Lagging demand for the iPhone X and reports from smartphone chipmakers of decreased orders has some analysts predicting that Apple will retire its most expensive phone.
Mirabaud analyst [Neil Campling](https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/20/apple-iphone-x-discontinued-this-year-analyst-says.html) said he anticipates the iPhone X will likely be discontinued this year.
According to Sascha Segan, lead analyst for PCMag.com, that's not going to happen. Instead, Segan said that Apple would launch new iPhones in the fall and the X would live on as the premium iPhone on the market.
"We are going to do a little flipping here," said Segan. "You have this prestige position where the X is, and then the 11 and then the 12 possibly."
When asked if the X is worthy of that prestige position, Segan said, "No, I never thought the iPhone X was worth a thousand dollars."
The iPhone X is still the most profitable iPhone despite underwhelming demand. Segan said that Apple was testing consumers' limits with the iPhone X. But he thinks the company will keep pushing those limits.
For full interview, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/iphone-x-dead).
Co-founder and CEO of Rad Intel, Jeremy Barnett, joins Cheddar anchor Dave Briggs to discuss the influencer marketing space and how RAD is changing the game.
Houseplant Founders Seth Rogen and Mikey Mohr joined anchor Dave Briggs to discuss the changing culture around Cannabis and their smoke-ware brand Houseplant.
Julie Bowen joins anchor Dave Briggs to discuss the What's App ad with a few Modern Family reunions, her most recent spooky role, Xiidra, and Happy Gilmore 2.
Welcome to the new age, where Big Tech runs AI on tiny nuclear plants! Plus, banks make bank, the best kind of cancel culture and the wealth gap explained.