Apple's plan to add
generative AI to its iPhones and revive sagging sales in the crucial Chinese
market will be in focus on Thursday, when the tech giant is expected to report
its biggest quarterly revenue decline in more than a year.
Long considered a must-own
stock on Wall Street, Apple shares have underperformed other big tech companies
in recent months — falling more than 10% this year as fears mount about its
slow roll-out of artificial intelligence services and as a resurgent Huawei
takes market share in China.
Analysts on average see
iPhone sales, which account for about half of Apple's revenue, falling 10.4% in
the first three months of 2024, according to LSEG. That drop would be the
steepest in more than three years.
The year-ago iPhone revenue that
the iPhone sales drop will be measured against was unusually high, as Apple
satisfied pent-up demand after the COVID-19 pandemic, company executives
previously noted.
At least $5 billion of the
$51.3 billion in iPhone sales a year ago was essentially catching up from
disruptions in the December 2022 quarter when COVID-19 lockdowns in China
hampered iPhone production, executives said.
Even with that factored in,
Wall Street expects a slight decline in iPhone sales, and analysts estimate
Apple's total revenue declined 5% in its fiscal second quarter ended in March.
That would be Apple's biggest revenue decline since the December 2022 quarter,
when revenue fell 5.5%.
Earlier this year, Apple lost
the crown of world's most valuable company to Microsoft. Its market value
stands at $2.68 trillion after the share price declined 11.24% so far this year.
Weak revenue and falling
shares have pressured Apple to spruce up its flagship device after years
without major upgrades.
The company is in talks with
OpenAI and Alphabet-owned Google to add generative AI features for the iPhone,
which could be unveiled at what is expected to be its biggest-ever annual
developer conference in June, Bloomberg News has reported.
Analysts believe such an AI
integration could drive demand for the next iPhone series, expected to be
announced in the fall.
While executives at
Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta Platforms and other major technology firms have
talked up their AI strategies on quarterly conference calls in recent months,
Apple CEO Tim Cook has discussed his plans for the emerging technology much
less.
Adding AI features to iPhones
could also help Apple to compete better with Huawei and Samsung Electronics,
which reclaimed the title of the world's top smartphone vendor from Apple this
year driven by demand for the AI features in its Galaxy S24 smartphones.
"Replacement cycle
tailwinds and incremental generative AI features set up Apple well for a strong
iPhone 16 cycle," Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi said this week as he
upgraded the company's shares to "outperform" from
"market-perform."
"We believe prevailing
weakness in China is more cyclical than structural, and note historically
Apple's China business has exhibited much higher volatility than Apple overall,
given its very feature-sensitive installed base."
The rest of the company's
hardware business is also reeling from soft demand, with iPads and Mac sales
expected to fall 11.4% and 4.3%, respectively, in the March quarter. Apple has
signaled it is sharpening its focus on the devices, which have also been
hobbled by a lack of major upgrades.
A revamped iPad lineup is
expected to be unveiled at an Apple event this month, and media reports have
said that it plans to update every Mac model with faster, AI-focused M4
processors.
The services business, which includes App Store and subscription services such as Apple TV, is expected to remain a bright spot with revenue growth of 7.7%.
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