Showing posts with label Mark Beauch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Beauch. Show all posts

Saturday, April 7, 2012

The Braeburn Group AAPL March Quarter Estimates

On April 24th Apple will announce results for the company's 2nd fiscal quarter ended March 31st. To gauge expectations for the March quarter, we asked members of the Braeburn Group, formerly known as the AAPL Independent Analysts, to submit estimates for the company's March quarter performance. The group takes its new name from the braeburn apple, a hybrid cultivar of the popular fruit.
Among the fifteen Braeburn Group members who submitted estimates for the March quarter are Dennis Hildebrand, Navin Nagrani, Patrick Smellie and newcomers Scott Millar and Christian Peel. Collectively these fifteen individuals represent a cross section of the Group's members and come from a variety of professional backgrounds and career interests. Membership in this private group is open to those willing to register and actively participate in the group's lively discussions. 
On average Braeburn Group Index participants anticipate the following March quarter unit sales results:



Macs
4,617,307
22.80%
YOY Growth


iPhones
38,232,733
105.03%
YOY Growth


iPads
13,301,667
183.38%
YOY Growth


iPods
6,844,933
-24.09%
YOY Growth

Notes on the Unit Sales Estimates:
Mac Sales: In Apple's 14-week December quarter, Mac unit sales rose 25.74% to 5.198 million units. The average unit sales growth estimate from the Braeburn Group Index participants suggests unit sales growth of 22.80%, on track with the 22.19% unit sales growth Apple reported in in the fiscal year ended last September. 
iPhone Unit Sales: On average, the Braeburn Group Index participants expect iPhone unit sales growth of 105% to 38.232 million units. This is below the December quarter unit sales growth pace of 128% and slightly above the FY2011 unit sales growth rate of 99%.
iPad Unit Sales: The introduction of the new iPad in the final month of the March quarter has produced a wide range of unit sales estimate from the Braeburn Group Index analysts. For the quarter, the fifteen participants anticipate on average unit sales of sales of 13.301 million iPads and associated unit sales growth of over 183%.
iPod Unit Sales: On average, the index participants anticipate a nearly 25% decline in year-over-year iPod sales to about 6.845 million units. 

Saturday, October 15, 2011

The Apple Analyst Sandbag Factor

Each fiscal quarter Apple 2.0's Philip Elmer-DeWitt provides an index of quarterly estimates that include numbers from a select group of bloggers and numbers from Wall Street pros. For the September quarter, the differences in the estimates from the bloggers and the pros have the widest divergence since the quarterly indexes began. This quarter the gap is so pronounced it might best be described as a chasm. Revenue estimates range from a high of $37.19 billion from Mark Beauch of the AAPL Independent Analysts group to a low of $26.36 billion from Morgan Stanley's Kathryn Hubert. On earnings per share, the estimates range from a high of $10.01 put forward by this author to a low of $6.30 also from Kathryn Huberty. 
The table below lists the average revenue and eps estimates from the 16 bloggers and the 28 pros who submitted revenue and eps numbers. 

The Apple Analyst Sandbag Factor
There's more to the difference in the average eps estimates from the two groups than the difference in revenue estimates. This difference is what I call "The Apple Analyst Sandbag Factor."
The purpose of this exercise is to remove differences in the revenue estimates from the numbers submitted by the individual analysts and compare each analyst's eps outcome to their respective revenue estimate, using Apple's June quarter results as a constant in the review. The outcome of the analysis indicates the Wall Street analysts are forecasting a significant deterioration in Apple's net income and eps performance per revenue dollar based on their own revenue and eps numbers. This anticipated deterioration in net income and eps performance represents the "Sandbag Factor."

The chart below lists the September quarter estimates from the analysts. The content is courtesy of Apple 2.0 and is from the article titled, Wall Street Still Doesn't Understand Apple published on October 11, 2011. The analysts are ranked by revenue estimate. The bloggers are highlighted in green and the Wall Street pros are highlighted in blue.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

The AAPL Independent Analysts FQ4 Estimate Index

On October 18th Apple will announce results for the company's 4th fiscal quarter ended September 24th. To gauge expectations for the quarter, we asked members of the AAPL Independent Analysts group on Linkedin and members of the Apple Finance Board who have participated in prior quarterly indexes to submit estimates of the company's 4th fiscal quarter performance. 
Among the fourteen individuals who submitted estimates for this September quarter index are well known independent analysts Horace Dediu and Daniel Tello, returning analysts Navin Nagrani and Patrick Smellie and newcomers Michael Cranston and Martin Epstein. Collectively these individuals represent a cross section of the AAPL independent analyst community and come from various professional backgrounds and career interests. 
On average index participants anticipate the following September quarter unit sales results:


Macs
4,677,500


20.40% YOY Rise

iPhones
23,765,071


68.52% YOY Rise

iPods
7,158,857


20.91% YOY Decline

iPads
13,624,214


225.32% YOY Rise


Notes on the Unit Sales Numbers:

Mac sales: Over the first nine months of FY 2011, Macintosh unit sales rose 21.1%. The index average is inline with the recent unit sales trend and reflects confidence in Mac sales during the recent back-to-school season.
iPhone sales: The index average reflects expectations of a slower rate of growth in iPhone unit sales in the 4th quarter due to the release of the iPhone 5 in the holiday quarter. During the first nine months of the fiscal year iPhone unit sales rose 113%. 
iPod sales: The Apple iPod remains in a state of steady unit sales decline. The iOS-based Apple iPod touch remains the biggest revenue generator among the available iPod models. Apple's decision this year to offer $100 in iTunes content to students purchasing a new Mac versus a free iPod touch will influence iPod unit sales results in the quarter. 
iPad sales: The index average suggests anticipation of strong iPad unit sales in the September quarter as Apple strived to resolve the challenge of constrained product supplies. Index participants expect a rise in unit sales of 225% over the prior-year period. 

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

The AFB AAPL Price Target Index - February 2011 Edition

The AFB AAPL Price Target Index - February 2011 Edition
The Apple Finance Board is home to some of the best known and hardest working independent AAPL analysts on the planet. As a service to the members of the AFB, a popular and well respected discussion board, I'm hosting the index of AFB AAPL price targets and share price forecasts developed by the members here at Posts At Eventide.
This post is an update to the initial AFB AAPL Price Target Index published in January. The participants in this index represent a cross section of AFB members ranging from well known AAPL analysts Horace Dediu, Daniel Tello, Turley Muller and Andy M. Zaky, to long-time AFB members Mark Beauch and Ron Smith and newer members such as Dennis HildebrandIn all, twenty four (24) members of the Apple Finance Board are represented in the index.

AFB AAPL Price Target Index Averages
Index participants submitted AAPL price targets for the first day of the month following the release of Apple's quarterly earnings reports through February 1, 2012 and submitted associated ranges for the share price. Comments on the index can be made at the bottom of this post and for registered members of the AFB in the topic created specifically for this discussion.  Thank you to the index participants for submitting their share price targets and anticipated trading ranges. 
The graph and data table below indicate the average AAPL price targets of the two dozen index participants.