Growth was exceptionally
hard to come by in the last quarter of 2015, particularly as iPhone
sales just barely beat out those of a year earlier. And as foreign
currencies continued to tumble against the dollar, Apple said it was a
rough time to have two-thirds of its sales come from outside the United
States.
“This is a huge
accomplishment for our company, especially with the turbulence around
us,” CEO Tim Cook said on a conference call with analysts. “The
challenging global macroeconomic environment is leading to constrained
conditions unlike anything we’ve seen, everywhere we look.”
And even though Apple (AAPL, Tech30) managed to beat its record quarter from a year earlier, Apple said it believes sales in the current quarter will fall for the first time in 13 years.
Shares fell 3% in after-hours trading.
Here’s how Apple’s past quarter stacked up against the previous year.
iPhone
Final quarter of 2014: 74.5 million iPhones sold
Final quarter of 2015: 74.8 million, up less than 1%.
Final quarter of 2015: 74.8 million, up less than 1%.
Apple posted record iPhone sales in the last quarter — barely.
Demand
for the latest iPhone isn’t quite as strong as many had hoped. Cook
said about 60% of iPhone customers haven’t yet upgraded to the iPhone 6
or 6S (or the 6 Plus or 6S Plus).
Yet
Cook vigorously defended the iPhone, noting that Apple sold 34,000
iPhones an hour last quarter. That “speaks to the immense popularity of
the iPhone,” he said.
He also noted that people are currently using more than 1 billion Apple devices worldwide.
iPad
2014: 21.4 million iPads sold
2015: 16.1 million, down 25%
2015: 16.1 million, down 25%
IPad sales have fallen for eight straight quarters.
Mac
2014: 5.5 million Macs sold
2015: 5.3 million, down 4%
2015: 5.3 million, down 4%
Wall
Street analysts were expecting Apple to sell a record 6 million Macs.
PC sales fell broadly last quarter, but Apple had been bucking the
overall trend
Profit
2014: $18 billion
2015: $18.4 billion, up 2%
2015: $18.4 billion, up 2%
Apple’s quarterly profit was better than expected and the most profitable quarter in corporate history.
Sales
2014: $74.6 billion
2015: $75.9 billion, up 2%
2015: $75.9 billion, up 2%
Sales were also a quarterly record for Apple. In 2014, Apple ranked No. 5 on the Fortune 500 list of companies with the most revenue.
Apple
figures that if global currencies hadn’t plunged against the dollar,
Apple would have posted more than $80 billion in sales, growing 8% from
the previous quarter.
China sales
2014: $16.1 billion, making up 22% of Apple’s total sales
2015: $18.4 billion, up 14%, making up 24% of Apple’s total sales
2015: $18.4 billion, up 14%, making up 24% of Apple’s total sales
China is still growing, just not as strongly as it had been. Sales in China nearly doubled a year earlier.
This quarter’s sales
First quarter of 2015: $58 billion
First quarter of 2016: $50 billion to $53 billion
First quarter of 2016: $50 billion to $53 billion
The
last time Apple’s sales fell year over year was March 2003. As much as
investors were concerned about what Apple will say about the past
quarter, many are even more focused on the current quarter.
Cook said he expects iPhone sales will fall for the first time in history this quarter.
Apple suppliers have been cutting production of iPhone components
left and right, citing weaker demand. Cook chalked it up to a really
great quarter a year earlier, leading to a difficult comparison, on top
of a “dramatically different” economic environment now versus 2015.
Cash
Third quarter of 2015: $206 billion
Fourth quarter of 2015: $216 billion
Apple
posted another record cash hoard. Some critics would like to see Apple
use that cash to buy up assets that will help the company grow stronger.
One place Apple has invested in recently is virtual reality. Though it doesn’t have a product yet, Cook said on the call that he believes VR has some legs.
“I don’t think it’s a niche,” Cook said. “I think it’s really cool and has some interesting applications.”
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