Key Takeaways
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- iPhone 17 series sold 14% more than iPhone 16 over the first 10 days in the US and China, per Counterpoint Research.
- Base iPhone 17 is the standout driver, helped by improved display, higher storage, and the A19 chip; in China, base-model sales are nearly double vs. iPhone 16’s launch window.
- iPhone 17 Pro Max demand is strong in the US, pulling forward pandemic-era owners into an upgrade cycle; features include best-yet cameras, improved thermals, and a notable redesign.
- Despite staggered rollout of Apple Intelligence in China, iPhone hardware momentum is offsetting AI software timing gaps.
What happened?
Counterpoint’s early sell-through data show the iPhone 17 family off to a meaningfully stronger start than last year’s lineup in Apple’s two most critical markets. The base iPhone 17 is outperforming the prior $799 tier due to tangible hardware upgrades that resonate with mainstream buyers, while the Pro Max is catalyzing a late-cycle replacement wave among users who last upgraded during the pandemic. In China, where competitive pressures are intense and Apple Intelligence has yet to roll out, the base model’s performance is particularly robust—nearly twice the iPhone 16 base-model sales in the comparable window—suggesting price/spec alignment is landing.
Why it matters
A stronger launch mix led by the base model plus resilient Pro Max uptake implies healthier unit volumes and potentially stable blended margins if upsell to higher storage tiers persists. The data points to an upgrade cycle that is hardware-led, mitigating near-term risk from AI feature timing in China. For Apple’s P&L, a 14% early outperformance supports iPhone-driven revenue, which still accounts for about half of total sales, and can lift ecosystem monetization (services attach, accessories) as new devices enter the base. For suppliers, it signals upside risk to second-half builds, especially in display, storage, camera modules, and thermal solutions.
What’s next?
Watch sustained sell-through into November, mix between base and Pro/Pro Max, and regional performance in China amid domestic competition. Track storage tiering (256GB+ take rates) and carrier promos that could shape margins. Monitor timing and reception of Apple Intelligence in China as a secondary demand lever post-hardware cycle. Supply-chain reads from key component vendors will help validate whether the 10-day strength extends into the December quarter.














