Khaleej Times

Apple manages to beat views

- Alvin R. Cabral

dubai — It was good enough for Apple to stop the bleeding.

After not-so-encouragin­g results in the previous quarter and the historic misses during the second quarter of fiscal 2016, the tech giant on Tuesday posted slightly better-than-forecast results for its fiscal three-month period ended September 24, showing a quarterly revenue of $46.9 billion and net income of $9 billion.

While both were down 8.9 per cent and 19 per cent from $51.5 billion and $11.2 billion, respective­ly, in Apple’s record-setting quarter last year, it still managed to beat Wall Street’s estimates.

Cupertino, California-headquarte­red Apple sold 45.5 million iPhones during the quarter - slightly above the 44 million predicted by analysts and 5.3 per cent lower than the 48.05 million a year ago. Revenue for the flagship device was at $28.2 billion, 13 per cent down from last year’s $32.2 billion.

Still, it was not enough to save the company from posting a third straight quarter of declines in iPhone sales.

The newest iterations of the iPhone, the 7 and 7 Plus, began selling on September 16, so this is not be a true barometer of its performanc­e yet. On the other hand, the effects of Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 fiasco, analysts say, may have some bearing on Apple’s next results in January.

iPads sold in the fourth quarter clocked in at 9.3 million, also slightly above views but still 5.9 per cent lower than the year-ago period’s 9.88 million. Revenue was almost flat at $4.3 billion.

For its Mac computers, Apple sold 4.9 million units, also below expectatio­ns and 14 per cent less than in fiscal fourth quarter 2015. Revenue dived 17 per cent to $5.7 billion from the year-ago period’s $6.9 billion. Other products - which include the Apple Watch, iPod, Apple TV, Beats audio products and Applebrand­ed and third-party accessorie­s - also fell, down 22 per cent from 2015’s $3 billion to $2.4 billion.

On a quarter-to-quarter basis, however, revenue was up for all categories save for the iPad, which fell 13 per cent: iPhones were up 17 per cent, Macs climbed 10 per cent, services rose six per cent and other products were higher by seven per cent.

The real star of the results, however, was Apple’s services unit; it was up 24 per cent at $6.3 billion from $5.1 billion in 2015, a fresh quarterly record. This include those from the company’s Internet services, AppleCare, Apple Pay, licensing and other services.

App Store revenue rocketed 43 per cent.

Three of Apple’s five regions posted revenue declines: the Americas by seven per cent, Greater China by 30 per cent and the rest of the Asia-Pacific by one per cent.

 ?? Reuters ?? Apple has reported its first fall in annual revenues in 15 years, highlighti­ng a slowdown in the smartphone market and intensifyi­ng competitio­n from Chinese rivals. —
Reuters Apple has reported its first fall in annual revenues in 15 years, highlighti­ng a slowdown in the smartphone market and intensifyi­ng competitio­n from Chinese rivals. —

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