Despite reporting better-than-expected iPhone sales, Apple’s
latest earnings missed Wall Street estimates for the first time in four
years driving the shares in the world’s most valuable company down as
much as 6 percent in after-hours trading.
Apple reported revenue of $50.56 billion for the three
months to the end of March, which represented a 13 percent drop compared
with the $58 billion it earned in the same period last year. Profits
were down even further, with the $10.5 billion significantly down on the
$13.6 billion it reported last year — a drop of 23 percent. Earnings
per share came in at $1.90 per diluted share, which again was down on
the $2.33 reported last year.
The consensus among Wall Street analysts polled by Thomson
Reuters before the results were announced was for Apple to report
revenue of $52 billion earnings per share of $2.
Apple has also issued guidance for the current quarter,
which is lighter than analysts had predicted, estimating revenue of
between $41 billion and $43 billion and gross margin of between
37.5 percent and 38 percent. This compares with revenue of $49.6 billion
and a gross margin of 39.7 percent in the same period last year.
CEO Tim Cook, in an earnings call with analysts, called the quarter
“very busy and challenging,” pointing to highlights like strong growth
in services (iTunes, App Store and Apple Pay) which outperformed the
company’s Mac business for the first time.The most significant decline came in Apple’s iPhone business which makes up the majority of Apple’s overall revenue. In the first three months of 2016 the company sold 51.2 million iPhones, which is well below the 61 million it sold in the same period last year but was ahead of Wall Street analysts’ prediction of 50 million units sold.
Cook, however, called the iPhone business “healthy and strong,” pointing to strong conversion of Android users to the iPhone and sales of iPhones in India up 56 percent year on year — though according to figures from Counterpoint Research, Apple still holds just 2 percent of the market in the subcontinent.
"Despite weak guidance, which we attribute to a pause ahead of the iPhone 7 launch and soft iPhone 6s cycle, we see the June quarter as the trough,” Angelo Zino, equity analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence said in a research note.
Apple is being impacted by an overall slowdown in demand for smartphones globally, with IDC predicting growth in the market will slow to almost half what it saw in 2015, with slowdown in China — a market where Apple has seen huge growth in the last two years — being particularly significant.
Elsewhere Apple's iPad line continued to decline despite the
introduction of new models with the company selling 10.3 million units
during the quarter, down from the 12.6 million units it sold in the same
period last year. While the number of iPad users continues to
increase, it is a competitive marketplace and Apple has been losing
share of the U.S. tablet market. After falling below 50 percent for the
first time in 2015, Apple's share of the tablet market is expected to
drop to 47.8 percent in 2016 according to eMarketer and by 2020 the
market research firm estimates that figure will drop to 44 percent.
Apple's Mac division, which has consistently outperformed
the falling PC market in recent years, reported sales of 4 million
units, down from 4.5 million units in the same period last year and down
from 5.3 million in the last quarter. Overall the PC market saw a drop
of almost 10 percent in first three months of 2016 according to figures
from Gartner.
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