Showing posts with label Apple Revenue Growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple Revenue Growth. Show all posts

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Apple And The Long Arc Of Time

“In the fiscal year beginning in late September, Apple will generate over one-quarter trillion dollars in revenue and sell more than one-quarter billion iPhone handsets. In the upcoming December quarter the company will set yet another record for corporate profitability in a three-month period.”

I posted the above paragraph as a comment on a recent column by Philip Elmer-DeWitt about Apple’s upcoming September 9th event. The focus of Philip’s column, in my interpretation, is the incessant demands of Wall Street for sensational new products, “one more thing” surprises and almost Hollywood-style showmanship at every Apple special event. I concluded my comment by posting, “While some on Wall Street might want the likes of PT Barnum, most of us who buy Apple products and invest in the company’s stock prefer the steady hand of CEO Tim Cook.”

While millions of us may enjoy discussing, debating and speculating about what new products Apple might have under development or may announce during the company’s fairly regular product events, the company’s revenue over the past several years has been marked by an impressive and unbroken sequence of rising year-over-year quarterly growth. This has occurred without game show-style product introductions or fantastical claims about future product features and functionality. 

Apple And The Long Arc Of Time 
The graph below illustrates Apple’s revenue on a quarterly basis as far back as FQ1 2009. In that quarter recognized revenue was $11.880 billon. By comparison, in FQ1 2015 Apple’s recognized revenue was $74.599 billion or a greater than six-fold increase in revenue in the first quarter of the fiscal year over a six-year period of time. No wonder Apple’s CEO is fond of the term “long arc of time” when responding to analyst questions during the quarterly conference call with analysts. When Apple completes the current fiscal year near the end of September, the company will report a greater than five-fold increase in revenue over the same six-year period. 
The corresponding EPS graph below illustrates an even more impressive outcome during this six-year period. Again using FQ1 2009 as the benchmark, Apple’s earnings per share in FQ1 2015 of $3.06 was 8.5 times greater than the split-adjusted $.36 in eps reported in FQ1 2009. While the company’s ongoing share repurchase program has diminished the fully diluted share used on a split-adjusted basis in this comparison, the company’s rising revenue has been the most substantial factor in the eps growth rate.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

What A Weird, Whacky and Wild Stock Market Ride!

I’ve been receiving inquiries about when I will publish my next article. My answer is: “Soon.” I primarily cover Apple’s fundamentals with an emphasis on performance trends. I’m sure what I describe as a “Weird, Whacky and Wild Stock Market Ride!” has created some curiosity as to how I view Apple and the market in the midst of this rollercoaster ride on Wall Street.

Because I follow Apple’s fundamentals and not technical charts or the broad market in general, I’m a bit bemused by the recent pummeling of Apple’s share price. In my view, the company’s fundamentals remain strong in the midst of a $140 billion share repurchase program, a dividend increase put in place last spring and recent comments from the company’s CEO the iPhone’s performance in Greater China in on track with management’s expectations for the current quarter. As of the end of the June quarter, Apple had about $150 billion in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities net of debt acquired to fund share repurchases.

In other words, management has ample resources to fund the share repurchase program, increase the quarterly dividend again next April while investing in research and development on existing products and yet-to-be-announced products and services.

I consider Apple a buy-and-hold long-term investment. Although I continue to acquire shares, I do not “trade” the stock or any other stock. I’m not one to provide stock market advice. I don’t have a margin account, I have never purchased options and have no desire to “trade” stocks. I am a long-term Apple shareholder focused on the company’s fundamentals. I tend to hold equities for more than a few minutes or a few months.

My current view is as follows: 

Around this time last year the Street’s consensus revenue estimate for the current fiscal year ending in September was $197 billion. The company is closing in on about $235 billion in revenue for the period.

At this time the Street’s consensus revenue estimate for FY2016 is, according to Yahoo! Finance, $244.66 billion or an estimated revenue growth rate of about 4.90%. According to the same source, the Street’s current eps consensus estimate for FY2016 is $9.76 or about a 7.2% eps growth rate over the current eps estimate for FY2015 of $9.13. 

In the first time nine months of the current fiscal year Apple’s revenue rose about 30%. iPhone unit sales, representing roughly two-thirds of the company’s reported revenue total, rose about 41% in this nine-month period. Apple Watch revenue will be wholly accretive to revenue growth on a year-over-year basis in the first six months of the fiscal year beginning in late September.

