iPhone 17 goes on sale globally as Apple faces China rivals and AI doubts


A buyer holds up the brand new orange-colored iPhone 17 Professional Max smartphone inside an Apple retail retailer in Chongqing, China, on September 19, 2025.

Cheng Xin | Getty Photos Information | Getty Photos

The iPhone 17 hit retailer cabinets worldwide on Friday, drawing traces from Beijing to London.

However past the launch buzz, Apple is underneath stress to show itself, grappling with questions over its synthetic intelligence plans, in addition to rising competitors. 

Merchandise on show for the primary time embody the iPhone 17 Professional, iPhone 17 Professional Max, and iPhone Air, in addition to new Apple Watch and AirPods fashions.

Whereas they had been accessible for preorders within the U.S. from Sept. 12, the worldwide launch holds specific significance as Apple takes on rising competitors in abroad markets. 

China competitors

If that development had been to pan out, it might be welcome information for Apple, which has misplaced market share in China to gamers corresponding to Huawei and Xiaomi. 

After years of management within the area, the iPhone-maker now solely holds 10% of the Chinese language smartphone market, trailing native gamers like Oppo, Huawei, Xiaomi and others, in accordance with information from Omdia.

Up to now, the indicators are constructive for the iPhone 17 sequence in China. Final Friday, JD.com — one among China’s largest ecommerce platforms — noticed the primary minute of iPhone 17 sequence preorders surpass the first-day preorder quantity of final 12 months’s iPhone 16 sequence, the corporate reported

At 10 a.m. native time on Friday, JD.com mentioned that iPhone 7 trade-in gross sales had been 4 instances greater than the identical interval final 12 months.

Different markets 

Apple intelligence 

A profitable iPhone 17 launch might assist reassure Apple traders after a considerably underwhelming rollout of its synthetic intelligence options, which started late final 12 months.

Chatting with CNBC’s “Squawk Field Europe” final week, Ben Wooden, chief analyst at CCS Perception, lauded Apple’s newest product launches however mentioned the corporate now wanted to ship on synthetic intelligence. 

'Apple need to deliver on AI': says analyst

“There isn’t any query that Apple must ship on AI,” he mentioned, noting that the corporate had “dropped the ball” final 12 months by making massive guarantees that did not materialize.

“Apple has to catch up [in AI], however proper now, I believe they have sufficient runway to have the ability to cope within the intervening interval.”

– CNBC’s Eunice Yoon contributed to this report