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Why Apple may need a cheaper iPhone now more than ever

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Since the beginning of this year, Apple has been dogged by concerns about slowing growth in its smartphone business. Nervous investors have driven down the stock. And critics have questioned the company’s ability to innovate.

But in recent weeks, it seems like slowing smartphone sales have spread throughout the industry like a virus. A couple of weeks ago, Research In Motion reported disappointing earnings thanks to sluggish BlackBerry sales. And on Friday, HTC and Samsung disclosed that they were going to miss their targets in the most recent quarter.

For Topeka Capital Markets analyst Brian White, this is an unmistakable sign. The problem is not Apple, he says. It’s everyone. The high-end smartphone market, where Apple has focused, is saturated.

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“In our view, we believe the higher-end portion (possibly including certain mid-range) of the smartphone market has hit a wall due to high penetration rates and high price points,” White wrote in a note to clients Friday.

And no amount of new gee-whiz features is going to change that, White believes. That’s bad news for all these companies, but it hits Apple especially hard because that’s the main target of its phones.

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“Since Apple only serves the high-end smartphone market when unveiling a new iPhone (older versions are discounted but these are not new products), no other smartphone vendor is more susceptible to this slowing growth than Apple,” White wrote.

The good news is that the low-end market for less expensive smartphones is still exploding, especially in China. Given leaks of photos of a less expensive iPhone, among other clues, White is more confident than ever that Apple will unveil such a gadget later this year to address the fastest-growing segment of the smartphone market.

“We believe a $350-to-$400 price point will allow Apple to significantly expand its reach in the smartphone market and better address developing markets such as China, while opening up more opportunities in Brazil, Russia, India and elsewhere,” White wrote.

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That should help narrow the price gap in many of these regions. But as our story this week about Apple’s challenges in Brazil explained, the company also faces hurdles like high tariffs on imported goods that keep the cost of its products high.

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