Kuwait Times

Apple shines in history-making style, despite some bruises

Brand still stands for quality product, great design, ease of use

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SAN FRANCISCO: Despite fears of sapped inspiratio­n, slowing sales, tariffs and suffocatin­g regulation, Apple is now shining brighter than any other private-sector company in history, as the first with a $1 trillion market value. Since starting out in a family garage in Silicon Valley more than 40 years ago, Apple weathered boardroom drama, market missteps, and even a close call with bankruptcy on its path to the milestone, thanks to products that radically transforme­d lifestyles and the way we communicat­e with each other.

The symbolic stock market accomplish­ment is a “natural result” given Apple’s winning steps, and is “certainly not the finish line,” Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi reasoned in an AFP interview. Apple has sold more than a billion iPhones. The handsets account for more than half of the Cupertino-based company’s revenue.

In the second quarter of this year, the company recorded profits that jumped more than 30 percent to $11.5 billion, besting market expectatio­ns despite selling slightly fewer iPhones than analysts projected. Apple’s revenue in the fiscal third quarter soared 17 percent to $53.3 billion from the same period a year earlier on the back of sales of pricier iPhones, online services and wearable devices.

Waiting for magic

However, iPhones accounted for 14.7 percent of the smartphone­s sold in 2017, while South Korean consumer electronic­s behemoth Samsung had 21.6 percent of that market, according to industry tracker IDC. Apple shipped 41.3 million iPhones, claiming 12.1 percent of the global market compared to 20.9 percent for Samsung and 15.8 percent for Huawei. Apple has seen sales of Mac computers grow despite overall shrinking in the market.

Since the death of legendary Apple co-founder and pitchman Steve Jobs in 2011, analysts have watched for the company to wow the world with the next “big thing” that will shake up culture and fuel revenue like the Macintosh, the iPod or the iPhone. While that kind of innovation has yet to reach store shelves, Apple has consistent­ly defied dour prediction­s. In early May, Apple unveiled a new $100 billion share buyback plan, alleviatin­g worries about the iPhone’s prospects and a hit from US-China trade tensions.

The company has managed to notch higher revenues, even when iPhone sales fall shy of expectatio­ns due to a trend of Apple making more money off each handset. Apple chief executive Tim Cook has remained firmly bullish, touting the company’s product pipeline and championin­g good sales of the iPhone X, a recently unveiled model whose $1,000 price tag analysts worried would be excessive. Benedict Evans of Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz saw strength in Apple’s tendency to do the unexpected in a way of thinking it likely inherited from Jobs.

“The tendency of so many people in tech to presume an Apple product will fail because it makes choices that they wouldn’t have made is one of Apple’s greatest competitiv­e advantages,” Evans said in a missive fired off on Twitter. And while online pre-orders and global product releases have whittled down the long, colorful queues at Apple shops on iPhone launch days, throngs still make pilgrimage­s to lay hands on devices. “The brand still stands for quality product, great design, ease of use and a customer-first approach to technology,” analyst Milanesi said of Apple.

Certainly not the finish line

Privacy a religion

Apple has managed to shine despite bruises to its image that included being accused of keeping young people addicted to smartphone­s, slowing performanc­e of older iPhones to motivate upgrades and sidesteppi­ng taxes by nestling cash in offshore havens.

The company has battled with the US government over making iPhones so secure that even police can’t peek at data, and prides itself on not making money off people’s personal informatio­n the way ad-targeting companies such as Facebook do. “Tim Cook has made privacy a religion at Apple,” Gene Munster of Loup Ventures said in an online post early this year. “We expect over the next year investors will look favorably on Apple given the company’s privacy-first ethos in an age where privacy is becoming a more prevalent topic.” Apple has spotlighte­d the growing amount of money it takes in from music, applicatio­ns, games, subscripti­ons and services it sells to people using its devices.

 ?? —AFP ?? NEW YORK: The Apple logo is displayed in an Apple store in lower Manhattan in New York City.
—AFP NEW YORK: The Apple logo is displayed in an Apple store in lower Manhattan in New York City.

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