In PiperJaffray’s 13th bi-annual teen survey, “25 percent [students] said they’d be willing to buy one at the previously announced $500 entry point.”

Still, Munster said he’s modeling for the Cupertino-based electronics maker to sell just 660,000 iPhones during the 2007 fiscal year ending September and just another 4 million in the proceeding 12 months.
“We expect increasingly widespread adoption of the iPhone in more price-sensitive markets after the price gradually comes down,” he wrote. “Even if 20 percent of those students (or 5 percent overall) actually enter the market at $500, our estimate may prove to be conservative.”

[via AppleInsider]

In PiperJaffray’s 13th bi-annual teen survey, “25 percent [students] said they’d be willing to buy one at the previously announced $500 entry point.”

Still, Munster said he’s modeling for the Cupertino-based electronics maker to sell just 660,000 iPhones during the 2007 fiscal year ending September and just another 4 million in the proceeding 12 months.
“We expect increasingly widespread adoption of the iPhone in more price-sensitive markets after the price gradually comes down,” he wrote. “Even if 20 percent of those students (or 5 percent overall) actually enter the market at $500, our estimate may prove to be conservative.”

[via AppleInsider]

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