Austin American-Statesman

IPhone rolls as industry slows

Strong quarterly results anticipate­d from Apple after robust sales.

- By Brandon Bailey Associated Press

Smartphone sales might be slowing for some tech companies, but not for Apple.

Analysts expect another powerhouse performanc­e from the California tech giant when it reports quarterly financial results Tuesday. Apple’s signature iPhones remain popular, even as other smartphone makers are seeing demand slow down.

Wall Street analysts estimate Apple will report a hefty $10.3 billion in profit after selling $49 billion worth of iPhones, iPads, Mac computers and other products during the April-June quarter. That’s an increase of more than 30 percent in both revenue and profit from the same period a year earlier.

Apple has said it won’t release sales figures for the new AppleWatch, though some analysts believe demand has fallen since Apple introduced the wearable gadget three months ago.

But it almost doesn’t matter: As in other recent quarters, Apple will reap its biggest rewards from its smartphone­s, especially the new, big-screen iPhone 6 and 6 Plus models introduced last fall.

People use smartphone­s for social networking, playing games, looking at pictures — far more than they use them to make calls. And for those activities, many users prefer a bigger screen.

Several analysts say their studies confirm Apple CEO Tim Cook’s claim that many recent iPhone buyers are people who switched from Android phones. Some consumers were drawn to Android devices in recent years because they had bigger screens, but Apple’s decision to increase the iPhone’s screen size is persuading Android owners to defect, said Ryan Reith, who tracks smartphone sales for the research firm IDC.

Apple likely sold about 47 million iPhones during the most recent quarter, or 34 percent more than a year earlier, according to analysts polled by FactSet.

At an average selling price of more than $600, before carrier subsidies, Apple’s phones are more expensive than many competing Android models, but they also provide more profit.

While Apple doesn’t break out the numbers, Canaccord Genuity analyst MichaelWal­kley estimates that during the first three months of 2015, Apple reaped 92 percent of the $16.6 billion in operating profit generated from smartphone­s by companies around the world.

Samsung sold more phones than Apple during that period, but many of them were lower-priced models, giving Samsung only about 15 percent of the industry’s operating profits, according toWalkley. He estimates other companies operated their smartphone business at a loss or broke even.

Apple sold about 18.2 percent of all the smartphone­s worldwide in the first quarter of 2015, while Samsung had 24.5 percent of the market, according to IDC. But Samsung has said it expects a drop in profit for the AprilJune quarter, apparently because sales of its new Galaxy S6 models fell short of expectatio­ns.

HTC has also lowered its revenue forecast for the quarter, as it blamed weak sales in China and lower demand for highend Android phones. Microsoft, meanwhile, is cutting 7,600 jobs and writing down the value of its Nokia phone division by $7.6 billion, essentiall­y acknowledg­ing that its effort to build a business sellingWin­dows smartphone­s had failed. Microsoft also reports earnings Tuesday.

Although each company has its own issues, experts say smartphone sales are slowing in many developed countries because most people already own one. IDC is forecastin­g an 11 percent increase in global smartphone sales this year, but that’s down from 28 percent in 2014.

Phone makers using Google’s Android operating system will see even slower growth of about 8.5 percent. But IDC predicts iPhone sales will grow by 23 percent this year.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 2014 ?? Apple CEOTim Cook takes a photo with an Apple employee during the launch of the newiPhone 6 at an Apple store in Palo Alto, Calif., last September. Analysts expect the California tech giant’s quarterly financial report Tuesday to showanothe­r powerhouse performanc­e, based primarily on the strength of iPhone sales.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 2014 Apple CEOTim Cook takes a photo with an Apple employee during the launch of the newiPhone 6 at an Apple store in Palo Alto, Calif., last September. Analysts expect the California tech giant’s quarterly financial report Tuesday to showanothe­r powerhouse performanc­e, based primarily on the strength of iPhone sales.

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