More than a device maker, I consider Apple a “customer relationship continuum.” I consider each new product release and the company’s new services such as Apple Pay, Apple Music and the highly anticipated TV content service as continuations of the ongoing “conversation” Apple has with its global customer base. While past performance is not necessarily an accurate indicator of the company’s future performance metrics, I do expect Apple’s revenue and earnings per share growth performance in FY2016 to handily beat the Street’s current expectations. 

I see a great deal of strength in Apple’s product and services lines and in the ongoing relationship the company has with its hundreds of millions of product and services customers. While I don’t expect the same revenue and eps growth rates next fiscal year the company is enjoying this fiscal year, I do see real opportunities for continued growth in each of Apple’s regional revenue segments.

I’ll be back with my next article soon. In the meantime I remain bemused by the dramatic drop in the share price over the past few weeks, the broad market’s significant pullback not withstanding. 

I’m not one to give investment advice and please don’t consider any content I post to be investment advice. All investors need to perform their own due diligence and make informed decisions based on their circumstances and objectives. But in my own ongoing conversation with the readers of my blog, I’m confident in the ability of Tim Cook & Co. to continue to successfully execute the company’s business plan, I look forward to trading in my iPhone 5s for the next flagship iPhone handset this fall and acquiring the new Apple TV (when it finally arrives!). Until then I’ll watch with more than mild curiosity the wild gyrations in the share price. My next article is: “Coming Soon.” 

Robert Paul Leitao

Disclosure: The author is long Apple shares

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Wall Street Discounts Apple’s Revenue and Earnings Trend

On Friday, June 12th, Apple’s share price closed at $127.17. This represents a valuation of 15.72 times trailing 12-month earnings of $8.09 and about 14.10 times the current Wall Street consensus earnings per share estimate of $9.02 for the fiscal year ending in late September.

As I will illustrate in this article, I consider today’s valuation of Apple to be low and I expect the share price to move significantly higher over the next six months. 

Apple’s Revenue And Earnings Trend
Following a five-quarter period of single-digit revenue growth that ended in the June quarter one year ago, Apple’s revenue has risen on a year-over-year basis by nearly 25% over the most recent three fiscal quarters. The graph below illustrates the rebound in Apple’s revenue growth rates and the beginning of the company’s current fast-growth epoch that will continue through next fiscal year.
Apple’s earnings per share have risen nearly 39% over the same nine-month period. The graph below illustrates the return to earnings per share growth that began in FQ1 2014 and the acceleration of the earnings per share growth rate over the most recent six fiscal quarters.
Apple’s Net Income And Gross Margin By Quarter
Since the nadir of 36.87% gross margin in FQ3 2013, Apple’s gross margin has rebounded to 40.78% in the recent March quarter. Rising iPhone unit sales have delivered the company’s highest gross margins in three years and the company is now riding down the cost curve on the larger-screen iPhone handsets. The iPhone 6 series handsets will deliver high gross margin through the two-year handset cycle. The graph below illustrates the company’s gross margin recovery over the most recent seven fiscal quarters.

The graph below illustrates the rising percentage of revenue flowing to the company’s net income line since the release of the iPhone 6 handsets. Fast rates of revenue growth combined with higher gross margin have dramatically increased the percentage of revenue flowing to the net income line. The sharp rise year-over-year in the percentage of revenue flowing to the net income line will continue through the end of FY2015.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Painting With Numbers: Apple’s Regional Revenue Mix

Since the release of Apple’s larger-screen iPhone handsets last fall, the company has entered a new era of growth. My forecasting models suggest the company will deliver impressive rates of revenue growth through this fiscal year and through at least FY2016 which commences in late September. While the iPhone currently delivers about 70% of the company’s reported revenue, the resurgent iPhone product line along with the rising popularity of Apple’s Macintosh line of personal computers will boost the rates of growth of constituent accessories and services such as the forthcoming Apple Watch and a new TV service expected this fall.

The fast rates of revenue growth expected through at least FY2016 are due not only to the success of the iPhone, but also Apple’s ongoing geographic expansion. Apple will soon reach one billion product and services customers across the globe with the Macintosh line, the iPad line and the company’s robust eco-system of apps, content and services playing important supporting roles in the company’s fast rates of growth.

Concurrent with the release of December quarter (FQ1 2015) results in January, Apple’s management changed reporting of revenue on a regional basis. Apple eliminated the reporting of revenue of its global franchise of retail stores as a separate regional revenue segment and incorporated the revenue from the stores in the geographic regions in which the stores are located. The company also provided retrospective reports for fiscal years 2012 through 2014.

