- McIlroy hopes Trump election victory helps end golf rift
- Low taxes, high tariffs: What a Trump victory means for the US economy
- Germany's Scholz tells Trump: 'We're better off together'
- What's going wrong at Man City?
- Lebanon files UN complaint against Israel over pager attacks
- Man City told to pay majority of Mendy's unpaid wages
- 'Going to be rough': NATO braces for Trump's return
- UniCredit says needs a year to decide Commerzbank deal
- Madrid heading for crisis with Kroos gone and Mbappe floundering
- Dollar soars, stocks rally as Trump wins US election
- 'Worry' in Ukraine at Trump victory at critical moment in war
- Indian village proud as Trump claims victory
- Osimhen beginning to make mark for Galatasaray ahead of Spurs clash
- Americans must wait for their first woman president
- Hungary's Orban jubilant at Trump victory as he hosts EU leaders
- Trump's climate denial and green rollbacks poised to fuel warming
- Trump victory to bring unrestrained 'America First' to world
- Dutch court upholds e-cigarette flavour ban
- Trump may further test US military norms in second term
- Trump: political Houdini does it again
- Trump wins White House in stunning comeback
- Tesla shares soar pre-market as Trump hails 'genius' Musk
- Interpol says over 2,500 arrests in human trafficking crackdown
- PlayStation 5 Pro goes on sale, will gamers pay hefty price to play?
- Obesity drug maker Novo Nordisk posts strong profit
- Trump claims 'magnificent' victory over Harris
- Russian senators ratify North Korean defence pact
- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record, as Trump claims victory
- Trump claims victory over Harris in US presidential election
- Multiple US states extend abortion rights, while Florida measure fails
- Thousands in Israel protest sacking of defence minister
- Anti-Brussels firebrand Orban to host European leaders in Hungary
- Trump on verge of victory over Harris
- China says ex-government worker to be executed for spying
- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record, stocks swing as Trump win seen
- Mood darkens at Democratic parties as Trump gains key states
- Afghanistan poppy cultivation grows 19 percent despite ban: UN
- Toyota maintains net profit forecast despite drop in first half
- Trump pushes ahead of Harris with second swing state win
- Snow seen on Mount Fuji after record absence
- Trump wins swing state, edges ahead of Harris in US election
- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record, stocks gain as Trump win seen
- Talent, toil and pleasing Kim bring N. Korea women's football glory
- Harris or Trump? US election heads for cliffhanger
- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record and stocks rally as Trump win seen
- Sarah McBride to be first transgender person in US Congress
- Florida ballot initiative to extend abortion rights fails
- Russia blamed for hoax bomb threats at US voting sites
- Taiwan students design drones for mock battle, as China threat looms
- Florida ballot initiative to extend abortion rights fails: US media
PlayStation 5 Pro goes on sale, will gamers pay hefty price to play?
The PlayStation 5 Pro hits shops on Thursday with a price tag that has raised eyebrows among gamers, but growing sticker shocks in the tech industry have yet to deter consumers.
The upgraded version of Sony's flagship gaming console is retailing for $699.99 in the United States -- $250 more than the previous PlayStation 5 model.
It will cost an eye-watering 799.99 euros ($860), 250 euros higher than the older version, in Europe and almost 120,000 yen ($780) in Japan, where Sony is based.
"I don't think I'm going to buy it. I don't want to spend amounts like that to buy a console," said Hideki Hasegawa, a 45-year-old entrepreneur in Tokyo.
He recalled a time when consoles "didn't cost more than 30,000 yen".
With the release of the PlayStation 5 dating to 2020, the Pro version gives Sony a chance to integrate improvements that allow games to run faster and with better graphics.
"Simply put it's the most powerful console we've ever built and a worthy edition to the PS5 family," PlayStation's lead architect Mark Cerny said at an event in September.
However, the higher price "looks challenging from a marketing perspective", said J.P. Morgan analyst Junya Ayada.
Analysts said Sony had failed to boost flagging sales when it released an upgrade to the PlayStation 4 in 2016 at a higher cost than the previous version.
- New technologies -
Sony is not the only tech company making consumers fork out for their latest devices.
"It's a broadly similar trend across all device types, whether it's sort of, you know, phones, video games... AR glasses, smartwatches," said Jack Leathem, an analyst at Canalys, a firm that analyses the technology market.
While Apple kept the price of the iPhone 16 unchanged from the iPhone 15 when it launched in September, the $799 starting price is much larger than those for flagship smartphones five years ago.
The trend is similar at Apple's competitors like Samsung, which has begun selling foldable screen phones like the Galaxy Z Fold 6.
"These are new market entrants that are bringing in new technologies, which will usually mean that comes with a premium price," Brian Comiskey, a specialist in the evolution of technology at the Consumer Technology Association, told AFP.
Rising prices also reflect an increase in the cost of raw materials, said Leathem, pointing to soaring prices for rare earth minerals like indium and yttrium.
The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into devices has also had an impact.
"These companies have to make a profit," Leathem said.
"And they're having to sort of balance off the sheer volume of money they're investing in AI and new technologies by increasing the price of the device as well," he said.
- Tech in instalments -
But rising prices do not seem to be cooling the ardour of consumers for the latest tech products.
According to Canalys's figures, nearly 310 million smartphones were sold in the first nine months of the year, a five percent increase from the same period last year.
For Josh Lewitz, an analyst at Consumers Intelligence Research Partners, "there's definitely been a sort of a ratcheting up of what price is possible for a phone".
But consumers are also holding onto their devices longer, and in many markets including the United States operators are offering clients the possibility to pay for the phone in instalments.
"That has made the relative price difference less important," said Michael Levin, also an analyst at Consumers Intelligence Research Partners.
O.Johnson--AMWN