Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Apple becomes 1st US firm to hit $1 tn market value

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

SANFRANCIS­CO: Apple Inc. became the first Us-based company with a market value of $1 trillion, four decades after the late Steve Jobs co-founded the firm in his parents’ garage in Silicon Valley.

The consumer-technology giant briefly touched the milestone at 11.48am in New York trading on Thursday, based on share count data the company disclosed in a recent regulatory filing. Petrochina Co. briefly crossed that valuation in late 2007 but slumped quickly as oil prices collapsed in the financial crisis. Other tech giants are not far behind Apple today, with Amazon.com Inc., Alphabet Inc. and Microsoft Corp. worth more than $800 billion each.

Since its inception in 1976, Apple has consistent­ly re-imagined what a computer can be and defined how humans interact with devices and software. The imac desktop computer, the ipod, iphone, and ipad were smash hits, while commercial misses like the Newton and Lisa are still considered pioneering.

“Steve’s vision was grounded in the synergy between hardware products, software services, and third-party apps and media to make sure any customer would have everything they need without ever leaving the Apple ecosystem,” said Tony Fadell, who worked closely with Jobs to create the ipod digital music player.

“Layered on top of that business model, you had unparallel­ed product innovation, marketing excellence, combined with an untouchabl­e retail experience,” Fadell added. “There isn’t another company out there that executes at Apple’s level of detail, at their fit-and-finish. This trinity establishe­d Steve’s vision and created the Apple we know today.”

When Jobs introduced the iphone in early 2007, its touch

OTHER TECH GIANTS ARE NOT FAR BEHIND APPLE TODAY, WITH AMAZON, ALPHABET, MICROSOFT WORTH MORE THAN $800 BN EACH

screen, built-in music player, web browser and email capabiliti­es started the smartphone revolution and left competitor­s like Motorola and Blackberry in the digital dust. The iphone surpassed almost all early expectatio­ns, selling more than 1.3 billion units. It spawned the app economy, where a global army of independen­t developers earn a living from their software creations while increasing the utility of the device. It’s now the hub for a growing services business that the company hopes will pull in $50 billion in revenue a year by 2021.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Apple was a very different company. Jobs left in 1985 after disagreeme­nts with then-ceo John Sculley and the board. By 1997, the company was close to bankruptcy. Jobs returned and, with key lieutenant­s like design head Jony Ive and operations chief Tim Cook, saved Apple and turned it into the giant it is today. Jobs cut the number of Apple products so they could all fit on a small table, bringing a knack for whittling away extraneous offerings that weren’t up to scratch.

Apple faced another crisis when Jobs died in 2011 and investors worried the company couldn’t thrive without his intense, hands-on product-design leadership. However, Cook has overseen the developmen­t of key new products, like the iphone X and Apple Watch, new services like Apple Music, and research on potential new categories like self-driving cars and augmentedr­eality glasses.

Apple was worth about $350 billion when Jobs died, so Cook has led the creation of even more stock-market value than his former boss and mentor. Bloomberg News asked him about the $1 trillion target in a February interview.

“I don’t really think about it,” he said, suggesting that if the company keeps making successful products, financial success will follow. “I still view Apple as a pretty small company, the way that we operate. I know it’s not numericall­y, but the way we function is very much like that.”

 ?? REUTERS/FILE ?? Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple Inc.
REUTERS/FILE Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple Inc.

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