Apple’s FY2014 Regional Revenue Mix
The graph below illustrates Apple’s revised regional revenue mix for the fiscal year that ended last September. 
For the fiscal year, the Americas and Europe regions combined represented 68% of reported revenue. Greater China, Japan and the Rest of Asia Pacific comprised the remaining 32% of the company’s reported revenue total. Apple’s highest concentrations of retail stores are in the US, Canada and Europe. The reporting of retail store revenue in the regions in which the stores are located provides a clearer picture of revenue activity on a geographic basis. 

FY2014 Revenue Growth By Region
The graph below illustrates the rate of growth by region in a fiscal year in which aggregate revenue rose at a modest 6.95% rate. Greater China was the fastest growing revenue region while Japan also delivered double-digit revenue growth. The Rest of Asia Pacific region realized a revenue decline in the 12-month period.

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Apple’s Success Is Based On Fundamentals

On February 27th Apple’s share price ended the month’s trading at $128.46 after achieving an all-time high of $133.60 in intra-day trading on Tuesday, February 24th. The closing price represented an 8.82% rise in the share price from the opening bell on Monday, February 2nd and a 17.70% rise in the share price since the release of December quarter results on January 27th. 

Speculation About An Apple Car
In addition to Apple’s strong December quarter performance sparked by record iPhone unit sales and iPhone revenue, speculation about the development of an Apple car has added a new and alluring element to the company’s share price action. No matter the fact if an Apple car is under serious development it would not reach the consumer market before 2020, investors are attracted to the concept of Apple entering the auto industry as a new sector for revenue and profit growth.

Apple’s March 9th Special Event
Choosing the first weekday following the seasonal change in time to announce the release date and pricing for the Apple Watch, Apple has sent out invitations for a March 9th special event. The Apple Watch is the first new product line to be released by the company since the appointment of Tim Cook as CEO. While expectations for unit sales vary widely among analysts, the Apple Watch will deliver new revenue and net income for the company. The Apple Watch will add appreciably to Apple’s revenue and earnings per share growth rates particularly in the first four fiscal quarters following release. 

FY2015 Revenue and Earnings Per Share Expectations
The Wall Street consensus revenue estimate for the fiscal year ending in September currently stands at $225.24 billion, representing anticipated year-over-year revenue growth of 22.22%. The Street’s current consensus earnings per share estimate of $8.59 represents anticipated eps growth of 33.18%.

In contrast, my current revenue target for FY2015 is $235 billion and earnings per share for the fiscal year of over $9.25. My comparatively bullish outlook, anticipating revenue growth of 28.56% and earnings per share growth in the range of 44%, is based only in part on expectations for the early success of the Apple Watch. Rising iPhone and Mac sales are integral to my revenue growth models. Apple’s net income per revenue dollar is rising quickly as the rate of revenue growth zooms beyond 20%.

Apple’s Success Is Based On Fundamentals, Not Faddishness
While an Apple car is an interesting topic for conversation and as we mark time waiting for news on the release date for the Apple Watch, management is hard at work boosting the company’s underlying financial performance.

The graph below illustrates Apple’s net income performance over the most recent twenty one fiscal quarters. The recent December quarter’s iPhone unit sales growth rate of 45.94% sparked a 37.88% rise in net income and boosted net income per revenue dollar to 24.16%.


The graph below illustrates in a more simple way Apple’s net income per revenue dollar over the same 21-quarter period. The larger-screen iPhone 6 handsets have not only boosted unit sales, the increase in the average selling price (ASP) has boosted the company’s gross margin.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

FY2015: Apple's Big Adventure

On Friday, November 28th, Apple’s share price closed the month’s trading at $118.93, up 9.9% from the opening price on November 3rd and up nearly 10.5% from the opening price on September 29th, the first trading day of the fiscal year. 

Recent analyst revenue upgrades and price target revisions have provided support for the share price. The current Wall Street consensus revenue estimate for the December quarter is $66.23 billion compared to management’s revenue guidance for the quarter of between $63.5 billion and $66.5 billion. However, the current revenue consensus estimate for FY2015 remains a decidedly conservative $210.68 billion and for FY2016 the revenue consensus estimate is a surprisingly low $223.02 billion.

In contrast, my revenue models suggest Apple may reach one-quarter trillion dollars in revenue in FY2016 following a revenue performance this fiscal year of $225 billion.

On November 19th Morgan Stanley’s Katy Huberty raised her firm’s price target from $115 to $126. She stated investors underestimate demand for the Apple Watch and is forecasting 30 million Apple Watches will be sold in CY2015. She also believes institutions remain underweighted in Apple shares. In my view, increasing institutional demand for shares will buoy the share price during the first six months of the current fiscal year.

