28 Oct 2022

Apple earnings rise as economic gloom hits tech

12:30 pm on 28 October 2022
TOWSON, MARYLAND - JUNE 20: People walk past The Apple Store at the Towson Town Center mall, the first of the company's retail locations in the U.S. where workers voted over the weekend to unionize, on June 20, 2022 in Towson, Maryland. Following a late-pandemic era wave of workers demanding higher pay, better benefits and more negotiating leverage, 65 of the 98 workers at the Towson Apple Store voted to join the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers union on June 18.   Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by CHIP SOMODEVILLA / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

Apple was saved by its oldest technology, its laptop computers, while its star, the iPhone, stumbled. Photo: AFP

Apple is reporting revenue and profit that topped Wall Street targets, one of the few bright spots in a tech sector battered by spending cutbacks due to inflation.

The forecast for the holiday quarter was more grim. While not providing specific numbers, Apple said revenue would decelerate in the December quarter but did not go as far as Amazon.com, whose dire holiday outlook sent its shares down 14 percent.

Apple shares fell 2 percent in after-hours trade.

Apple was saved by its oldest technology, its laptop computers, while its star, the iPhone, stumbled.

Although iPhone sales were not as strong as some analysts had targeted, they were still a record for the September quarter. Mac sales of $US11.5 billion ($NZ19.7b) were far head of analyst estimates of $9.36b.

Apple's results showed some resilience in the face of a weak economy and strong US dollar that has led to disastrous reports from many tech companies. Like Facebook parent Meta and Snap, Apple is seeing softness in advertising spending.

Overall, Apple said quarterly revenue rose 8 percent to $90.1b, above estimates of $88.9b, and net profit was $1.29 per share, topping with the average analyst estimate of $1.27 per share, according to Refinitiv data.

"We did better than we anticipated, in spite of the fact that foreign exchange was a significant negative for us," said chief financial officer Luca Maestri.

The rising US dollar has hit many companies such as Apple that generate substantial foreign revenue and are getting less cash back when they convert it.

Apple's iPhone sales for the company's fiscal fourth quarter rose to $42.6b, when Wall Street expected sales of $43.21b, according to Refinitiv IBES.

Maestri said iPhone sales set a record for the September quarter, improving 10 percent over the prior year's quarter and exceeding the company's forecast.

"The iPhone number is a hint of the turmoil and uncertainty in the market, but Apple has different ways to offset," said Runar Bjorhovde, a research analyst at market research firm Canalys.

Sales of Apple's Mac computers received a boost from this summer's introduction of redesigned MacBook Air and MacBook Pro laptops. New tablets went on sale this week.

Apple said its gross margin of 43.3 percent was a record for the September quarter.

Maestri said the robust sales also reflected a backlog of orders, caused by a prolonged shutdown at one of the factories that produces Macs, which Apple was able to fill in the quarter.

Apple wearables such as AirPods and other accessories notched sales of $9.7b, slightly ahead of the Wall Street forecast of $9.2b.

Growth in the company's services business, which has buoyed sales and profits in recent years, saw a rise to $19.2b in revenue, below the estimate of $20.10b.

Maestri said Apple experienced softness in digital advertising, as have others in the sector. "Like other major tech companies, even Apple is suffering from the negative impact of a worsening macro backdrop and ongoing supply chain woes, though it has done a better job of navigating through the challenging environment," said Jesse Cohen, senior analyst at Investing.com.

In China, which has experienced a sharp economic slowdown, Apple reported fourth-quarter sales of $15.5 billion. That is a gain from the prior quarter, when Apple logged sales of $14.6b.

Apple said it now has 900 million paying subscribers to its services, up from the previous quarter's 860m.

- Reuters

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