Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Apple’s revenue returned to growth during the holiday period, beating analysts’ expectations with a boost from its services division and solid iPhone sales.
Apple’s revenues were $119.6bn for the quarter to the end of December, up 2 per cent from the same period in the previous year and beating consensus estimates of $118.3bn, according to S&P Capital IQ. That breaks a four-quarter streak of declining revenue.
Chief executive Tim Cook credited iPhone sales, which rose 6 per cent to $69.7bn, and an “all-time revenue record in services”, as the number of active Apple devices surpassed 2.2bn.
Apple’s services business, which includes the App Store, iCloud, Apple Pay and Apple TV, recorded $23.1bn in revenue for the quarter, up 11 per cent from $20.7bn the year before, continuing to increase its share of the company’s business.
Sales to greater China were down, however, at $20.8bn compared to $24bn for the same quarter the prior year. That reflected pressure from resurgent competitor Huawei, as well as restrictions Beijing has reportedly imposed on Apple products in some government agencies amid geopolitical tensions with Washington.
Apple chief financial officer Luca Maestri played down the decline in China sales, blaming it in part on a stronger dollar. He said the installed base of iPhones in the country hit a new all-time record, and the company had “solid growth on upgraders on a year-over-year basis”.
Net income in the quarter was $33.9bn, from $30bn a year ago. Diluted earnings per share were $2.18, up 16 per cent year over year.
Shares fell 2 per cent in after-hours trading.
Investor attention has been focused on how hardware sales have held up, after the company launched the iPhone 15 in September. In January, Barclays and Piper Sandler both downgraded their ratings on Apple stock citing concerns about weaker demand for the iPhone in 2024.
Samsung and Google have released handsets with new generative artificial intelligence capabilities, leading to expectations that Apple will soon respond with similar features on its own devices to prompt consumers to upgrade and stay in its ecosystem.
Apple shares are up about 28 per cent over the past 12 months. It was recently overtaken by Microsoft as the world’s most valuable company, as its market cap slipped below $3tn.
The results come the day before Apple’s new Vision Pro mixed reality headset goes on sale in the US, its biggest new product launch in almost a decade.
Maestri told the Financial Times the Vision Pro would have 600 apps specifically designed to use the mixed reality capabilities of the headset, with more than 1mn apps in total.
“The level of customer enthusiasm and developer enthusiasm is very strong,” Maestri said. “All the premises are very good.”
Read the full article here