There is one nuance that the naive public forgets about, but which cunning manufacturers use - the quality of the goods. As prices drop, quality drops. You expect the quality of the goods, as at the original price, but in reality this is almost never the case ...
If for some reason the manufacturer cannot influence the quality, he reduces the weight or volume of the package, as everyone knows in the products. For example, in the USA, when the price of eggs increased 3 times, they simply began to sell 10 pieces, instead of the standard 12.
But in a highly sophisticated product, there are always many ways to imperceptibly lower the quality, but at the same time clearly inflate the price, at the level of the original quality. And all this is not taken into account by naive buyers who do not see the overall margin flow, on average, at the level of all released batches of goods but with different levels of quality (and hence the cost for the manufacturer).
The quality of Samsung SSD drives (as well as other manufacturers) also drops significantly with decreasing price. You can only find out when testing large batches of goods and during long-term tests, which no one naturally does.
If the consumer of the product knew exactly the difference in batches, he would most likely find that even this last price is significantly overpriced, in reality.