This is according to DigiTimes’ industry sources who revealed that the company had their suppliers make 100 million worth of iPhone components, suggesting that this is how many units Apple plans to ship. However as we have noted in the past, shipments don’t necessarily translate to sales, but given that iPhone 7 and 7 Plus shipping estimates have already begun to slip hours after pre-orders opened, it looks like the demand is still there.
There have been some studies done to suggest that customers aren’t as excited as before, although we have seen T-Mobile’s CEO John Legere boast that pre-orders of the iPhone are four times more than the iPhone 6, while Sprint themselves are claiming that iPhone 7 pre-orders have seen a 375% increase.
Apple unfortunately will not be sharing the iPhone sales figures for the first weekend, meaning that we’ll probably have to wait until Apple’s next financial report to find out just many iPhone 7 and 7 Plus units the company has managed to sell.