But
Wall Street is still expecting a near-record sales quarter for
the Cupertino, California company's signature device when it
reports fiscal first-quarter earnings on Wednesday, with
estimates of $59.8 billion, according to IBES data from
Refinitiv as of Jan. 26. If Apple beats the number, it could
eclipse its all-time record of $61.58 billion in iPhone sales
for the first quarter of fiscal 2018.
Analyst largely attribute the boost to the timing of the iPhone
12 lineup, which had a new look, 5G cellular data connectivity
and new models at the top and bottom of the sizing range.
"They have an extremely good understanding of what their refresh
cycle looks like and when waves are possible and whey they are
not," said Ben Bajarin, head of consumer technologies at
Creative Strategies. "Every bit of data across China and Europe
has shown that not only was the installed base getting older,
but people were not refreshing. I think (Apple) knew it would be
heavy refresh cycle."
Analyst also expect strong Mac sales of $8.69 billion, according
to Refinitiv data from Jan. 26, thanks in part to the
introduction of models with the first central processor chip for
its laptops and desktop that Apple designed itself. Overall,
analysts expect $103.28 billion in sales and earnings per share
of $1.41 for Apple's fiscal first quarter.
A "super cycle" of booms in iPhone sales after several more
modest years are not new to Apple - the company's previous high
came after it announced the iPhone X, with a new design. During
previous cycles, Apple's shares often traded at lower
price-to-earnings ratios than its rivals due to Apple's
dependence on the iPhone.
But those ratios have risen over the past year, and analyst Toni
Sacconaghi of Bernstein wondered how much further they can go.
"At 33x consensus (fiscal year 2021 earnings per share), and
buyside expectations above the Street's, we struggle to see case
for material outperformance in (Apple), absent a surprise
product announcement or migration to a bundled hardware
subscription model," he wrote in a note to clients.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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