A handful of iPhone 6 users are reporting a flaw with their front-facing cameras where the module behind the glass appears to be offset, resulting in blurry or dark photos altogether.

The problem has been escalated to Reddit and has even caught the eye of financial analysts, who partially blame the recent fall in AAPL’s stock price on this particular issue.

In what is obviously a manufacturing defect, the issue is described by Redditor BAnOpenMindedSkeptic as follows:

“My iPhone 6's front facing camera is misaligned. There is a crescent visible on the right side of the hole. This also happened to my friends phone and a replacement model the Apple Store gave him. I'm wondering if others are seeing this issue.”

Seemingly widespread

Many responses ensued, with users reporting similar manufacturing woes. However, the number of commenters doesn’t necessarily equal the number of reported cases in the wild. Camera issues are being revealed on Apple Support Communities as well.

There, problems vary from blurry photos taken with the “rear” camera to software glitches. In other words, there are several types of manufacturing defects associated with these handsets, and considering the sheer number of new iPhones sold this year, it’s actually not unusual to see a bunch of these reports.

Reportedly affected AAPL valuation

More worrisome is the fact that several news outlets, specifically financial ones, are pinning the camera issues on a drop in Apple’s stock price in the past few days. Fortune highlights several “commentators,” with one of them saying that “The tech giant is also dealing with hundreds of iPhone 6 customers experiencing their phone’s front-facing ‘selfie’ camera not working properly.”

Needless to point out, a few busted iPhones is hardly grounds for a 6.4% plunge. The reasons may be as diverse as Apple’s entire product lineup. And there’s a good chance it has nothing to do with the performance of Apple’s iDevices in recent days or even recent weeks.

It still isn’t clear what caused the shares to go down by this much overnight, but it’s believed it had to do with programmed trading. More than 6.7 million shares were traded in less than one minute, at 9:51AM EST Monday. However, it is worth noting that several important tech companies also saw their stock take a plunge, with LinkedIn falling 4%, Facebook 2%, and Twitter falling as much as 5%.

In any case, a misaligned iPhone camera on a few hundred units isn’t enough to account for even 1% of that number. Especially when Apple is more than happy to replace faulty units, free of charge, no questions asked.