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Apple Earnings: No Need to Hit the Panic Button Yet

Apple Earnings: No Need to Hit the Panic Button Yet

(Bloomberg Gadfly) -- I have some bad news, and some probably-not-terrible news about Apple Inc.

The bad news was Apple didn't have a terrific holiday season for its most important product. Apple said Thursday that it sold 1.2 percent fewer iPhones in the three months ended Dec. 30 than it did in the same period of 2016. Analysts had expected those unit sales to increase by a few percentage points or so.

Even though Wall Street had been bracing for some weakness, and Apple's trumpeted iPhone X was on sale for only two months of the quarter, it's not a great sign that unit sales fell. Shares initially dipped a bit in after-hours market trading, but then recovered. 

Apple Earnings: No Need to Hit the Panic Button Yet

There are two points of less-bad news that should encourage investors -- or at least leave them feeling the worst predictions won't come to pass. Apple's average sale price for each phone hit a record of $796. That's likely thanks to those $1,000-and-up iPhone X models. The higher price tags helped Apple's total revenue jump 13 percent -- more than analysts had expected.

Apple Earnings: No Need to Hit the Panic Button Yet

And better yet, it's clear Apple's quarter ending in March won't be the disaster that pessimists feared. (Although it doesn't look that great, either.) 

Apple predicted its revenue for the March quarter would be $60 billion to $62 billion for the March quarter. That is far lower than expectations of $66 billion, according to the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

But a feared iPhone apocalypse isn't likely. Before Thursday, analysts thought iPhone unit sales would decline about 24 percent from the December to March quarters. If that holds up -- and the dour holiday season sales mean those expectations may be wrong -- Apple could sell about 59 million iPhones in its fiscal second quarter ending in March. That would be a jump of about 16 percent from the same point a year earlier. 

All in all, it's not terrible for Apple. Based on early information, unit sales of iPhones aren't likely to grow like a weed this year, but higher prices are making up the difference. Revenue also rose about 11 percent in the region that includes China -- Apple's most important market.

It seems Wall Street's rethinking of Apple's prospects in recent months were accurate. The company may not be able to sell far more phones than it ever has before, but each one is fetching a higher price. That doesn't sound too bad, or at least it sounds pretty good now that investors are warming to this less highflying but still steady version of Apple. 

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Shira Ovide is a Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering technology. She previously was a reporter for the Wall Street Journal.

To contact the author of this story: Shira Ovide in New York at sovide@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Daniel Niemi at dniemi1@bloomberg.net.

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.