San Francisco, Feb 2 : Apple Inc missed Wall Street's revenue forecast for the third
straight quarter after iPhone sales came in below expectations, fanning fears
that its dominance of consumer electronics is slipping.
Shares of the
world's largest tech company fell 10 percent to $463 in after-hours trade,
wiping out some $50 billion of its market value - nearly equivalent to that of
Hewlett-Packard and Dell combined.
Apple said it shipped a record 47.8
million iPhones in the December quarter, up 29 percent from a year earlier. But
that lagged the 50 million that analysts on average had
projected.
Expectations heading into the results had been subdued by news
of possible production cutbacks by some component suppliers in Asia, triggering
fears that demand for the iPhone, which accounts for half of Apple's revenue,
and the iPad could be slowing.
But some investors clung to hopes for a
repeat of years of historical outperformance, analysts said.
"It's going
to call into question Apple's dominance in the space. It's still one of the
strong players, the others being Samsung and Google. It's still a two-horse
race, but Android continues to grow rapidly," said Sterne Agee analyst Shaw
Wu.
"If you step back a bit, it's clear they shipped a lot of phones. But
the problem is the high expectations that investors have. Apple's conservative
guidance highlights the concerns over production cuts coming out of Asia
recently."
Apple is forecasting revenue of $41 billion to $43 billion in
the current, second fiscal quarter, lagging the average Wall Street forecast of
more than $45 billion.
Fiscal first-quarter revenue rose 18 percent to
$54.5 billion, below the average analyst estimate of $54.73 billion, though
earnings per share of $13.81 beat the Street forecast of $13.47.
Apple
also undershot revenue targets in the previous two quarters, and these results
will prompt more questions on what Apple has in its product pipeline, and what
it can do to attract new sales and maintain its growth trajectory, analysts
said.
Net income of $13.07 billion was virtually flat with $13.06 billion
a year earlier on higher manufacturing costs. The year-ago quarter also had an
extra week compared to this year.
Gross margins consequently slid to 38.6
percent, from 44.7 percent previously.
"You can't just keep rolling out
iPhones and iPads and think that everybody needs a new one," said Jeffrey
Gundlach, who runs DoubleLine Capital LP, the $53 billion bond firm. "The mini?
What is that all about? It is a slightly smaller iPad — so what? So that is our
new definition of innovation?"
"There are plenty of competitors like
Samsung and other legitimate competitors like them," added Gundlach, one of the
highest-profile Apple bears. He maintains a $425 price target.
Taking
into account the drop in shares in the after-hours trading, Apple's stock is now
down 34 percent from its September record high and the company has lost about
$227 billion in market value.
Shares of several of Apple's suppliers
crumbled. Chip suppliers Skyworks and Cirrus Logic both fell more than 6
percent. Qualcomm Inc slipped 1.8 percent.
Intense competition from
Samsung's cheaper phones - powered by Google's Android software - and signs that
the premium smartphone market may be close to saturation in developed markets
have also caused a lot of investor anxiety.
Meanwhile, sales of the iPad
came in at 22.9 million in the fiscal first quarter, roughly in line with
forecasts.
On the brighter side, Chief Financial Officer Peter
Oppenheimer said that iPhone sales more than doubled in greater China - a region
that Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook has vowed to focus on as its next big growth
driver.
The company will begin detailing results from that country going
forward. Revenue from the region totaled $7.3 billion, up 60 percent from the
year-ago December quarter.
"These results were OK, but they definitely
raised a few questions," said Shannon Cross, analyst with Cross Research. "Gross
margin trajectory looks fine so that's a positive and cash continues to grow.
But I think investors are going to want to know what Apple plans to do with
growing cash balance."
"And other questions are going to be around
innovation and where the next products are coming from and what does Tim Cook
see in the next 12 to 18 months."
In an unusual move for Apple, which
typically does not respond to speculation, Cook addressed the production cutback
rumors at length on the conference call and questioned the accuracy of rumors
about its plans.
Media reports earlier this month said the company is
slashing orders for iPhone 5 and iPad screens and other components from its
Asian suppliers.
"Even if a particular data point were factual, it would
be impossible to accurately interpret the data point as to what it meant for our
overall business, because the supply chain is very complex," he said, adding
that Apple has multiple sources for components.
"Yields might vary.
Supplier performance can vary. The beginning inventory positions can vary.
There's just an inordinately long list of things that would make any single data
point not a great proxy for what's going on," he said.
Apple's initial
iPhone and iPad mini sales were hurt by supply constraints, but Cook expects
supply to balance demand for the iPad mini this quarter. He also acknowledged
that iPad was cannibalizing its high-margin Macintosh computers, but said it was
a huge opportunity for the company.
"On iPad in particular, we have the
mother of all opportunities here, because the Windows market is much, much
larger than the Mac market is," he said. "And I think it is clear that it's
already cannibalizing some."
In another departure from tradition, Apple
intends to tweak the way it both reports results and publishes
forecasts.
Apart from breaking out results from China, the company also
will no longer provide a single revenue or gross margin outlook. It began
providing the range it expects to hit, rather than the often-ludicrously
conservative estimates that Apple was once notorious for.
The new policy
took many by surprise.
"Before people could always ignore the guidance,"
said Dan Niles, Chief Investment Officer of AlphaOne Capital Partners, LLC.
"Apple is telling investors that they need to pay attention to the guidance and
you can't ignore it, which is basically what we all did in the
past."
Ends
SA/EN
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Apple's iPhone disappointment fans doubt on growth
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