Apple results top Wall Street targets on strong iPhone sales, shares slip on outlook

APPLE’S AI-enhanced iPhone made a strong start, helping push quarterly sales ahead of Wall Street expectations, but questions about whether the rollout will continue apace were underscored by a modest revenue forecast.

A decline in China sales during the fourth quarter also concerned some analysts and investors, helping send shares down about 2 per cent in after-hours trade, despite surprisingly large overall profit and revenue in the fourth quarter.

“We expect our December quarter, total company revenue to grow low to mid single digits year over year,” CFO Luca Maestri said on a call with analysts, referring to Apple‘s current first quarter. Analysts had expected revenue growth of 6.65 per cent to US$127.53 billion during the first quarter, according to LSEG data.

IPhone sales helped steady Apple‘s fourth-quarter sales in China, which were down less than 1 per cent to US$15.03 billion overall. But analysts were expecting larger China sales, of US$15.78 billion, according to data from Visible Alpha.

Prior to management’s call with analysts, Tom Forte, an analyst at Maxim Group, attributed Apple‘s share drop to China sales coming in below expectations.

“We see the potential for sustained weakness in China,” he said. Apple said fourth-quarter sales were US$94.93 billion, ahead of Wall Street targets of US$94.58 billion, according to LSEG.

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Earnings of US$1.64 per share, excluding a massive one-time tax charge in the European Union, topped analyst expectations of US$1.60 per share.

Fourth-quarter sales of Apple‘s iPhone, the company’s main product, were up 5.5 per cent to US$46.22 billion, compared with analyst estimates of US$45.47 billion. Other product lines missed expectations.

Apple‘s fourth quarter ended Sept 28, meaning it reflects only a few days of sales of its iPhone 16 series that went on sale Sept 20. Apple Chief executive Tim Cook told Reuters that iPhone 16 sales grew faster than iPhone 15 sales did a year earlier, with both phones on sale for the same number of days in the fourth quarter.

Cook also said Apple customers are downloading a new version of its iPhone operating system with what it calls Apple Intelligence features at twice the rate they had the year before.

“We’ve had great feedback from customers and developers already,” Cook said. “We’re off to a good start.”

AI strategy

The rollout of Apple‘s artificial-intelligence strategy, which it revealed this year, hinges on how well its new phones sell.

Rather than introduce AI in a standalone app or service, Apple has sprinkled Apple Intelligence throughout its most recent operating systems as new features, such as the ability to help re-write an email in a more professional tone.

Those features will mostly be available on iPhone 16 models, which feature more powerful computing chips, although the pro versions of the iPhone 15 both work with Apple Intelligence.

While some of those Apple Intelligence features arrived this week, others have been delayed, which has led some Wall Street analysts to wonder whether consumers will be slower to upgrade their devices this year while flagship software features trickle out. 

Apple‘s rivals Microsoft and Meta both said this week they expect continued increases in spending to support their AI strategies. Apple said payments for property and equipment – a measure of its capital expenditures – were up US$2.91 billion from the previous quarter to US$9.45 billion.

Apple‘s lower spending comes in part because it uses third-party data centres for some AI work. Some aspects of Apple Intelligence do rely on Apple‘s own data centres, but the company is using its own in-house chips to power those features.

“There would be some (financial) benefit to us by using our own silicon, obviously, but that’s not the reason we’re doing it. We’re doing it because we can provide the same standard of privacy and security that we can provide on device,” Cook said.

Sales in Apple‘s services business, which includes iCloud storage and Apple Music, were US$24.97 billion, compared with analyst expectations of US$25.28 billion, according to LSEG.

Mac and iPad sales were US$7.74 billion and US$6.95 billion, respectively, compared to estimates of US$7.82 billion and US$7.09 billion, according to LSEG data.

Sales in Apple‘s home and wearables business, which includes its Apple Watch and AirPods devices, fell to US$9.04 billion, compared with estimates of US$9.2 billion, according to LSEG.

Earnings per share were 97 cents including the charge related to a one-time multi-billion-euro European tax payment. REUTERS

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