AppleInc. [NASDAQ: AAPL] reported better than expected earnings for the
second quarter, but hinted at the sum of all fears on Wall Street as
it revealed disappointing guidance for the next quarter.
The
company's earnings release after the financial markets closed on
Tuesday announced an increase in a stock buyback program to $60
billion from $10 billion. Apple increased its dividend by 15 percent
to $3.05 a share.
Apple
announced revenue of $43.6 billion in the second quarter, higher than
the $42 billion expected on sales of 37.4 million iPhones and 19.5
million iPads. But it said that sales for the coming quarter will be
$33.5 billion to $35.5 billion, below the $38.25 billion Wall Street
was forecasting.
The
stock was up about 5 percent in after-hours trading to about $426.
"I
think it really comes down to the stock buyback and dividend
overruling the earnings," said JJ Kinahan, chief derivatives
strategist of TDAmeritrade. "The earnings were good, not great.
But the fact that they announced an expanded stock buyback program
and increased dividend per share per quarter sent the stock price
up."
The
company's stock had taken a beating in recent weeks, falling more
than 13 percent since the last earnings report in January. It's down
40 percent from its peak last fall amid reports that the tech giant
is losing its mojo and has new no exciting products like the iPad or
iPhone to offer. Still, Apple is one of the most profitable companies
in the U.S., earning $13 billion in the quarter ended in December.
The
company reported profit fell 18 percent to $9.55 billion in the last
quarter.
"Expectations
are so low, they actually had a chance to beat the street," said
Kinahan.
BrianColello, Morningstar senior equity analyst, said he was looking for
three aspects of the earnings report on Tuesday.
The
first, of course, is the tech company's revenue and sales figures for
the first three months of the year. This report is the first time
that Apple has given a range for its revenue forecast, instead of a
conservative forecast.
"There
wasn't a big expectation for upside or a massive earnings beat,"
Colello said.
The
second item Colello is its outlook for the next quarter. However,
because Apple does not reveal the timing of its new product releases,
an earnings outlook would be a wildcard.
"If
it's an especially weak outlook, certainly it would be bad, but if a
new iPhone were to come out in July, it would be more palatable,"
Colello said.
He
expected June's forecast to be worse than March, especially for the
iPhone, because many customers will be holding off for a possible new
model.
However,
Colello expects continued sales of the iPad ahead for students and
educators ahead of the back-to-school shopping season.
Colello
expected around 36 to 37 million iPhone sales in the last quarter and
17 to 18 million iPads.
Apple
announced that it sold 37.4 million iPhones compared to 35.1 million
a year ago. The firm sold 19.5 million iPads in the quarter, up from
11.8 million a year ago.
The
last announcement that many investors expected Apple to make was a
dividend of stock buyback to use its pile of cash, which was reported
to grow as large as $170 billion by the end of the year.
Peter Oppenheimer, Apple's CFO, announced that its ending cash balance is
$145 billion for the quarter.
The
company also announced gross margin of between 36 and 37 percent.
Kinahan
said Wall Street analysts had hoped for gross margin of about 40
percent.
Source:
abcnews
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