Chicago Sun-Times

Apple’s Services division a cash juggernaut

Technology giant making good on Steve Jobs’ vision

- Jon Swartz @ jswartz USA TODAY

Apple is synonymous with hardware, and certainly its fortunes can rise and fall with sales of its bestsellin­g device, the iPhone. Yet all those dollars and cents consumers pay for iTunes, Apple Music and Cloud storage are adding up to big numbers.

When Apple announces its fiscal secondquar­ter results late Tuesday, Apple Services will once again be amajor story line.

It is turning into a $ 7 billion sales machine for Apple and in three years could account for nearly one- third of the company’s sales.

This should spice up what is typically Apple’s quietest quarter— the proverbial intermissi­on between its blockbuste­r holiday season and the latest, greatest iPhone announceme­nt in the fall. Financial analysts predict a bump in revenue and sales primarily because of growth in Apple Services.

It’s part of an evolving strategy at Apple that started 16 years ago with then-- CEO Steve Jobs, who determined enhanced services integrated into hardware not only improved sales but was crucial in keeping customers within Apple’s ecosystem, says Tim Bajarin, an analyst at Creative Strategies who covers Apple.

“( Apple’s) investment in services will only increase and will drive how they design future hardware to maximize these new services and more closely tie them to their hardware designs,” Bajarin says.

For people with an Apple device in their pocket or on their desk, this means more reason to spend time, and money, on their device — viewing content, listening to music, using apps, making online purchases.

Angelo Zino, a senior equity analyst at CFRA Research who has a “strong buy” on Apple shares, forecasts an 18% jump in Service- related revenue to $ 7.07 billion.

For the quarter ending in March, analysts polled by S& P Global Market Intelligen­ce estimate earnings of $ 2.02 per share on revenue of $ 53 billion, compared with $ 1.90 and $ 50.6 billion, respective­ly, in the same quarter a year ago.

Zino forecasts iPhone shipments will rise slightly to 51.5 million, accounting for about 67% of all quarterly revenue.

The real growth will come from Services, which will contribute 13% to sales, continuing a recent surge. Company CEO Tim Cook has compared the division to a Fortune 100- like company.

“We feel great about this momentum, and our goal is to double the size of the Services business in the next four years,” Cook said in a conference call announcing Apple’s first- quarter earnings in January. Apple reported $ 7.17 billion in Services sales for that quarter, up 18%.

Indeed, the Services juggernaut — which includes the App Store, Apple Music, iTunes, Apple Care and iCloud — could reach $ 52 billion annually from $ 26 billion today, estimates Kulbinder Garcha, an analyst at investment bank Credit Suisse.

What’s next? Maybe money transfer. Apple is in talks to launch a service that would rival Venmo, popular with Millennial­s, and the more establishe­d PayPal, reports Recode, and could be exploring enhanced video services.

Video offers another tantalizin­g possibilit­y for the fledgling division, Garcha and other analysts contend.

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