Apple's pricey iPhone X, subscriptions deliver earnings
beat
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[August 01, 2018]
By Stephen Nellis and Sonam Rai
(Reuters) - Apple Inc sales led by the
pricey iPhone X pushed quarterly results far beyond Wall Street targets
on Tuesday, with subscriptions from App Store, Apple Music and iCloud
services bolstering business.
The world's most valuable technology company also forecast revenue above
expectations for the fall, when it typically launches new iPhone models,
reassuring a nervous tech sector that saw sell-offs last week in
Facebook Inc, Twitter Inc and Netflix Inc on concerns about their future
growth.
The Cupertino, California company has responded to a plateauing global
smartphone market by launching ever-more expensive phones and
diversifying into services, prospering even as rival Samsung Electronics
Co Ltd missed targets for its flagship Galaxy S9 and China's Huawei
Technologies Co Ltd [HWT.UL] took the No. 2 global smartphone sales
spot.
Apple also regained growth in China, where sales rose 19 percent. Sales
there fell dramatically in 2016 after Chinese consumers shunned the
iPhone 7, whose overall appearance differed little from its predecessor.
And a $20 billion stock buyback in the quarter spurred by sweeping U.S.
corporate tax cuts brought Apple's buyback tally this year to a record
$43 billion and exceeded the stock market value of almost three-quarters
of the companies in the S&P 500.
"The lesson Apple’s management has learned from the iPhone X, is when
you sell a smartphone for more than $1,000 you can sell fewer units and
still reap the financial benefits," said analyst Thomas Forte from D.A.
Davidson & Co.
Shares rose 3.7 percent in extended trade to $197.34, a record high,
putting its market capitalization at $954 billion. The stock would need
to hit $206.49 for Apple to become the first publicly traded U.S.
company to cross the $1 trillion threshold, based on Apple's share count
at the end of the quarter. Apple may have reduced its share count since
then.
Apple sold 41.3 million iPhones in the fiscal third quarter, half a
million less than expected, but the average iPhone selling price topped
expectation by $30, hitting $724, according to FactSet. Apple Chief
Financial Officer Luca Maestri told Reuters that customers were buying
costlier models and the $999 iPhone X was the quarter's best seller.
Apple posted third-quarter revenue of $53.3 billion and profits of $2.34
per share, compared with analyst estimates of $52.3 billion and $2.18
per share, respectively, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. (Graphic:
https://tmsnrt.rs/2LNgw6q)
It also forecast revenue of $60 billion to $62 billion for its fiscal
fourth quarter, which will include early sales of soon-to-be-announced
phone models, beating the $59.6 billion analysts expected, according to
data from Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Despite the beat, James Cordwell, an analyst from Atlantic Equities,
said the high selling prices might cause investors some concern because
"there’s a limit to how much Apple can grow the iPhone franchise by
pushing pricing."
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The company's logo is seen outside Austria's first Apple store,
which opens on February 24, during a media preview in Vienna,
Austria, February 22, 2018. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader/File Photo
Apple services include streaming music and video, where Apple faces competition
from rivals including Spotify Technology SA and Netflix.
But several of Apple's services do not face strong rivals. Maestri told Reuters
that sales from Apple Care, the company's warranty offering, were up 27 percent
versus a year ago.
Apple's biggest selling products do not yet face duties stemming from the
U.S.-China trade disputes, but President Donald Trump has threatened hundreds of
billions of further tariffs whose product categories have not yet been
enumerated.
Apple is looking at whether it will be hit by tariffs on purchases the company
must make, possibly related to data centers, Chief Executive Tim Cook said on a
conference call with investors.
He credited "wearables", a category which includes wireless earphones and the
Apple Watch, with making growing contributions, and the Watch could be hit by
tariffs. Maestri told Reuters that Apple could not keep up with demand for
AirPods headphones.
Services revenue was $9.5 billion, beating analyst expectations of $9.1 billion,
according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. The revenue included $236 million from
resolving lawsuits such as Apple's long-running dispute with Samsung Electronics
Co Ltd.
Apple executives emphasized the recurring nature of much of that revenue, saying
the company had reached 300 million subscriptions on its devices, a figure that
includes both Apple's own services such as music and third-party subscriptions
such as Netflix, where Apple takes a cut of the revenue when it handles the
billing.
Cook said Apple Music has more than 50 million users when free trials are
counted and hinted at the company's video content efforts. Apple has hired
prominent television executives from Sony Corp and started making deals for
content such as a dramatic series with Hollywood stars Reese Witherspoon and
Jennifer Aniston.
Apple has yet to say how it will distribute those shows or how much it will
charge, but Cook said Apple is "thrilled about our pipeline that have some new
services in it."
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco and Sonam Rai in Bengaluru;
Editing by Peter Henderson and Lisa Shumaker)
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