Apple's value plunged nearly $1 trillion in 2022. Here's what that says about the economy

Apple marked a grim milestone this week, falling about $1 trillion below a peak reached in 2022.

The company's shares rallied in recent days, but the massive loss in value reflects difficult economic times for companies across the tech industry and beyond.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq plummeted by about one-third in 2022 while the broader S&P 500 fell 19% over that period. Apple's performance, meanwhile, fell right in between those two indexes, dropping 27% over the course of the year.

The decline of a longstanding stalwart like Apple highlights trends that thrust the U.S. economy into uncertainty in 2022, leaving it in a precarious position as the new year begins, analysts told ABC News.

The forces that have squeezed Apple and the wider economy include a shift from pandemic-era consumption that flipped the fortunes of companies large and small, a near-historic rise in inflation that triggered an aggressive response from the Federal Reserve and supply chain disruptions that eased but persisted with zero-COVID lockdowns in China, analysts said.

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"You're talking about $1 trillion wiped out from the economy in one stock – it's a big number and it isn't something that should be ignored," Angelo Zino, senior industry analyst at CFRA Research, told ABC News.

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Why Apple lost nearly $1 trillion in value in 2022 and what it says about the state of the U.S. economy.

PHOTO: Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple Inc., speaks during a 'First Tool-In' ceremony at the TSMC facility under construction in Phoenix, Dec. 6, 2022. (Bloomberg via Getty Images)
PHOTO: Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple Inc., speaks during a 'First Tool-In' ceremony at the TSMC facility under construction in Phoenix, Dec. 6, 2022. (Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Consumer tastes change as pandemic fears wane

Like many tech companies, Apple has suffered from a major consumer shift away from the pandemic-era focus on buying goods.

At the height of the pandemic, hundreds of millions across the globe facing lockdowns replaced restaurant expenditures with couches, exercise bikes and tech products. Over the first three months of 2021, for instance, Apple's profits more than doubled compared to the same period a year prior.

"People were home buying computers, playing with gadgets and consumer electronics – all the things that Apple sells," Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, told ABC News.

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As pandemic fears have waned, however, consumers have prioritized spending on the experiences they missed out on while cooped up indoors. This fall, demand for personal computers plunged nearly 20% compared to the year prior, research firm Gartner found.

That change in taste has punished the bottom line of Apple and many tech firms, Zandi said.