USA TODAY International Edition

Here’s what the new iPhone still is missing

- Matt Krantz @ mattkrantz USA TODAY

Diehard Apple fans fretted for months over what would go missing in the newest iPhone. But investors are more worried about something other than an absent headphone jack: the missing enthusiasm for Apple’s stock.

Shares of Apple fell 0.7% in the 30 days leading up to the 11th iPhone product launch Wednesday, lagging the Standard & Poor’s 500 index 0.1% increase during the same time. The lackluster stock reaction coming into the smartphone announceme­nt is a departure from previous Apple smartphone launches going back to the original iPhone almost a decade ago.

If there’s a bright spot for investors, it’s that Apple’s shares performed better Wednesday than on announceme­nt days in the past. Shares closed up 66 cents, or 0.7%, to $ 108.36. That first- day reaction breaks a string of declines or no changes in the stock following the announceme­nts of the previous four phones.

But expectatio­ns going in were low. On average, prior to the iPhone 7, Apple shares have gained 3.8% in the month prior to a product announceme­nt. The last iPhone, the shrunken-down and discounted SE, gained 10.3% in the 30 days prior to the March 2016 announceme­nt as the S& P 500 rose 6.9%.

The lack of excitement is notable given the importance of the product to Apple; iPhone revenue accounted for twothirds of Apple’s revenue last year, according to market research firm Trefis.

The lackluster run is even more disappoint­ing since the stock typically runs into pressure afterward. Apple’s stock has declined an average of 0.6% in the 30 days after the previous iPhone announceme­nts going back to 2007.

In the last four cycles, shares of Apple fell 4% in the two weeks after new phones were actually launched and made available, UBS analyst Steven Milunovich says.

The smartphone is a mature product, and the company’s other offerings ranging from watches to tablet computers as well as music and payment services have failed to pick up the slack. Apple unveiled a new iteration of its watch Wednesday but didn’t address one of the top concerns: battery life. Apple’s revenue is expected to fall 8% this fiscal year ended in September to $ 215.4 billion, S& P Global Market Intelligen­ce says.

Even with a new smartphone launch next fiscal year, analysts see revenue inching up just 4%, a fraction of its 28% revenue growth in fiscal 2015 and 31% average revenue growth over the past five fiscal years.

Samsung continues to challenge Apple. Apple claimed 75% of the premium- tier smartphone profits in the second quarter, says Michael Walkley, analyst at Canaccord Genuity. But that’s down from Apple’s 90% share in the first quarter due to Samsung capitalizi­ng on better demand for its Galaxy S7 device, he says.

Still, people waiting to upgrade their phones may finally pay up for the iPhone 7 or new phones launched in 2018, Walkley says. Apple still also has a large captive audience of users to pitch its services.

Analysts think Apple shares should be worth $ 123.25 each in 18 months.

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