It appears Apple’s days of rabid growth are over. The Cupertino, California firm is forecasting its first sales decline in over a decade, according to a company filing posted Tuesday. Apple’s guidance for revenue in the current quarter, ending in March, is just over fifty billion dollars. Even the high end of that range falls below what Apple generated during the same period last year.Rico says he wonders who else in the tech world is making that much money...
If Apple’s own predictions come to pass, the company is about to mark its first quarterly revenue drop since 2003. The company’s stock was down more than one percent in after-hours trading.
Apple’s biggest headache? Flagging iPhone sales. The smartphone is by far the company’s biggest source of revenue. But the iPhone just had its slowest growth quarter since it was released in 2007, with revenue from the device up just one percent.
Still, it’s not all doom and gloom. Apple posted record quarterly revenue for the three-month period ending in December: over seventy-five billion dollars, compared to just under seventy-five billion a year ago. But the results lend credence to analysts’ warnings that Apple’s growth is slowing.
A big part of Apple’s iPhone problem is China. The world’s second-biggest economy is also Apple’s second-biggest market. But economic troubles there are causing a slowdown that’s apparent in Apple’s results. On top of that, Timothy Arcuri, a managing director at Cowen & Company covering the technology industry, says Apple already dominates China’s high-end smartphone market. That makes continued growth there harder. “They’re sort of a victim of their own success but, in China, it’s magnified,” says Arcuri. “The way they’re going to grow in China is if more customers come into the premium phone market, which will happen, but it’s going to take time.”
All told, the earnings report will fuel concerns that iPhone sales have peaked. That conversation first started when two of Apple’s biggest suppliers lowered their forecasts for the first quarter of this year, a sign that iPhone demand is dropping.
But there is hope for the iPhone. Apple releases new handsets on an annual cycle, with wholly new models in “A” years and minor upgrades in “B” models. This year will see the former, offering Apple the chance to wow consumers once again.
Arcuri adds that many iPhone owners are on a two-year upgrade cycle pegged to “A” years, so those periods naturally see higher sales. “The iPhone 6s could have been the best thing since sliced bread, but people aren’t going to buy it because they bought the 6,” he says.
While the iPhone remains Apple’s most critical device, the company has striven to dispel the idea that it’s a one-trick pony. Apple has expanded into new product categories like smartwatches, and revamped its Apple TV in 2015. Apple doesn’t break out individual sales figures for these devices, but instead lumps them into a general “Other” category. That group saw a sixty-two percent boost in revenue year-over-year in the most recent quarter.
In a call following the earnings report, Apple also highlighted the growth of its Services category, which is up fifteen percent year-over-year for the quarter. That includes items iTunes music sales, App Store sales, and Apple Pay fees.
27 January 2016
iPhone sales a headache for Apple
Time has an article by Lisa Eadicicco, Alex Fitzpatrick, and Arpita Aneja about Apple:
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