On November 25th Aaron Rakers at Stifel Nicolaus raised his Apple price target to $130 from $115. On the same day Brian Blair reiterated his firm’s view iPhone unit sales will range between 72 million and 75 million in the December quarter. Although the share price may not go higher in a straight line, I expect a continuing series of analyst estimate revisions over the next several weeks to support the share price into Apple’s December quarter earnings release in late January. 

Looking Back
Although unit sales expectations for Apple’s iPhone 6 handsets are moving higher with strong evidence of a big market share shift in the high-end smartphone market from competitors to Apple, most analysts remain cautious on their FY2015 revenue and earnings per share estimates. 

The graph below illustrates Apple’s revenue mix for the fiscal year ended in September. In the 12-month period, the iPhone represented just over 55% of reported revenue. Combined, the iPhone and iPad lines represented over 72% of revenue in the period.

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Apple’s Magical Mystery Year

On October 20, 2014, Apple announced results for the fiscal quarter ended September 27, 2014 and for the fiscal year that ended the same day. For the fiscal year, Apple’s revenue rose about 7% to $182.795 billion while earnings per share rose about 13.6% to $6.45 due to year-over-year growth in net income and the ongoing $90 billion share repurchase program.

For the fiscal year, Apple set records for revenue and earnings per share. Although net income rose about 6.7% year-over-year to $39.51 billion, the current high water mark for net income was set in FY2012 at $41.733 billion on outsized gross margin. However, Apple may come within striking distance of a new net income record in FY2015 as we watch the fiscal year unfold.

The Trend Is Again Apple’s Friend
The graph below illustrates Apple’s net income on a quarterly basis and the corresponding percentage of revenue that flowed to the net income over the most recent twenty fiscal quarters. 

After a peak of 29.66% of revenue flowing to the net income line in FQ2 2012, Apple’s net income as a percentage of revenue has begun to gradually recover from the nadir of 19.53% set in FQ3 2013.

Since returning to net income growth in the March quarter, Apple’s share price has risen from a split-adjusted price of $74.96 on April 23rd immediately prior to the release of March quarter results to $105.22 on Friday, October 24th. This 40% rise in the share price in six months correlates to the market’s anticipation of rising net income and rising earnings per share amplified by the ongoing share repurchase program.

The graphs below depict Apple’s revenue and earnings per share performances over the most recent twenty fiscal quarters. 

Apple’s Revenue Growth
Apple’s revenue growth rates have moderated since the torrid rates of growth experienced in fiscal years 2010 through 2012. From a high of 66% revenue growth in FY2011, which included the first full fiscal year of iPad unit sales, to about 7% revenue growth in the fiscal year ended in late September, Apple’s revenue growth rates sharply declined over the two most recent fiscal years. FY2014’s revenue growth rate performance represents Apple’s slowest rate of revenue growth in over a decade. However, the revenue growth rate in the recent September quarter of 12.4% to $42.123 billion represents a reversal of that recent revenue growth rate trend.
For the December quarter (FQ1 2015) Apple is guiding to revenue of between $63.5 billion to $66.5 billion. This represents an expected revenue growth rate of between 10.25% and 15.5% in the period. To put Apple’s revenue guidance for the December quarter in perspective, Apple’s revenue total for all of FY2010 was $65.225 billion. 

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Apple Looks East, Looks West For Growth

Over the past few years much of Apple’s revenue growth has been fueled by the expansion of the number of iPhone carriers outside the Untied States. In the first nine months of the current fiscal year, Apple’s revenue moved higher by 5.42% to $140.672 billion. During this time, revenue in Apple’s Americas region rose by only 0.38% to $48.985 billion while revenue rose in the Greater China region by 22.27% to $24.068 billion and in Japan by 13.38% to $11.475 billion. 

The chart below details Apple’s regional revenue mix for the first nine months of the fiscal year that ends on Saturday, September 27th.
During this nine-month period, Greater China and Japan combined to deliver just over 25% of reported revenue while the Americas region represented just over one-third of Apple’s revenue total. 
The graph below illustrates Apple’s revenue growth rates by region over this nine-month period. While Europe’s 5.07% revenue growth was close to the aggregate revenue growth rate of 5.42%, the Rest of Asia Pacific region had a negative revenue growth in the period. Apple’s Retail revenue segment, separate from the revenue activity in the regions in which the stores are located, delivered a 3.64% rate of growth. 
No matter the four-quarter slide in net income that ended in the December quarter (FQ1 2014), Apple has continued to deliver year-over-year revenue growth. The chart below illustrates Apple’s revenue on a quarterly basis, segmented by region, since FQ1 2011.

