Apple
expands buybacks by $30 billion, OKs 7-for-1 stock split
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[April 24, 2014]
By Edwin Chan
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) — Apple Inc has
approved another $30 billion in share buybacks till the end of 2015
and authorized a rarely seen seven-for-one stock split, addressing
calls to share more of its cash hoard while broadening the stock's
appeal to individual investors.
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The company also approved a roughly 8 percent increase in its
quarterly dividend to $3.29 per share.
Activist investor Carl Icahn, who had famously called on the iPhone
maker to boost its buyback program, tweeted his approval of the move
on Wednesday.
Shares of the company, which have remain mired around the $500 to
$550 range since the start of the year, jumped 7 percent to $561.51
in after-hours trade.
On Wednesday, Apple reported sales of 43.7 million iPhones in the
quarter ended March, far outpacing the roughly 38 million that Wall
Street had predicted. That drove a 4.6 percent rise in revenue to
$45.6 billion — a record for any non-holiday quarter — and beating
Wall Street's projections for about $43.5 billion.
But whether Apple can again produce a revolutionary new product
remains the central question in investors' and Silicon Valley
executives' minds. The smartphone market is maturing and rivals like
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Google Inc are taking chunks out of
its mobile-device market share.
Many hope that the next iPhone, which sources have said will sport a
larger screen with new display technology, will provide a timely
lift to the company's bottom line come September, when Apple usually
introduces the latest version of its core product.
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Speculation persists that the company will take the lead in wearable
devices with a smartwatch or other gadget, given that Chief
Executive Officer Tim Cook has spoken about "new product categories"
for 2014.
For now, the company's momentum in China and emerging markets has
been the topic of much discussion in investor circles. On Wednesday,
Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri told Reuters the jump in iPhone
sales was "very broad-based," but singled out greater China and
Japan, where business got a boost from the recent inclusion of NTT
Docomo and China Mobile as carrier partners.
Overall revenue from greater China, which includes Hong Kong and
Taiwan, climbed 13 percent to $9.29 billion in the quarter. Japanese
sales rose 26 percent to $3.96 billion.
(Reporting by Edwin Chan; editing by Bernard Orr)
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