Report: Apple's AI Strategy Could Finally Pay Off in 2026

Apple's restrained artificial intelligence strategy may pay off in 2026 amid the arrival of a revamped Siri and concerns around the AI market "bubble" bursting, The Information argues.

apple intelligence black
The speculative report notes that Apple has taken a restrained approach with AI innovations compared with peers such as OpenAI, Google, and Meta, which are investing hundreds of billions of dollars in data centers, chips, and large language model training. This has fueled criticism that Apple is falling behind in the AI space, particularly as Siri has significantly lagged behind more advanced, capable, and reliable conversational systems.

The report argues that market sentiment toward AI spending is beginning to show signs of skepticism, with questions emerging over whether such large investments can be justified by near-term revenue. Against that backdrop, Apple's decision to limit AI-specific capital expenditures has left it with more than $130 billion in cash and marketable securities, giving the company the option to pursue acquisitions or partnerships if valuations of AI startups fall.

Apple's biggest AI-related move in 2026 will be the long-anticipated overhaul of ‌Siri‌, which is expected to arrive in the spring. The updated assistant is set to be more conversational and capable of completing multi-step tasks. To power it, Apple is believed to be adopting Google's Gemini, reflecting an internal view that large language models may become commoditized and not worth the cost of large-scale proprietary development.

The iPhone is said to be a key strategic advantage. Unlike AI companies that rely on standalone apps or web services, Apple can distribute AI features directly through software updates and system-level integrations across its devices. Efforts by AI companies to build competing hardware face major challenges in manufacturing, distribution, and ecosystem development, areas where Apple has very strong footholds.

The Information also points to recent leadership changes as part of Apple's effort to refocus its AI work. ‌Siri‌ has been placed under Mike Rockwell, who was responsible for launching the Vision Pro headset, following significant delays to the assistant's overhaul. In addition, Apple's AI chief John Giannandrea announced his retirement earlier in December, with parts of his organization redistributed into product-focused teams amid internal concerns about a lack of clear product direction.

While Apple has a history of early but uneven AI efforts, including the original launch of ‌Siri‌ in 2011, The Information argues that these shortcomings have not materially harmed its core businesses. 2026 may be an inflection point in which Apple's cautious strategy could appear prescient if enthusiasm for large-scale AI spending continues to cool and the company finally delivers a more capable version of ‌Siri‌.

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Top Rated Comments

iToph Avatar
6 weeks ago
So sheer cluelessness is called „strategy“ nowadays? Interesting…
Score: 31 Votes (Like | Disagree)
froot1988 Avatar
6 weeks ago
Blablablabla they can't even get the keyboard to work without stuttering and missinputs
Score: 24 Votes (Like | Disagree)
WarmWinterHat Avatar
6 weeks ago
Color me skeptical...Not only has Apple been flailing in the LLM space, they have been flailing with software across the board. iOS 26 sucks, the Photo app sucks, Tahoe sucks, they completely screwed up the workout portion of the watch, etc.

I'll believe it when I see it. Until then:



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Score: 22 Votes (Like | Disagree)
ZeroInspo Avatar
6 weeks ago

What strategy?

Behind severely behind isn’t a strategy. Not having a frontier model isn’t a strategy.
Why do they need a frontier model? Are there any profits in it? Is there significant user demand for it? Anyone who understands how LLMs work, and has taken out 5 minutes of their time to think of how organic consciousness work could have guessed that LLMs, in their current approach, would never reach what people think of when they think of AI, or AGI as they like to call it. That doesn't mean it isn't useful, it's just not useful enough for the average consumer.

Your mentality is what has driven our economy to be in its current suicidal state "this is the latest thing therefore we absolutely have to invest everything in it no matter whether it is profitable, useful or even wanted at all". Mind you I'm not against AI, I use it daily and probably more extensively than 99% of users. The question, however, is, do LLMs need to be embedded in everything and does every company absolutely have to develop their own proprietary LLM? The answer to both of those questions you will find is: NO.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
UliBaer Avatar
6 weeks ago
I'm curiously awaiting the incoming results - especially the overhauled Siri. :cool:
Score: 17 Votes (Like | Disagree)
swingerofbirch Avatar
6 weeks ago
That's a very distorted take.

They had a veritable boondoggle in their Tesla competitor development, and that was essentially all AI spending. Tim Cook said himself that autonomous driving was the ultimate AI challenge. That's where they spent years and fortunes.

The idea that they have been "restrained" rather than constrained and that the current state of Siri was strategic is preposterous.

The part I agree with is that Apple has so much inertia that not even introducing the iPhone 16/Pro with AI as the hallmark feature that then flopped has slowed them. It's not admirable, but it is true. They even made the flagship Apple Store have the new Siri glow for the 16 release. If that embarrassment didn't throw a wrench into the gears of the Apple machine, nothing in the foreseeable future will.
Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)