The low-key launch, held at the technology company's Cupertino,
California campus rather than its traditional splash at a much
larger venue in San Francisco, did not wow tech experts or
investors.
But the new mid-range model was seen as necessary to counter the
dominance of cheaper phones running Google's Android system.
"There are people who want that smaller screen size," said Bob
O'Donnell of TECHnalysis Research. "You do a price cut when you need
to drive the market a bit more," though he questioned if the price
was low enough to generate significant demand.
Apple is hoping the cheaper model will stimulate overall iPhone
sales, which it expects to decline this quarter for the first time
since it essentially created the smartphone market nine years ago.
The new model did not allay investor concerns that Apple, which
celebrates its 40th birthday on April 1, has no obvious blockbusters
in its pipeline.
“Apple is so big now that nothing seems to be earth-shaking anymore,
and the strategy seems to be turning to offering complementary
products like watch bands so they can maintain their sales
momentum,” said Skip Aylesworth, portfolio manager of the Hennessy
Technology Fund.
The company showed off new wristbands for the Apple Watch and a new
iPad Pro tablet at Monday's event, and a robot called Liam to take
apart old iPhones and reuse the materials.
But none of those moves generated much excitement among investors.
Apple shares fell in the afternoon and were down about $0.15 at
$105.77. The stock is down 20 percent from its all-time high closing
price of $133 in February 2015.
The iPhone SE's 4-inch screen is the same size as the iPhone 5C,
which fizzled and is no longer available on Apple's online store.
The iPhone 6S, which previously had the smallest screen of the
sixth-generation line-up, is 4.7 inches.
The new phone has a 12-megapixel camera and starts at $399 for 16 GB
of memory.
The model represents Apple's second bid for the crowded mid-tier
market after an unsuccessful foray three years ago. Orders start on
Thursday, and the phone will be available next week.
The starting price is well below the $649 for the current top iPhone
model without a contract, which is beyond the reach of many. With
Apple's vaunted A9 chip, the new phone is twice as fast as Apple's
previous attempt at an entry-level phone, launched in 2013. It also
runs Apple Pay and comes in the wildly popular rose gold color.
The more compact phone design comes after Apple expanded the size of
the screens in its high-end iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus phones in
2014 to as large as 5.5 inches. That was broadly seen as an attempt
to match rival Samsung Electronics <005930.KS> with its large-screen
Galaxy phones.
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Apple is still expected to introduce a top-of-the-line, large-screen
iPhone 7 late this year. The company now appears to be following a
two-pronged approach to attack the top and the middle of the
smartphone market.
“If these smaller phones are a gateway into the Apple ecosystem then
over the long term it improves Apple’s chances of growing at a
comfortable rate," said David Meier, a fund manager with Motley Fool
Funds.
Reaction to the multi-model strategy was mixed on social media.
"So what's Apple's line-up next year? iPhone 7, 6s and a new SE?"
tweeted Benedict Evans, a partner at venture capital firm Andreessen
Horowitz. He also posted an image of several iPad models with the
caption: "Please tell me this is getting cleaned up."
COOK DEFENDS PRIVACY STANCE
Before the launch, Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook played up the
company's role as a staunch defender of its customers' data and as a
good corporate citizen with announcements of a new recycling effort
and software for mobile apps that help people manage health
conditions.
He repeated his refusal to comply with a U.S. court order to unlock
an iPhone belonging to one of the shooters in a December attack in
San Bernardino, California.
Apple has a responsibility to protect customers' data and privacy,
Cook said, adding that Apple "will not shrink from that
responsibility." His statement was greeted by applause from the
audience.
The tech company's dispute with the U.S. government has become a
lightning rod for a broader debate on data privacy in the United
States. The company is set to square off against the U.S. government
at a court hearing on Tuesday, likely the first round in a long
legal fight to avoid being forced to decrypt the iPhone.
(Reporting by Julia Love, Noel Randewich, Mari Saito, David Randall
and Amy Tennery; Writing by Bill Rigby; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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