Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Upgrade Now
Apple's $500 billion promise: Been there, done that

In This Article:

Photo: PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP (Getty Images)
Photo: PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP (Getty Images)

A version of this article originally appeared in Quartz’s members-only Weekend Brief newsletter. Quartz members get access to exclusive newsletters and more. Sign up here.

Wall Street’s number crunchers are giving Apple’s eye-popping $500 billion U.S. investment plan the digital equivalent of the “thinking face” emoji. Financial analysts have serious doubts about whether the tech giant can actually deliver on what would be its most ambitious spending spree ever – even as the announcement scored an immediate all-caps “THANK YOU TIM COOK AND APPLE!!!” from President Donald Trump on Truth Social.

This isn’t Apple’s first headline-grabbing investment announcement. In January 2018, during Trump’s first term, Apple announced a $350 billion contribution to the U.S. economy over five years. That included plans to create 20,000 jobs — the same job creation figure in last week’s announcement. In April 2021, during the Biden administration, Apple announced an “acceleration” of its U.S. investments, with plans to spend more than $430 billion over five years.

The company’s pattern of recycling key commitments while increasing the headline dollar figure raises questions about how much of these investments represent truly new economic activity — as opposed to just repackaging existing business plans.

The timing and scale of Apple’s announcement appear strategically aligned with the political landscape. Trump himself acknowledged the connection between Apple’s plan and his trade policies, telling governors that Apple had “stopped two plants in Mexico” to boost its U.S. presence. “They don’t want to be in the tariffs,” Trump said.

This follows a pattern that began during Trump’s first term, when Cook built goodwill with the president through personal meetings and successfully lobbied for tariff exemptions in 2019. The relationship appears to be continuing, with Cook attending Trump’s inauguration and potentially shielding Apple from the full impact of new tariffs on Chinese imports that could significantly affect its business model. As Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives noted, “Cook continues to prove that he is 10% politician and 90% CEO.”

UBS analyst David Vogt was more blunt in his assessment, calling the $500 billion figure “completely unrealistic mechanically” in comments to Fortune. He questioned where the additional money would come from, noting that Apple only generates about $100 billion a year in free cash flow, with $90 billion already allocated to share buybacks. “It’s unclear where the cash flow comes [from] to try to even remotely attempt this,” Vogt said, adding that Apple’s current $10 billion in annual capital expenditures represents just a fraction of the annual $125 billion the new investment would require.