Analysts are generally satisfied with the outlook for AAPL despite Apple’s harsh earnings call warning. However, one analyst has indicated that iPhone prices could rise in other countries. While this could happen across the complete range of Apple products, it’s likely to be especially problematic for the iPhone 14.
Apple reported record earnings for Q2, but warned that revenue for the current quarter would incur a hit of anywhere from $4B to $8B due to five issues …
Background
Apple reported record earnings for the first quarter of the year (Apple’s fiscal Q2).
Apple reported revenue of $97. 3 billion, an increase of 9% year over year. The company reported a profit of $25 billion and earnings per share of $1.52.
However, the company stated that this quarter would be difficult.
Apple CEO Tim Cook yesterday warned that Apple is likely to see a supply shortfall costing the company anywhere from $4B to $8B this quarter. That followed a market intelligence report suggesting continuing shortages in four component categories.
CEO Tim Cook outlined five reasons why Q3 revenue was expected to take a huge hit:
- Component shortages
- COVID-19 disruption in China
- Exchange rate weaknesses
- Loss of Russian sales
- Inflation reducing consumer spending power
Apple analysts generally upbeat
PED30 has a roundup of reactions from 13 analysts, and the general consensus is upbeat. Piper Sandler’s note was pretty representative of the general view.
Transitory Headwinds Overshadow Strong Business Trends. We believe that the guidance might be viewed as disappointing for the wrong reasons. In the June quarter, Apple is being impacted by two transitory, nonoperational issues: 1) a 150 bps headwind from the sales ban on Russia and 2) another 300 bps headwind from FX. In addition, the company is facing a $4 billion to $8 billion headwind from COVID shutdowns in China and silicon shortages. The company’s fundamentals seem to be headed in the right direction, but the short-term transitory impacts are distorting June quarter results.
But iPhone prices may rise outside US
However, one analyst warned that iPhone prices may rise outside the US when the iPhone 14 lineup is launched in the fall. Chris Caso warned that the exchange rate problem may be a long-term one, and that while Apple product prices may increase across the board beyond US borders, the timing may be particularly unfortunate for the iPhone 14.
We consider FX and Russia more permanent and fear that Apple will need to increase local currency prices when it launches new products in fall, if the exchange rate doesn’t change. In the past, higher local prices can have negative effects on unit demand.
That could see Apple warning of a further revenue hit in the fall quarter, specifically due to this.