news

Apple sales rise 6%, company seeing early iPhone 16 demand

Manuel Orbegozo | Reuters

CEO of Apple Tim Cook poses as Apple holds an event at the Steve Jobs Theater on its campus in Cupertino, California, U.S. September 9, 2024. 

  • Apple's fiscal fourth-quarter results beat Wall Street expectations for revenue and earnings per share, but net income slumped after the company paid a one-time charge as part of a tax decision in Europe. 
  • iPhone sales and overall sales both rose by 6%.
  • Sales of the iPhone 15 were "stronger than 14 in the year-ago quarter, and 16 was stronger than 15," Apple CEO Tim Cook told CNBC's Steve Kovach.

Apple's fiscal fourth-quarter results beat Wall Street expectations for revenue and earnings per share, but net income slumped after the company paid a one-time charge as part of a tax decision in Europe.

Apple shares were down 2% on Friday.  

Here's how the iPhone maker did versus LSEG consensus estimates for the quarter ending Sept. 28:  

  • Earnings per share: $1.64, adjusted, versus $1.60 estimated 
  • Revenue: $94.93 billion vs. $94.58 billion estimated 
  • iPhone revenue: $46.22 billion vs. $45.47 billion estimated 
  • Mac revenue: $7.74 billion vs. $7.82 billion estimated 
  • iPad revenue: $6.95 billion vs. $7.09 billion estimated 
  • Other Products revenue: $9.04 billion vs. $9.21 billion estimated 
  • Services revenue: $24.97 billion vs. $25.28 billion estimated 
  • Gross margin: 46.2% vs. 46.0% estimated 

Overall iPhone revenue grew 6%, in the first sign of how the iPhone 16 is faring in the market. Apple's newest devices came out Sept. 20, giving Apple about a week of new product sales in the quarter. It's still Apple's most important product, accounting for nearly 49% of the company's overall sales.  

Sales of the iPhone 15 were "stronger than 14 in the year-ago quarter, and 16 was stronger than 15," Apple CEO Tim Cook told CNBC's Steve Kovach.  

Cook said the company was looking forward to Apple Intelligence, the AI system for iPhones and Macs that started to roll out this week as part of the iOS 18.1 update.  

"We're getting great feedback from customers and developers already and a really early stat, which is only three days worth of data: Users are adopting iOS 18.1 at twice the rate that they adopted 17.1 in the year-ago quarter," Cook said. 

Apple said on a call with analysts that it expects "low to mid-single digit" sales growth during the December quarter. It also signaled that it expects services growth to be about the same as its growth rate for the past year, which was 12.87%.

Apple reported $14.73 billion, or 97 cents per share, in net income during the quarter, versus $22.96 billion, or $1.47 per share, in the year-ago period. Apple's adjusted earnings per share, after removing the one-time tax charge, increased 12% on an annual basis.  

Revenue rose about 2% for the full fiscal year to $391.04 billion. Revenue in the September period was up 6%. The company's cash pile now stands at $156.65 billion.

During the quarter, Apple paid a one-time income tax charge of $10.2 billion to resolve a long-running case dating back to 2016 over how the company handled taxes in Ireland.

Apple's results close out a busy week of earnings for the top tech companies. Alphabet on Tuesday reported better-than-expected results, driven by cloud growth. Microsoft issued disappointing guidance on Wednesday, leading to the stock's steepest sell-off in two years, while Meta beat estimates but warned of significant acceleration in its infrastructure expenses next year. On Thursday, Amazon reported strong growth in its cloud business.  

Apple's iPad business had the strongest growth of any of hardware line, with an 8% increase in sales to $6.95 billion. That was partly from pent-up demand. Apple released new iPad Pro and Air models in May after going through all of 2023 without releasing new iPads.  

Revenue in the Mac business rose 2% on an annual basis to $7.74 billion during the quarter, which included back-to-school laptop sales. Cook told CNBC that the growth was driven by sales of the MacBook Air, which was updated with new chips in the spring. 

Apple's services business — which includes online subscriptions such as iCloud, Google search revenue, and AppleCare warranties for Apple hardware — grew 12% on an annual basis to nearly $25 billion in sales. However, Apple's services revenue came in under LSEG consensus expectations.  

The company reports its AirPods headphones, Homepod speakers and Apple Watch sales in a category it calls Other Products or wearables. That unit came in light versus revenue forecasts of $9.04 billion, which was down 3% year over year. The company released new Apple Watch and AirPods models during the quarter alongside the new iPhones.  

Apple's results in China, the company's third-largest region, are closely watched by investors. The company faces renewed competition from local Chinese handset makers such as Huawei. Apple's revenue in China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong was down slightly year over year at $15.03 billion. 

The company said it spent $29 billion on share repurchases and dividends during the quarter.

WATCH: Apple Intelligence rollout could be an inflection point, says Futurum Group CEO Daniel Newman

Copyright CNBC
Exit mobile version