USA TODAY US Edition

Apple’s three-phone strategy provides mixed bag of results

- Jefferson Graham

LOS ANGELES – Apple’s experiment to launch three new phones for the holiday quarter doesn’t appear to be a hit, at least in terms of number of phones sold. But higher prices mean Apple and its investors could still sit pretty.

On paper, the iPhone X, Apple’s most-expensive phone ever, looks to be a bust. The megahyped, redesigned phone, initially short on supply when released in November, now has more units available than consumers want to buy.

According to reports by Japan’s Nikkei and The Wall

Street Journal, Apple has ordered its suppliers to cut production of the phone by half for the current quarter, to 20 million units. Apple did not respond to requests for comment.

Yet overall the company, which announces fiscal first-quarter earnings late Thursday, is expected to show higher revenue for the December quarter: $87.4 billion, up 11% from the year-ago quarter, according to S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce. Higher prices are making up for the declining customer base for new phones, according to one analyst.

Consumers should “expect higher-priced devices in the years to come,” CFRA Research analyst Angelo Zino says. He sees prices overall on iPhones later this year to rise 8%.

Apple introduced the 8 and 8 Plus phones in September, followed in November by the iPhone X, the first to have a major redesign since 2014. The company is expected to show a slight uptick in iPhone shipments — 79 million, up 0.9% from a year ago, according to the analyst consensus.

More than two-thirds of its revenue will come from iPhone.

Worrying analysts now are reports from Asia about the iPhone X cutback as a signal that consumers weren’t as interested as anticipate­d in the top-end phone.

Limited interest in China is behind cooler iPhone X sales, says Daniel Ives, an analyst with GBH Research. China represents 25% to 30% of Apple inventory sales, he says.

“It’s clear Apple is not going to capture the demand” it thought it would have for the iPhone X, he adds.

The big question Thursday for Apple executives is the outlook for the first three months of this year, the first full quarter customers could buy iPhone X. Ives expects Apple to dance around the issue of production cutbacks within the guidance it gives, which itself will answer the question.

“The Band-Aid will be ripped off,” he says. “There’s a lot of fears right now, and the Street is in panic mode.”

For the December quarter, analysts forecast earnings per share of $3.84, up from $3.36 a year ago.

Apple shares fell less than 1% to $166.97 Tuesday. They’re down 7% since Thursday but still up 37% for the last year.

Apple CEO Tim Cook may also get quizzed about two other big announceme­nts that took place since Apple’s last earnings call: its mammoth tax repatriati­on and reinvestme­nt plans, and a public relations debacle after it admitted it had installed software in many phones to prevent unexpected shutdowns.

 ??  ?? Philip Schiller and other Apple executives could see a record year in revenues for the company. APPLE
Philip Schiller and other Apple executives could see a record year in revenues for the company. APPLE

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