For years, Apple
consistently beat Wall Street expectations, not only because the company
habitually low-balled its financial projections, but also because it
was growing at a rate and scale that was virtually unprecedented in the
history of corporate America. It appears those days are over.
For the third consecutive quarter, Apple, the world’s largest
technology company, fell short of analyst estimates, sending the
company’s stock down a whopping 10% in after-hours trading, wiping out
nearly $50 billion in shareholder value. Although it reported record
financial results, Apple’s slowing growth has raised questions about the
next phase in the company’s evolution.
(MORE: Apple Profit Surges 24% Ahead of Holiday Blowout; CEO Tim Cook Disses Microsoft)
One thing is for sure: The numbers associated with Apple’s business
are staggering. Apple sold 47.8 million iPhones and 22.9 million
iPads during the holiday quarter, but both of those figures were about
one million short of analyst expectations. The company generated profit
of $13.1 billion, but that was flat compared to the year ago period —
the company’s lowest rate of profit growth in a decade — in part because
of higher production costs associated with new products. Revenue came
in at $54.5 billion, an 18% increase over one year ago, but less than
the $55 billion that analysts had been expecting.
For the current quarter, Apple projected sales of between $41 billion
and $43 billion, but that number also fell below the $45.6 billion that
analysts had been expecting. That translates to revenue growth of about
7%, which is lower than the double-digit sales growth that Apple had
enjoyed in recent years.
The fundamental question facing Apple is whether its existing, wildly
popular products like the iPhone and the iPad can continue to power
revenue and profit growth, or whether it needs new, breakthrough
products. After all, during his legendary career, Apple’s late
co-founder Steve Jobs radically disrupted several industries with iconic products like the iPod, iPhone and iPad.
(MORE: Apple Earnings Miss Wall Street Target as Buyers Wait for New iPhone)
“It has been an overriding concern with Apple that they would not be
able to generate revenue growth just rolling out new versions of old
products,” Jeff Sica, president and chief investment officer of SICA
Wealth Management, told the Associated Press. “Now they’ve proven it in their numbers.”
What will be Apple’s next revolutionary product? On a conference call
with analysts, Apple CEO Tim Cook didn’t say — he likes to keep people
guessing — but he did insist that the company has some surprises up its
sleeve.
“We’re working on some incredible stuff,” Cook said. “The pipeline is
chock full.” There has been speculation that Apple could introduce a
new television product, especially after Jobs
told his biographer Walter Isaacson that he cracked the code on a
revolutionary new TV. But so far, those rumors remain just that —
rumors. “We’re very confident in our product pipeline as we continue to
focus on innovation and making the best products in the world,” Cook
added in a statement.
(More: Is Apple Losing Its Shine After Steve Jobs?)
Apple’s most recent quarter was just the latest period to fall short
of Wall Street expectations. (Though to be fair, the most recent holiday
quarter was one week shorter than the previous year. Also, new products
— and there were several this holiday season — are more expensive to
produce.) Last October,
sales of the company’s iPad tablet device fell short of analyst
forecasts, as many consumers held off buying in anticipation of the new
iPad Mini. And in July,
Apple’s iPhone sales disappointed analysts, again, as buyers waited for
the new model. This suggests that consumers are becoming more savvy —
and perhaps selective — about Apple’s product cycle.
Apple’s latest quarter raised questions for some Wall Street
analysts. ”It’s going to call into question Apple’s dominance in the
space,” Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu told
Reuters. “It’s still one of the strong players, the others being
Samsung and Google. It’s still a two-horse race, but Android continues
to grow rapidly.” Indeed, Google’s Android mobile operating system is
the most ubiquitous platform in the world, although it’s vastly less
profitable for Google than the iOS devices are for Apple.
Apple’s slowing growth rate has taken a major bite out of the company’s stock price, which has declined
by nearly 30% since its peak in September — and that’s before
Wednesday’s 10% after-hours free fall. Still, despite the pessimism,
which is being driven by typically sky-high expectations, there’s is
little doubt that Apple’s fundamental business remains very
strong. “Sentiment has turned super-pessimistic on Apple, where they’ve
gone from being able to do no wrong to suddenly being able to do no
right,” Rob Cihra, an analyst at Evercore Partners, told the New York Times. “I tend to think the company’s momentum is a heck of a lot more solid than people are concerned about.”
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