Apple Inc reported its worst holiday performance in four years after supply snags and a softening
economy hurt iPhone sales, exposing cracks in what has been one of tech’s most
resilient companies.
Revenue fell 5.5% to $117.2 billion in the December quarter,
Apple’s biggest sales period of the year, coming in well short of the average
Wall Street estimate of $121.1 billion. It was Apple’s first quarterly decline
since 2019 and the first time the company has missed analysts’ holiday sales
projections since 2015.
Shares fell 3% during premarket
trading in New York on Friday, the morning after Chief Executive Officer Tim
Cook discussed a rebound in China, which is emerging from strict Covid-19
rules. He also said Apple’s production problems have subsided.
Chief Executive Officer of Apple,
Tim Cook has revealed that the Covid restrictions in China added to Apple’s
woe, making it harder to ship enough
The
iPhone and Mac were particular weak spots for Apple last quarter, dragged down
by a broader slump afflicting mobile devices and computers. The Covid
restrictions in China added to Apple’s woes, making it harder to ship enough of
the most popular versions of the iPhone. Timing was another issue: The company
didn’t launch new Macs and HomePods until recent weeks, missing the end of the
holiday quarter.
“The world continues to face
unprecedented circumstances — from inflation to war in Eastern Europe to the
enduring impacts of the pandemic — and we know that Apple is not immune to it,”
Cook said on a conference call. “But whatever conditions we face, our approach
is always the same. We are thoughtful and deliberate.”
Earnings came in at $1.88
per share during the fiscal first quarter, which ended Dec. 31. That compared
with an average estimate of $1.94 per share.
The Cupertino,
California-based technology giant didn’t provide a detailed outlook for the
second quarter, continuing an approach it adopted at the start of the pandemic
in 2020, but it did lay out some expectations.
Apple said that its performance in
the March quarter would mirror that of the first quarter. That means a revenue
decline of about 5% — compared with $97.3 billion a year earlier — could be in
the cards. On the positive side, the company said iPhone revenue would
accelerate in the March quarter and that services revenue would grow. However,
the iPad and Mac will likely decline.
Apple shares had closed up
3.7% at $150.82 in New York. They have gained 16% this year.
Apple generated $65.8
billion from the iPhone in the period, missing the estimate of $68.3 billion.
That also represents a decline from the $71.6 billion that the product brought
in a year earlier.
While the latest iPhone
was a more significant leap than the previous version, the factories producing
the popular Pro models in China were shuttered for weeks during the quarter due
to pandemic restrictions.
The company made $7.74
billion from the Mac, far short of the $9.7 billion estimate. That’s also a
significant drop from $10.9 billion a year ago.
It was a
tough year-over-year comparison given that Apple launched a revamped MacBook
Pro line in the previous holiday period. This time around, it didn’t update the
MacBook Pro and Mac mini models until the current quarter.
The wearables, home and accessories
division — a unit that includes the Apple Watch, HomePod speakers, Apple TV,
AirPods and Beats products — brought in $13.5 billion. That fell short of Wall
Street expectations of $15.3 billion. The division’s sales also represented a decline
from last year’s $14.7 billion.
Other areas fared better. The iPad
brought in $9.4 billion, beating the estimate of $7.8 billion. Apple launched
minor iPad Pro updates and a revamped entry-level model in October. That led to
growth from a weaker iPad quarter a year ago.
Services generated $20.8 billion,
exceeding estimates of $20.5 billion and growing from $19.5 billion a year ago.
A price hike helped. The cost of Apple Music climbed by $1 per month, with
Apple TV+ going up by $2. The category also includes the App Store, AppleCare
customer service and repairs, and offerings like Arcade and News+.
Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri
noted that the services revenue was a record total and that — holding currency
constant — the company increased its overall sales.
And Cook said that Apple would
continue to refine its supply chain.
“The last three years have been a
pretty difficult time, between Covid and silicon shortages and the like,” he
said. “I think we have had a very resilient supply chain.”
Source: Bloomberg.com