Lodi News-Sentinel

Apple first U.S. company to reach $1 trillion market cap

- By Seung Lee

CUPERTINO — Silicon Valley technology giant Apple on Thursday became the first public company in U.S. history to reach a $1 trillion market value, ahead of rapidly rising Seattle-based Amazon, after another strong quarterly earnings report and revenue outlook that lifted Apple’s shares.

Apple reached its trilliondo­llar market capitaliza­tion when its share price touched $207.05 at around 8:51 a.m. Thursday. Analysts calculated Apple’s market capitaliza­tion by multiplyin­g the share price with the outstandin­g share count — or how many shares are currently in the market.

Apple’s outstandin­g share count was at 4,829,926,000, according to the company’s 10-Q filing to the Securities and Exchanges Commission on Wednesday.

The milestone is the culminatio­n of Apple’s persistent growth and continued delivery of products that at times have been revolution­ary and other times evolutiona­ry, but neverthele­ss popular worldwide with consumers. From the early days of the Macintosh computer in the 1980s to later, more portable innovation­s such as the iPod, iPad, iPhone and Apple Watch — offering platforms for appbased services — Apple’s products and vision have lifted the company to new heights for a U.S. public company.

Experts pointed to the leadership shown by Apple’s late co-founder Steve Jobs and current CEO Tim Cook as pivotal to the company’s enduring success.

“Symbolical­ly, it’s an important milestone which speaks to how transforma­tional, successful and unparallel­ed the Apple ecosystem is that Jobs and Cook have created in succession,” said Dan Ives, GBH Insights’ head of technology research. “It just speaks to how revolution­ary the iPhone’s been.”

Apple, however, wasn’t the first corporatio­n worldwide to reach the trilliondo­llar market capitaliza­tion. Chinese oil giant PetroChina Co. did it first in 2007. But PetroChina’s trillion-dollar market capitaliza­tion was short-lived, and it’s now trading at a market value of around $214 billion, Forbes reported Wednesday.

Unlike PetroChina’s speculativ­e explosion that briefly propelled the oil company to the trillion-dollar pinnacle, Apple’s climb has been a slow, steady advance built on consecutiv­e quarters of solid growth. The final push came on the heels of Apple’s strong third-quarter earnings and good revenue guidance for the fourth quarter on Tuesday.

Apple paved the way for other technology companies, like Amazon, to reach the summit, according to analysts.

“Silicon Valley wouldn’t be what it is today without Apple,” said Ives. Ives also forecasted Amazon — currently more than $877 billion in market cap — will join Apple in the trilliondo­llar club in 2019.

After its $38 billion onetime tax payment to the United States government in January under the new tax reform, Apple announced a $100 billion stock buyback plan to reduce the share count in the market. Apple had 335 million more outstandin­g shares a year ago, according to the 10-Q filing from August last year.

Cupertino-based Apple reported Tuesday that sales of its iPhones only increased 1 percent in its fiscal third quarter from the same period a year earlier, but because of the popularity of its pricier smartphone models like iPhone X driving sales, total revenue from iPhone sales jumped 20 percent from the same period a year ago.

As iPhone revenues continued to jump, Apple’s most lucrative revenue growth came from services like Apple Music and Apple Pay and wearables like AirPod earphones and Apple Watch.

“They extracted more revenue and more profit from the most incentiviz­ed customers in the market,” said KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Andy Hargreaves. “As for the wearables, after early stumbles and not knowing quite what to do, Apple hit its stride. They added increments of growth surroundin­g the iPhone.”

However, geopolitic­al risks in the near term have the potential to derail some of Apple’s momentum. A looming trade war between the United States and China could possibly result in Apple products such as the Apple Watch being hit with tariffs by China and could lead to higher prices.

In a conference call with analysts on Tuesday, Cook said he hoped that “calm heads will prevail” in both Washington and Beijing.

Depending upon how it unfolds, the China-U.S. trade dispute could be particular­ly painful for Apple as mainland China remains a huge consumer base and the hub of most of its manufactur­ing, according to Hargreaves.

But Creative Strategies’ consumer technology analyst Carolina Milanesi said that the “impact of new tariffs on phones has been short-lived” in the past.

“My proof points are South Korea and their increase in tax of a few years ago and Russia, where there was a crackdown on import duties between 2010 and 2012,” said Milanesi. “In both occasions, prices grew, and the market slowed down for a few quarters before picking back up.”

Analysts suggested Apple’s new U.S. market cap record will have almost no impact on the company’s day-to-day operations or its consumers. Furthermor­e, they said they don’t expect the milestone to galvanize investors to sell or buy more Apple shares.

“From a day-to-day perspectiv­e I am sure it is business as usual (for Apple),” said Milanesi. “Does it matter for Apple? Sure, it proves that investors believe in the path they are on, especially given some of the bets they made with iPhone X pricing and the focus on services.”

But analysts noted that Apple reaching the trilliondo­llar market capitaliza­tion posits some merit.

“I’d be a fool to say there is literally no importance to it,” said Hargreaves. “It is a notable moment. It just doesn’t mean much in a practical sense. Like, is turning 50 (years old) any different than turning 49?”

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Apple Headquarte­rs in Cupertino. The tech giant became the first company with a $1 trillion market cap.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Apple Headquarte­rs in Cupertino. The tech giant became the first company with a $1 trillion market cap.

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