The latest Apple supplier to be hit by fears of slowing iPhone demand is US chipmaker Micron Technology. The company’s shares fell 7% in early trading this morning …

Reuters reports that this is just one of the concerns investors have about Micron.

Although Apple was one factor, falling demand for a range of chips has seen prices slide across the market, with subsequent impacts on share prices.

Micron’s NAND flash memory chips and dynamic random access memory (DRAM) memory chips help power servers and smartphones, including Apple Inc’s latest generation of iPhones.

Micron is also the subject of an antitrust investigation in China.

“Continued deterioration in both DRAM and NAND pricing leads us to model eight consecutive quarters of gross margin and EPS contraction,” Baird analyst Tristan Gerra, who also lowered his PT to $32 from $75, said in a note.

“NAND outlook continues to worsen, with contract pricing expected to decline mid teens in each of the next two quarters,” Gerra said.

The news is set against a backdrop of general investor nervousness around tech stocks at present, with all the FAANG stocks – which includes Apple – now in bear territory. AAPL stock has fallen more than 20% since October 3.

A number of Apple suppliers have been reporting cuts to orders from a smartphone customer widely believed to be the iPhone maker. It follows a suggestion that the company has slashed orders by as much as 20-25%.

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