Neil Cyberart, an analyst on Wall Street, believes that Apple's 64G and 128G versions of the new iPhone will abandon the 32G version, which may have earned up to $3 billion in additional revenue. Neil Cybart said that Apple kept the minimum capacity of the new iPhone at 16G, and instead promoted and attracted consumers to buy 64G version or above. The average selling price increased, but the actual cost of storage chips decreased, resulting in an unexpected increase in revenue.
Neil Cyberart calculates that if the new iPhone launches the 32G version, Apple's net income will be $44 billion. At present, Apple's net income is $47 billion, and 30% of the 16G iPhone users will upgrade to 64G.