SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Apple Inc results fell short of Wall Street's lofty expectations as a sagging European economy and a pause in iPhone sales ahead of a new version saw revenues slip from the previous quarter.
Shares fell more
than 5 percent to $570.81 in late trade after the world's most valuable
technology company - which beats expectations with near regularity -
reported its second quarterly miss in less than a year.
Apple's suppliers also felt the pain. Shares of LG Display, Toshiba and Hon Hai sank between 5 and 7 percent.
The rare miss
highlights how the Apple brand is becoming less resistant to the
economic and product cycles that have plagued rivals.
"Clearly it was a
disappointment," said Channing Smith, Co-Manager of Capital Advisors
Growth Fund. "We expected a lot of consumers will probably delay their
upgrade and their purchases until the iPhone 5 comes out. We saw a similar trend occur last year with the iPhone 4S."
Apple did post a 23
percent jump in revenue from the same quarter the previous year to $35
billion, but that was about $2 billion below Wall Street's average
forecast.
Net income jumped
21 percent from a year earlier to $8.8 billion, or $9.32 a share, about
10 percent below expectations.
From the previous quarter, sales fell 22 percent in
Asia-Pacific, outstripping a 3 percent to 6 percent drop in the Americas
and Europe.
Apple, which Tim
Cook has led since last August, divided the blame for the shortfall
between muted consumer purchases in Western Europe and a pullback in
demand as consumers wait for a new iPhone model that many expect will be
launched in September or October.
From April to June,
Apple shipped 26 million iPhones, well below the 28 million to 29
million that Wall Street analysts had predicted, even taking into
account a pause in buying ahead of the iPhone 5. It was a far cry from
the 35.1 million that moved in the March quarter.
The wait for a new
iPhone caused Apple to miss quarterly expectations last fall. This year
the phenomenon started early, which could mean that Apple's iPhone sales
may also stall in the current quarter.
"Apple is in that
rarest of all positions where the Street will punish them for anything
less than an excess of success," CCS Insight analyst John Jackson said.
"If there's a positive spin on the iPhone story, it is one of latent
demand."
Apple, notorious
for its conservative forecasts, estimated earnings for the September
quarter of $7.65 a share on revenue of $34 billion, well below the
average estimate of $10.23 a share on revenue of $38.03 billion,
according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
ANTICIPATION BUILDS FOR NEW PHONE
The Silicon Valley giant has a lot riding on its next
iPhone, the product that yields more than half its revenue and helps
shore up overall margins.
Apple has seen
Samsung Electronics -- now the world's largest seller of smartphones --
and other handset manufacturers using Google Inc's Android software chip
away at its market share.
As consumers wait
for the new iPhone, Samsung's Galaxy is expected to keep chalking up
robust numbers. Analysts say profit from Samsung's mobile division is
likely to have more than doubled from a year ago, with sales of around
50 million smartphones in the June quarter.
Fans are expecting Apple to launch a completely
redesigned phone that has a bigger screen, rather than just add or
change a few features as it did with the current model.
Less than stellar
sales of the iPhone were partly offset by robust sales of the iPad,
which accounts for well over half the world's tablet market. Sales came
in at 17 million in the fiscal third quarter, above expectations.
"It really is the
iPhone company. The iPad is not strong enough to beat numbers," said BGC
Partners analyst Colin Gillis. "The iPhone 5 is already the most hyped
device and for it to exceed expectations is going to be really hard."
MISSING TEMPERED EXPECTATIONS
Executives
acknowledged buyers were refraining from purchases because of "rumors
and speculation" around the iPhone 5. They laid part of the blame on
sputtering demand from European economies like Germany and France, while
dismissing the impact of a Chinese slowdown.
China's economy
grew at its slowest pace in three years in the second quarter. But Cook
blamed the revenue shortfall in the region on changes in inventory as
the company built up stocks of the iPhone 4S in the previous quarter,
adding he saw nothing in the Chinese economy as having had an impact on
sales.
iPhone sales had
surged when Apple began selling its "Siri" voice-search-equipped iPhone
4S and China Telecom signed on as a second carrier, Cook said.
In addition, the
latest iPad also hit Chinese store shelves late -- last Friday, months
after it had debuted elsewhere around the world.
Apple sold 4
million Mac computers, which was about flat from the previous quarter
but 2 percent higher than the year-ago period.
Resource : Yahoo News
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