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Apple’s Success Is In The Sensational And The Subtle

On Friday, August 29th, Apple’s share price ended the month’s trading at an all-time closing high of $102.50 after setting an all-time trading high of $102.90 earlier in the day’s session. For the month of August, the share price rose about 8% from the opening price of $94.90 on August 1, 2014. Since Apple announced the return to profit growth following the close of trading on April 23, 2014, the share price has risen about 37%. 

At Friday’s closing price, the company’s market capitalization stands at about $614 billion dollars. Because of the ongoing $90 billion share repurchase program and despite the recent all-time highs, the company’s market cap remains below the record levels set in late September 2012 and institutional ownership remains at a curiously low 62% of outstanding shares. 

No matter the dramatic rise in the share price over the past four months, opportunities remain for long-term shareholders to be richly rewarded over the next several quarters. 

Apple’s September 9th Event
There’s no shortage of rumors and speculation concerning what products and services Apple will choose to announce at the upcoming September 9th event. There’s very little doubt Apple will announce the next iteration of the company’s popular line of smartphones and expectations are high Apple will also announce its foray into mobile payments as well as new services to complement the much-anticipated iWatch line of accessories. 

Various reports from component suppliers suggest Apple will produce record numbers of iPhones, with larger screen sizes, to accommodate what is predicted to be unprecedented demand for the new handsets and demand on a scale that may prove to be high even by lofty iPhone standards. But the fact of the matter is it would actually be worrisome if demand for the new iPhone handsets didn’t break all previous records by a proverbial country mile. 

Apple’s Dependence On iOS Devices
The graph below illustrates Apple’s reliance on the iPhone and iPad product lines for revenue and revenue growth. Since the June quarter (FQ3) of FY2011, the iPhone and iPad lines have contributed at least 60% of Apple’s reported revenue. In seven of the most recent fifteen quarters, the iPhone and iPad lines have contributed at least 70% of Apple’s reported revenue total.
The graph below delineates the revenue performance of the iPhone and iPad lines over the most recent fifteen quarters. Against a backdrop of 5.42% aggregate revenue growth in the first three quarters of the current fiscal year, iPhone revenue rose 9.12% to $78.313 billion while iPad revenue fell 3.21% to $24.967 billion. Combined, the two product lines delivered $103.280 billion or 73.42% of the $140.672 billion in reported revenue in the nine-month period. As Apple determines the best path forward for growth in iPad unit sales, the iPhone line is and will remain Apple’s primary revenue growth driver.

Saturday, July 26, 2014

Apple's Game Of Inches

On Friday, July 25, 2014, Apple’s share price reached a 52-week closing high of $97.67. This was also the highest split-adjusted closing price since September 24, 2012 and within range of the all-time high closing price of $100.30 set on September 19, 2012.

From the closing high of 100.30 on September 19, 2012 to the closing share price nadir of $55.79 on April 19, 2013 to Friday’s closing price of $97.67, it’s been a startling roller coaster ride for Apple’s long-term shareholders. It’s simply a matter of time before Apple’s share price vaults above its previous all-time closing high and begins an ongoing series of new records.

Despite the share price volatility of the past two years, Apple’s growth moving forward will be best seen in sublime advances of technologies and less in sharp spikes and slides in revenue and earnings growth rates that have characterized the past four years of the company’s financial performance.

Apple is engaged in a game of inches and has entered an era that will again reward long-term shareholders for their conviction, patience and grit. 

Apple’s Return To Glory
While much attention has been placed on Apple’s recent 7-for-1 stock split, the share price rise from the closing price on the first day of post-split trading on June 9, 2014 of $93.70 to Friday's closing price represents a share price gain of 4.24%.

However, the share price rise from the closing price immediately prior to the release of March quarter results on April 23, 2014 has been 30.29%. Apple’s return to organic net growth income growth has delivered extraordinary share price gains in just over three months. Apple has now concluded two consecutive quarters of net income growth following a four-quarter slide in underlying profitability. 

The graph below illustrates the company’s net income performance over the most recent nineteen fiscal quarters. Rising net income is and will remain the primary catalyst for Apple’s share price appreciation.


Saturday, June 28, 2014

Apple's Latent Rates Of Revenue Growth

For the fiscal year ending in late September, Apple is on track to deliver reported revenue of over $182 billion versus reported revenue in the prior fiscal year of $170.91 billion. In dollar terms, revenue growth in the range of $12 billion appears more impressive than the underlying revenue growth rate of between 6% and 7%. However, there are factors at work which will lead to faster rates of revenue growth in the new fiscal year beginning this fall. I will delve into a few of these factors in this article. 

Apple’s Revenue Mix
The graph below illustrates Apple’s revenue mix for the first half of the fiscal year ending in September.

