The Stunning Implications of Apple's Earnings

Apple, Apple Inc, AAPL, earnings, services, watch



Written by: Ophir Gottlieb

Published: 8-6-2017

This is a snippet from a CML Pro dossier.

LEDE
Sometimes an earnings beat is more than just a company executing well. Sometimes it’s a signal of the future, beyond one quarter, beyond one-year, and with the latest earnings release from Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) , we may have just that.

RESULTS
Before we dive into the details of the earnings release, here are the headline numbers:

* Apple reported $1.67 in earnings per share (EPS) versus expectations of $1.57 per forecast from Thomson First Call.

* Apple reported revenue of $45.4 billion versus First Call estimates of $44.9 billion.

(note: while we are members of First Call we did not turn in estimates).

Apple sold 41 million iPhones, above estimates and, more importantly, reminding the world that there would be no ‘demand drop-off’ effect ahead of the new iPhone cycle. Even further, Tim Cook noted on the earnings call that Apple Inc also reduced channel inventories by 3.3 million units. A surprise to the upside in sales while reducing inventory ahead of a new cycle is no small feat, and one which Apple looked totally incapable of achieving just one-year ago.

Here is a quick snippet from the earnings call from CEO Tim Cook:

If you look across the world, we had several markets in Asia, in Latin America, and the Middle East which grew more than 25 percent year on year.

If you look at [iPhone] 7 in the [iPhone] 7 Plus, we grew strong double-digit year on year compared to the 6S plus a year ago. So, iPhone was terrific.

Source: CNBC



Apple also saw iPad sales increase for the first time in several years with 11.42 million units sold versus expectations of just 9.03 million. Tim Cook also noted that Apple Watch sales rose 50% year-over-year, although he continues to hide the actual number.

But all of that is standard data for a quarterly beat. First, it was the forward guidance and the news that followed that made this earnings cycle a piece of the future, rather than the past.

* Apple guided revenue for the current quarter in the $49 billion - $52 billion range versus First Call estimates of $49.2 billion.

Apple’s lifted guidance was a hint that amid all of the heated speculation that supply constraints would prevent the new iPhone from hitting shelves before the quarter end (Sep. 30) that the new iPhone will likely get into people’s hands in the last week (ish) of the quarter ending in September.

Second, Apple Services broke yet another record in revenue, topping $7.26 billion in the quarter, which is a 22% increase year-over-year. Doing a little math proves that Services now accounts for more than 16% of total revenue. The Apple Services segment alone is now the size of a Fortune 100 company according to Tim Cook.

Even better, it appears that Tim Cook’s goal of doubling Apple Services by 2020 is still on track (a 20% CAGR is required to hit that number).

Now, let’s turn to the future in greater detail:

THE FUTURE
iPhone revenue can be backed out by using the average selling price (ASP), which was $606, and multiplied by the units sales of 41 million. That gives us $24.846 billion, which we can round up to $25 billion assuming the company didn’t sell exactly 41 million units, but some number slightly higher.

With total revenue of $45.4 billion, that makes the iPhone 55% of sales. If that sounds crazy high, it actually isn’t.

In the one-year ago period, the iPhone accounted for 56.7% of revenue (ASP $595 and 40.4 million units) and in the two-year ago period iPhones accounted for (ASP $660 and 47.5 million units on total revenue of $49.6 billion) 63% of revenue.

Back in 2014-2015 Wall Street and the main stream media grumbled that Apple was in fact turning into a phone company rather than a broad technology company. Here is one of many high profile articles, this one from The Atlantic: