Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Upgrade Now
Here's what's pushing Apple to $1 trillion

In This Article:

It’s worth noting that as Apple (AAPL) holds its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) this week, (the annual confab where it announces new software and features), Apple’s stock has hit a new all-time high.

With AAPL closing at $190.24 on Friday, Apple’s market capitalization now stands right around $940 billion, as the company marches seemingly inexorably to become the first to reach a $1 trillion market cap. (More on that clunky ‘seemingly inexorably’ in a minute.) To get to a trillion, the stock will need to hit about $197.32.*

Shares got a nice bump up late last week after UBS raised its target on the stock from $190 to $210, citing strong pricing power more than offsetting some perceived sluggish sales.

Apple has outperformed this year, confounding those who rightfully point out that the so-called “tyranny of large numbers” makes above-trend growth ever tougher. Year to date, the stock has climbed 10.4%, running circles around the S&P 500, up a mere 1.7%.

Of course Apple has so many advantages it’s almost folly to enumerate them all. Here are a few: It has some of the most ubiquitous and high-margin consumer products in the history of humankind. It has almost unequaled brand equity. It has $130 billion in current assets, much of it cash. And in Tim Cook, it has a proven and respected CEO (I wrote about Cook’s acumen in my last piece about Apple six months ago), as well as highly-regarded senior management.

Radical incrementalism, services and smaller products

It’s worth delving into the company’s products and services a bit which is ultimately what drives the stock price. Analysts and investors have expressed concern for years now about the company’s inability to create revolutionary new products like the iPhone and iPad, never mind that this is the tallest of orders.

Customers enter the Apple store, Thursday, May 31, 2018, in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
Customers enter the Apple store, Thursday, May 31, 2018, in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

As Yahoo Finance’s Dan Howley points out in his preview, WWDC is really all about developers and apps, so new hardware isn’t expected though there may be some telegraphing of hardware to come.

But a funny thing happened while the world waited for Apple’s next “insanely great” product. It has figured out how to make some serious hay in other ways. The company is now thriving through radical incrementalism, services and some smaller products.

By incrementalism, of course, I’m referring to the ever-evolving iPhone. In 2007 when the iPhone was launched, the company sold 1.4 million units; last year it sold 216 million. It has now sold a staggering total of one billion units to date. And of course the average selling price has been climbing, up $100 alone over the past year to $795.