For the six-month period ended in June, the iPhone and iPad lines represented 75.20% of Apple’s reported revenue total of $103.24 billion. While Apple’s aggregate revenue rose 5.22%, the combined iPhone and iPad lines delivered revenue growth of 6.31%, the Mac line realized 8.64% revenue growth year-over-year and the combined iTunes/Software/Services & Accessories segments achieved revenue growth of 11.29%. The iPod line, in contrast, experienced a 53.82% decline in revenue. The iPod line’s revenue decline in the six-month period was $1.671 billion. iPod line revenue fell from $3.105 billion in the first six months of FY2013 to $1.434 billion in the first half of FY2014. 

Apple’s Unit Sales Growth Rates By Product Line
The graph below illustrates the unit sales growth of Apple’s major product lines from FQ1 2011 through FQ2 2014. While there has been obvious moderation in the unit sales growth rates of the iPhone and iPad lines over this time, iPod unit sales have been in decline throughout the fourteen-quarter period.


Product Line ASPs
The graph below illustrates the average selling prices for each of Apple’s major product lines over the same fourteen-quarter period. Although the introduction of the iPad mini in late 2012 (FQ1 2013) reduced the average selling price of iPads, Apple has been able to keep the ASPs on iPhones and Macintosh PCs consistently high even as unit sales growth rates have moderated over the past several quarters.


It was recently announced iPads and iPhones will again be sold through Costco. Walmart, in a high-profile move, has reduced the prices on iPhone 5 series handsets sold through the bricks and mortar stores when accompanied by a two-year contract. Apple is expanding the domestic sales reach of its current iPhone and iPad models ahead of the expected fall product refresh cycle. 

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Apple's Global Picture In 1,500 Words

In the first half of Apple’s current fiscal year, revenue rose 5.22% to $103.24 billion dollars. This is the first time Apple’s revenue surpassed $100 billion in a six-month period and is emblematic of the fact the company’s operations are truly global in scope.

According to the company’s SEC filings, Apple manages its business on a geographic basis. The chart below illustrates the company’s regional revenue mix in the first six months of the fiscal year. 

For the six-month period ended March 29, 2014, nearly 56% of reported revenue was sourced from the company’s traditional strongholds in North America and Europe. Combined, Greater China and Japan delivered 26.19% of reported revenue versus 22.57% of revenue sourced from Europe alone. Currently, the United States and China are the only two countries that deliver 10% or more of Apple’s revenue. Japan is quickly closing the gap and may soon gain entry to this exclusive group of nations.

Apple’s Revenue Growth Rates By Region
The graph below illustrates the rates of growth in each of the company’s regional segments in the first half of the current fiscal year. 

In the six-month period, Greater China delivered revenue growth at a 20.54% rate followed by Japan with a 17.59% growth rate. Europe lagged the aggregate growth rate of 5.22% with a 4.57% revenue growth performance and revenue in the Americas region was virtually static with a 0.04% revenue growth rate. In fact, year-over-year in the Americas region, revenue rose by only $15 million. 

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Apple’s Newfound Glory

On Wednesday, April 23rd, Apple triumphantly surprised the market with a return to net income growth in the March quarter following a four-quarter cycle of declining profitability. Although Apple did not set a record for March quarter net income, the company delivered record March quarter revenue and an impressive 22.40% of revenue to the net income line.

The graph below illustrates Apple’s net income performance and the percentage of revenue that has flowed to the net income line over the most recent eighteen quarters. 


On revenue of $45.646 billion, $10.223 billion flowed to the net income line. This was the fifth-highest net income performance in the company’s history and second-highest March quarter net income performance, eclipsed only by the results in the March quarter of FY2012. 

Stock Split and Expanded Share repurchase Program
With the release of March quarter results Apple also announced a 7-for-1 stock split. The likelihood Apple will be added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) after the completion of the stock split in early June added fuel to the immediate post-earnings share price rally. Following the release of the company’s March quarter numbers and accompanying announcements, the share price jumped from a closing price on Wednesday of $524.75 to end the trading week at $571.94. With a current market cap of over one-half trillion dollars, rising revenue, rising quarterly dividends and anticipated fiscal year revenue of over $180 billion, the addition of Apple to the well-known index is viewed as a near certainty after completion of the 7-for-1 stock split.

Apple is increasing its share repurchase program from $60 billion to $90 billion with all purchases to be completed by the end of calendar year 2015. As of the close of the March quarter, Apple had utilized $45.9 billion of the previously authorized $60 billion for repurchases.

The graph below illustrates the dramatic drop in the company’s reported fully diluted share count over the past several quarters.

