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[News] Lenovo Reportedly Set for July Price Hikes Across Product Portfolio as Memory Costs Pressure PC Market


2026-06-10 Consumer Electronics / Semiconductors editor

With memory prices remaining elevated, consumer electronics could be heading for another round of price increases. Chinese media outlet Lanjinger.com, citing sources familiar with the matter, reports that Lenovo plans to raise prices across its product lineup from July, broadly in line with the previous round of increases, after the 618 shopping festival ends.

Notably, Lanjinger.com highlights this would not be Lenovo’s first price hike this year, pointing to March when the PC maker issued nationwide price adjustment notices and raised retail prices for some models by over RMB 1,000. The report adds it has already urged distributors to lock in inventory and secure current pricing ahead of the upcoming increase, with a formal notice expected to be issued by the end of June.

The pricing pressure is spreading across the PC industry. Dell, as highlighted by the report, has already raised prices on certain products as well, with server prices increasing 20%–40%. Prices for desktops, notebooks, and workstations are also expected to see further significant hikes by July, the report suggests.

A separate report from Sina also suggests the sharp rise in costs has put pressure on the entire PC industry, prompting several major vendors to begin raising prices as early as six months ago. Dell, according to Sina, increased prices across its commercial PC portfolio in late 2025, with hikes ranging from 10% to 30%.

Memory Price Surge Drives PC Cost Pressure

Surging memory prices have become a key driver behind rising costs for PC brands. Lanjinger.com, citing TrendForce data, reports that cumulative spot price increases for DRAM and NAND flash have exceeded 300%. By May 2026, the average price of PC-grade DDR4 8Gb memory had climbed to US$20, the highest level since TrendForce began tracking the market, according to the report.

Against this backdrop, Taipei Times, citing TrendForce’s latest forecast, reports that global notebook shipments are now expected to decline 13% YoY in 2026, as soaring memory prices and tight CPU supply weigh on demand in the second half—marking a sharper downturn than the 9.4% drop projected in January.

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(Photo credit: Lenovo’s X)

Please note that this article cites information from Lanjinger.com, Sina, and Taipei Times.

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