The
brokerage trimmed its iPhone revenue estimate to $63 billion for
the first quarter of fiscal 2022, which would be a yearly fall
of nearly 4%, analyst Samik Chatterjee said in a note to
clients.
Last week, Needham said it expected iPhone 13 shipments to total
80 million units in the first quarter and cut its estimates for
the holiday quarter by 10 million units citing supply chain
issues including the chip shortage.
For the fourth quarter, JPM expects iPhones to bring in revenue
of $46 billion after selling 58 million units, marginally higher
than Wall Street's forecast of $41 billion.
According to Refinitiv IBES, analysts are expecting about 45
million units for the holiday quarter and 79.4 million units in
the first quarter.
While Apple has weathered the supply crunch better than many
other companies due to its massive purchasing power and
long-term supply agreements with chip vendors, supply chain
bottlenecks and lockdown in countries like Vietnam in the second
half of the year are hampering its production timelines.
Bloomberg News reported last week that the Cupertino,
California-based company is likely to slash production of its
iPhone 13 by as many as 10 million units due to the global chip
shortage.
Customers wanting an iPhone 13 are already having their patience
tested with one of the longest wait times for the phone in
recent years, analysts said.
"We continue to see strong demand for iPhone 13 and 5G iPhone SE
relative to low investor expectations to act as a catalyst, the
timing of realization of which, although delayed on account of
supply headwinds, is unchanged in magnitude," Chatterjee said.
However, Apple said on Monday that its two new MacBook Pro
models, that run on more powerful in-house chips, and new
AirPods 3, will start shipping next week.
Apple's announcement of hardware innovations for the holiday
season despite the chip shortage showed the company was flexing
its supply chain muscles, Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives said.
(Reporting by Aniruddha Ghosh in Bengaluru; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|