USA TODAY US Edition

Apple ‘isn’t reinventin­g world’ anymore

- Matt Krantz @mattkrantz USA TODAY

Apple’s maverick image and marketing made it a hit with consumers and investors when smartphone­s were novel.

But as boring replaces bold at the giant, investors need to reset their expectatio­ns, analysts say

Fast-growth is being replaced with “annuity-like revenue streams” as Apple is “now mainstream and not the upstart,” UBS analyst Steven Milunovich said in a note to clients on Thursday.

“Some might be disappoint­ed that Apple isn’t reinventin­g the world,” he said. Milunovich expects 5% growth in iPhone unit sales in the current fiscal year. That’s still a whopping number of smartphone­s being sold — 49 million in the current quarter — but on Wall Street, single-digit growth just doesn’t impress.

Investors and analysts are adjusting what they can expect from Apple, given the company is a behemoth and mathematic­ally unlikely to put up the kind of growth that turned the stock into such a champ in the past. The same fate has met other high-growth companies that have matured as their products reached saturation and improvemen­ts have become incrementa­l.

Meanwhile, Apple faces the additional challenge that carriers are moving away from subsidies, leaving consumers to see, often for the first time, what they’re actually paying for upgraded phones. Sticker shock could cause some consumers to keep their existing “good enough” phones longer than two years.

And the iPhone 6S isn’t a compelling upgrade, and that changes the math at Apple. Even with the iPhone 6, which was seen as a big upgrade as the company finally matched the larger screen sizes of phones from Samsung and Microsoft, Apple’s adjusted earnings grew 39%.

That’s a stellar growth rate but still a fraction of the 54% adjusted profit growth in 2010 and 85% growth in 2011.

Reality is sinking in fast along with maturation. Analysts expect adjusted earnings growth to grow 32% in the current quarter but then drop off fast as the iPhone 6S fails to inspire the same level of upgrade fever.

Adjusted profit growth is expected to be just 3.6% in the fourth calendar quarter and hit just 5.2% in the first quarter. Adjust profit growth is seen as being just 7% in fiscal 2016.

What’s this mean for Apple stock?

Most analysts remain bullish and think the stock could be worth close to $150 a share in 18 months. That would be 33% upside if correct. Shares of Apple rose $2.42, or 2.2%, Thursday to $112.57.

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