Management also announced with the March quarter results the company would be returning to the debt table to borrow against the company’s massive overseas holdings of cash and marketable securities. Although Apple reports a US tax expense on all foreign-sourced earnings not permanently dedicated for use outside the US, the payments are not due until the funds are repatriated. As of March 29, 2014, Apple has $19.471 billion in deferred tax liabilities on the balance sheet and $17.0 billion in previously acquired debt for share repurchases.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Apple Is Walking Up The Down Staircase

Over the past eight fiscal years Apple’s revenue has risen 1,127% from $13.931 billion in FY2005 to $170.910 billion in FY2013. Over this same eight-year period, Apple’s earnings per share has risen 2,457% from $1.55 to $39.63. The graphs below illustrate the story.


Since the migration of Apple’s Macintosh line of personal computers to Intel microprocessors in 2005 through the release of the iPhone and iPad product lines, Apple’s revenue growth performance has been phenomenal. From a peak revenue growth rate of 66% in FY2011 to a low of 9.2% revenue growth in the fiscal year ended in September, the company’s revenue growth performance over the past eight years places Apple among the highest revenue generating enterprises on the planet. Apple has become a global economic empire with roughly two-thirds of annual revenue generated outside the United States.


Despite a 10.3% drop in earnings per share in Apple’s most recent fiscal year, the company’s fast rate of revenue growth over the past eight years combined with high gross margin have propelled earnings per share on an annual basis to greater than 25 times the company’s FY2005 results.

Apple’s Revenue and Earnings Growth Performances Today
Following 66% revenue growth in FY2011 and 45% revenue growth in FY2012, Apple’s rate of revenue growth decelerated dramatically to just over a 9% rate last fiscal year. In the first quarter of FY2014 ended in December, Apple’s revenue growth rate continued to decelerate to a 5.7% pace. Management’s March quarter guidance suggests slow to no revenue growth in the quarter ended March 29, 2014. 


The graph above illustrates Apple’s decelerating revenue growth rates on a quarterly basis since the second quarter of FY2012. 


In all four quarters of FY2013, Apple realized negative earnings per share growth. However, the ongoing $60 billion share repurchase program pushed the earnings per share growth rate in the recent December quarter (FQ1 2014) to a positive 5% growth rate despite a slight decline in net income year-over-year. Based on management’s March quarter revenue guidance, earnings per share in the quarter may again turn negative despite the unprecedented share repurchase plan now in place. 

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Apple: Net Income Growth Is The Name Of The Game

Apple is a global empire with revenue results that place it among the top publicly-traded enterprises on the planet. Apple is also among the largest dividend payers in the world and management is dedicated to returning more than $100 billion in capital to shareholders over a four-year period through a combination of dividend payments and share repurchases. Apple’s brand value is arguably the highest in the world and the company’s balance sheet reflects over $140 billion in cash and equivalents net of debt despite the ongoing capital return program. 

No matter these superlatives, Apple is challenged to reverse a decline in profitability. The company is in the midst of a multi-quarter decline in net income and a cycle of lower net income per revenue dollar even as revenue rises modestly year-over-year.

Apple: Net Income Growth Is The Name Of The Game
For Apple’s first quarter of FY2014 ended December 28, 2013, management reported revenue growth of 5.7% to $57.594 billion. In the same 91-day period net income fell year-over-year by $6 million to $13.072 billion and represented 22.70% of reported revenue, below the 23.99% of net income per revenue dollar earned the year before.

This FQ1 2014 performance came on the heels of the company’s FY2013 results in which Apple’s reported revenue rose 9.2% to $170.91 billion and net income fell 11.25% to $37.037 billion. Based on Apple’s March quarter revenue guidance, which suggests the possibility of a decline in revenue year-over-year, net income in the current quarter may fall below not only last year’s results, net income is likely to come in well below the results of two years ago. 

Apple’s Net Income By Quarter
The graph below illustrates Apple’s net income has been in decline on a year-over-year basis since the March quarter (FQ2) of FY2013. Although in FQ1 2013 the company managed a meager rise in net income of $14 million, in the recent December quarter (FQ1 2014), Apple’s net income was $6 million below the results in the prior-year period and only $8 million above the results of two years ago. 


While Apple’s reported revenue has continued to rise, the company’s net income per revenue dollar has continued to fall. In the December quarter, net income represented 22.70% of revenue versus 23.99% in the prior-year quarter and 28.20% of revenue in the December quarter two years ago.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Apple: Management Needs To Vision Tomorrow More Than Explain Today

On Monday, January 27th, Apple announced results for the company’s December quarter (FQ1 2014). The company reported year-over-year revenue growth of $5.65% to $57.594 billion and earnings per share of $14.50 versus $13.81 in the prior-year quarter. Net income at $13.072 billion was lower than the results in FQ1 2013 by $6 million. Earnings per share rose 5.0% due to 45.765 million fewer shares in the fully diluted share count. 

