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Apple share price: Apple's turnover set for record quarter

Apple share price: Tim Cook, Apple's CEO next to an iPhone ad

In less than 12 months the Apple share price has more than doubled, from lows of $54 to last night's $143, with expectations high for another blowout opening quarter.

It’s also a big week for tech earnings more broadly, and with Microsoft setting the bar very high last night, expectations are rising that Apple will follow in Microsoft’s footsteps and blow the doors off when they report later today.

Apple share price not dented by Covid-19

Despite the challenges posed by the pandemic, the company has seen little in the way of impact on its quarterly numbers, and its ability to generate cashflow at an increasingly accelerated rate.

That’s not to say the year has been without its challenges, with disrupted supply chains delaying the launch of new products, resulting in a fragmented rollout, which resulted in a separate and delayed event for the new iPhone 12 5G model.

Apple one year chart

Source: CMC Markets

Apple’s share price comes into focus in the first quarter, as it is traditionally of the tech giant's best times for sales and revenues, especially given it includes the period covering Thanksgiving and Christmas, and coincides with the launch of new upgrades for its product suite.

New products to boost Apple share price?

In September we got announcements of new upgrades with a new iPad, and Apple One subscription bundle in what looks like an attempt to take on Amazon Prime, and a new Apple Watch 6 with a fitness bundle. The fitness bundle looks like an attempt by Apple to tap into the lucrative online fitness market, taking on Peloton, with a Fitness Plus option which connects to the Apple Watch and tailors' online workouts, where you can do virtual workouts online.

The new iPhone 12 which was announced in October was rather underwhelming, though we did finally get the long awaited 5G model, and it is here which could well determine whether Apple meets market expectations for Q1 revenues and profits, with the iPhone accounting for over 40% of all of its revenue in its last quarter.

Last year the company posted record revenue and income for Q1 at $91.8bn and $22.2bn respectively, with the iPhone responsible for 60.9% of that, and expectations are for a similarly record quarter this time around, with revenues expected to be in excess of $100bn. This would be an extraordinary achievement, particularly given the challenges facing consumer demand, and subdued iPhone demand in anticipation of the new iPhone 12.

Whether this is enough to drive the revenue numbers above $100bn remains to be seen, but it does seem a bit of a stretch, when consumers globally have held back on spending and retail sales in China are still well below the levels last seen at the end of 2019.

Services grows as a revenue stream

In the 12 months since its last record quarter, the amount that services have contributed from the revenue stream has grown from 13.85% to 22.5%, as the company gets a greater uptake from the likes of its streaming services, Apple TV+, Music, as well as its iTunes store.

The increase in services revenue is certainly a welcome development, however it doesn’t change the fact that Apple is still at heart a hardware provider, and while Apple TV+ is expected to see some gains against the likes of Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney+ it is its hardware sales that drive the company forward, and it will be here that determines whether we see a move above $100bn..

Even if we don’t, the market is still banking on a record quarter for Apple, and with the Apple share price already at a record high, valuing the company at $2.4trn, it would take quite a miss to undermine sentiment around a company that continues to generate cash at record rates.

It is this ability to generate cash that could be its Achilles heel in the months to come, as the new US administration starts to look at the tech sector in the context of how much tax they pay relative to their profits. This could prompt talk of windfall taxes or tougher regulation over the next year.


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