Apple’s path to $1 trillion

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Apple’s valuation hit $1 trillion once again Wednesday on the heels of the company’s better-than-expected earnings report that exceeeded Wall Street’s expectations on both the top and bottom lines.

The company reached the milestone when shares traded above $210.31 Wednesday morning. The tech giant’s valuation can be calculated by multiplying the price of a single share by 4,754,986,000, the number of shares outstanding.

Apple (AAPL) was the first U.S. company to reach a market cap of $1 trillion on August 2, 2018, but had lost the title at the end of last year after expressing concerns around slowing iPhone sales. And in January, the company spooked investors after giving its first revenue warning in 16 years, blaming slowing growth in China and the ongoing trade war with the world’s second largest economy.

Microsoft (MSFT) and Amazon (AMZN) have also touched trillion-dollar territory, but Apple has stayed at the top the longest. The latest $1 trillion milestone comes after Apple’s services industry — including iCloud, iTunes, the App Store, Apple Pay, AppleCare and Apple News+ — saw 16% growth year-over-year. Apple is also expanding its services segment with a new Apple TV+ streaming service, which will aim to rival Netflix.

Source: Yahoo Finance/David Foster
Source: Yahoo Finance/David Foster

Here are the key milestones along Apple’s tumultuous journey to becoming the first trillion dollar company in America.

April 1976: Apple is born

Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, after dropping out of Reed College and UC Berkeley respectively, cobbled together the Apple I computer in Jobs’s garage, which they would go on to sell without a monitor or keyboard. The company eventually became incorporated on January 3, 1977.

June 1977: The release of the original Apple II

The Apple II revolutionized the personal computer industry. The device’s color graphics and user-friendly design were considered to be game-changing innovations at the time. In April 1977, the now-defunct Byte magazine predicted that the Apple II “may be the first product to fully qualify as the ‘appliance computer’ … a completed system which is purchased off the retail shelf, taken home, plugged in and used.” In its March 1978 review, Byte concluded, “For the user that wants color graphics, the Apple II is the only practical choice available in the ‘appliance’ computer class.”

December 1980: Apple goes public

Average investors get to take a bite out of Apple, which was still considered a risky upstart at the time. The company sold 4.6 million shares at $22 per share under the stock symbol “AAPL,” on the NASDAQ. The public offering generated more capital than any other debut since Ford (F) in 1956.