The Demise of the iPod Line
Contributing to Apple’s unimpressive revenue growth rate in the December quarter was a 54.60% year-over-year decline in iPod revenue on a 52.29% decline in unit sales. The iPod touch, which represents greater than 50% of the product line’s revenue, was last updated in September 2012. iPod sales have been subsumed by the popular iPhone line with iPod capabilities and there is declining consumer demand for specific-use digital music players. Year-over-year, iPod revenue fell by $1.17 billion dollars.

The Resurgent Macintosh
In the midst of Apple’s 30th anniversary Macintosh celebration, the product line turned in a strong 19.11% unit growth rate against a soft prior-year comparison. The 4.837 million units sold was the fourth highest quarterly unit sales total in the product line’s history and the highest unit sales performance in two years. For the quarter, the Macintosh delivered 11.10% of Apple’s reported revenue. 

Apple’s Reliance on the iPhone and iPad
No matter the strong Macintosh unit sales numbers for the quarter, Apple’s reliance on the iPhone and iPad lines for growth continued to rise in the December quarter. The graph below illustrates the fact that 76.34% of reported revenue in the quarter was sourced from iPhone and iPad sales.
iPhone and iPad Unit Sales Growth
On a combined basis, iPhone and iPad unit sales rose 9.07% in the December quarter and combined revenue rose 6.37% net of the impact of the increase in deferred revenue per unit sold.The graph below illustrates the combined unit sales for the iPhone and iPad lines over the most recent seventeen fiscal quarters. Among the challenges for Apple is the fact iPhone and iPad unit sales growth rates have begun to slow dramatically.

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Apple: It’s a Matter of What, Where and Why

For the fiscal quarter ended Saturday, December 28th, Apple will report record revenue and earnings per share. There’s no disputing the popularity of Apple’s iPhone and iPad product lines. As of today Wall Street analysts are expecting revenue of $57.31 billion and earnings per share of $14.05. This is in contrast to revenue of $54.51 billion and eps of $13.81 in the prior-year quarter. 

As the founder of the Braeburn Group, I am currently collecting December quarter estimates from our global network of independent analysts. Although management has guided to revenue in the quarter of $55 billion to $58 billion, the independents by and large are expecting a revenue performance above the upper threshold of guidance. I will be publishing the Braeburn Group Estimate Index for the quarter on Sunday, January 5th. 

However, Apple’s quarterly results are merely a static snapshot of a fast-moving enterprise object. More than a purveyor of independent device lines, Apple has become a customer relationship continuum with a global platform of inter-related products and services. 

Among the factors influencing near-term results are management’s decision to increase the amounts of device sales revenue deferred for recognition in future periods, the pace of the company’s geographic expansion and the seasonal nature of the company’s product refresh cycles. Apple’s growth is best viewed not by quarters but by fiscal years. In today’s article I will look at Apple’s growth across a variety of measures and metrics. 

Apple: It’s A Matter of What, Where and Why
The graph below illustrates Apple’s FY2013 revenue mix by product line. In the fiscal year ended in September, over 72% of the company’s reported revenue was derived from the iPhone and iPad product lines. While this concentration of revenue in two product lines for a company that reported over $170 billion in revenue might on the surface seem alarming, the concentration of revenue is emblematic of Apple’s dynamic product mix and the changing nature of the digital device markets. 


The graph below illustrates Apple’s revenue growth by product line in fiscal years 2012 and 2013. In FY2013 the rates of revenue growth in year-over-year comparisons were impacted by the release of the lower-cost iPad mini and slowing rates of growth in the high-end smartphone market. While the average selling price (ASP) for the iPhone fell from $629 in FY2012 to $607 in FY2013, the average selling price for the iPad fell from $531 to $450. 


Moving into FY2014, the reported ASP for the iPhone will be impacted as much by the recent change in deferred revenue on each iPhone sold as any other factor. Apple’s apparent ability to meet demand for the iPhone 5s more quickly than for any new iPhone release in the past will assist in stabilizing reported revenue per unit sold. 

The Retina display iPad mini, at a higher per unit price than the original, will buttress the iPad’s ASP this fiscal year. In FY2014, there will be a stronger correlation between the rates of unit sales growth and revenue growth than in the slower-growth FY2013 that ended in September.