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iPhone Maker Misses Out While Apple Investors Make 950% Return

Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. has fallen 13 percent since the first iPhone was released in June 2007.

iPhone Maker Misses Out While Apple Investors Make 950% Return
A customer holds a iPhone 6 Plus during the sales launch (Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- It’s been one of the greatest money generating consumer products of all time. Yet those profits have barely spilled over to shareholders of the biggest builder of the iPhone.

Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. has fallen 13 percent since the first iPhone was released in June 2007. Even when factoring in dividends, the total return since then amounts to 11 percent, compared with about 950 percent for Apple Inc.

iPhone Maker Misses Out While Apple Investors Make 950% Return

The disparity shows Apple’s advantage in controlling the iPhone’s ecosphere from apps to the cloud, compared with the razor-thin margins earned by hardware builders. Other former phone giants such as Nokia Oyj and BlackBerry Ltd. abandoned their manufacturing business, while companies such as HTC Corp. and Lenovo Group Ltd. limp on.

Hon Hai shares have plunged 34 percent since last June’s high amid concern that demand for the iPhone X is slowing at a time when Chinese competitors such as Huawei and Xiaomi are rolling out more premium phones. Hon Hai gets about half its revenue from Apple, which is down 10 percent from its March peak.

Still, the pain isn’t being shared equally by U.S company. Analysts are still counting on the first three months this year to have been Apple’s best second quarter ever with an average estimate for $61 billion in revenue.

--With assistance from Kristine Servando and Sofia Horta e Costa

To contact the reporter on this story: Richard Frost in Hong Kong at rfrost4@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sarah McDonald at smcdonald23@bloomberg.net, Robert Fenner

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.