Intelligence filter in, there will be some rethinking about where Apple and AAPL are headed. Any continued strength in iPhone and Mac sales should inspire monetary confidence for earnings.'
on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'This is going to be HUGE! Only Siri will have direct access to the user’s private info and from the “real world” demos we saw above, it looks like Siri is seamlessly cross-referencing across apps and providing accurate results. Plus the UI/UX looks very Apple-like. For normal users — which is most of them — there will be no need for any other AI app. OpenAI and Anthropic must be getting a little nervous.'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'It’s a great way to make a living 🙂 And how its easier to make money when you have money.'
on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'Germany appreciates quality construction.'
on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Brent – thanks for that link!'
on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Maybe if more teams would become AVP involved they could sell “special” team units with insignias and colors. (Or – for the more pragmatic – white or black with interchangeable insignias! 🙂 )'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'To add context, here’s additional info from Gemini, soon to be Siri: “Out of your list, Jessica Williams, Brett Goldstein, Harrison Ford, Matthew Rhys, and Jane Krakowski are featured in shows or movies on Apple TV+. • Jessica Williams: Stars as Gaby in the hit comedy series Shrinking. • Brett Goldstein: Co-created and starred as Roy Kent in Ted Lasso and co-created Shrinking. He also stars in the Apple Original Film All of You. • Harrison Ford: Stars alongside Jason Segel in the comedy series Shrinking. • Matthew Rhys: Stars as Mayor Tom Loftis in the comedy-horror series Widow’s Bay. • Jane Krakowski: Starred as Mrs. Dickinson in the comedy series Dickinson. • The other individuals on your list (Lainey Wilson, Druski, Jimmy Fallon, Zedd, Whoopi Goldberg, Ryan Tedder, Michael B. Jordan, Rhea Seehorn, and Diplo) do not currently have prominent acting or starring credits within the Apple TV+ library.“'
on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'No AI agents have access to your personal info, keeping it private and tying it all together. That’s the game changer, all while guarding your privacy.'
on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'And in Germany they can’t even get the latest features due to the crazy EU regulations'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Joseph Bland said: “Maybe there IS something to this buy and hold AAPL approach after all….” **My AAPL spreadsheet shows our 100% AAPL portfolio increased by 986.3% since 12/31/16…and that’s with us paying taxes on my yearly RMD. So far, so good, Joseph! 🙂'
on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Another good video from Nate B Jones. A “busy” video, but I think he distills Apple’s plan/opportunity well. AI is the device in your hand, not a chatbot in the cloud. At the 9:40 minute mark of the video covers moving inference to the device from the cloud. https://youtu.be/t7L6-fMpxFc?si=t7Ph7TEFPzWfVekj'
on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'Impressive. Yeah, I understand that other “AIs” have been doing these things for a while, but as one reviewer stated!, Siri AI is going to bring this to a lot more people, not just the adventurous early adopters., and of those people how many are going to testdrive anything else?'
on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'You know, Fred, trustable AI could really be useful. For example, I just posted a bit on another thread, but made a slight mistake because of a glitch in mentally converting from percentage increase to X times increase. AND I could only extrapolate off a small set. But doing a large extrapolation and conversion plus laying it all out in a list would be duck soup for AI, with far less of a chance of error. It’s like the differences between long-hand calculations, slide-rule calculations, and calculator calculations: AI is going to “disappear” everything except the answer you wanted – IF it can be trusted! That’s why it needs to be able to also show its work, but also not tread on your privacy. And Apple has just clearly demonstrated that they have the inside track both on privacy and jumping relatively quickly to the answer you’re looking for. And I’ll bet that, if asked to, “Apple I” (Apple Eye?) can also show you how it got there.'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Selling insurance to pessimists, I love it. Getting paid with the “risk” that I may be forced to buy more AAPL at $170! Yes please!'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'I just looked over the collection of tech stocks I have on my Apple stocks app, and other than AVGO, QCOM, and complete outlier NVDA, Apple’s 11X over 10 years valuation increase is significantly better than the rest. And yes, to do as well over the next decade is unfathomable. But it was also unfathomable a decade ago, right? Maybe there IS something to this buy and hold AAPL approach after all….'
on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Great insights on what consumers pay for, but how does this apple to Apple, especially iPhone? And more so with AI? People buy iPhones for ALL the work they do. These jobs to be done vary widely amongst consumers. Because Apple, and it’s 3rd party Apps, do so many jobs, it doesn’t matter which ones make money for Apple or third parties. What matters is that the number of consumers buying into the Apple ecosystem keeps going up and the ARPU keeps going up? They spend more because Apple devices keep increasing the jobs that can be done. And yes, entertainment is a job of sorts. Still it is a long long road. Some family members still don’t now how to add a contact that I send via iMessage.'
on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'Crushing it, everywhere that counts, expect Samsung’s backyard. Doing OK there, anyway. And this is March, long after launch. Pro Max leads in China, but not elsewhere. Interesting.'


