earnings

AAPL 2Q12 Estimate


Revenue: $40.6 billion (AAPL guidance: $32.5 billion/Consensus: $36.0 billion) 
  • I expect iPad and iPhone to represent approximately 75% of Apple’s quarterly revenue.  

GM: 42.9%  (AAPL guidance: 42%/Consensus: 42.7%)

  • Apple’s margin jumped to 44.7% last quarter, from 40.5% in 2011. Continued strong iPhone sales should benefit overall GM in 2Q12,  with attractive component pricing providing additional support. 

EPS: $11.45  (AAPL guidance: $8.50/Consensus: $9.81) 

  • I expect Apple to report 79% yoy EPS growth, which is slightly less than the 83% yoy EPS growth observed in 2011.


Product Unit Sales and Commentary

Macs: 4.3 million (14% yoy growth)

  • With no Mac updates during the quarter, I expect Mac shipments to show continued yoy growth, albeit at a slower pace than 1Q12. iPad cannibalization is also picking up as consumers bypass Macs for lower-priced iPads. 

iPad: 12.0 million (155% yoy growth)

  • Apple sold three million new iPads during opening weekend (includes pre-orders that shipped for the 12 days leading up to the March 16 launch, but not iPad 2 sales).  My iPad estimate is primarily based on weekly sales run rates, using Apple’s new iPad opening weekend sales as a benchmark between slower iPad sales in January and February and the supply/demand imbalance at the end of March. Unlike last year’s iPad launch, Apple seemed to have a better handle with new iPad supply, as online shipment waits did not reach 2011 levels, even with a more extensive international rollout. My estimate assumes approximately 6 million new iPads sold during the last 3.5 weeks of March and an additional 6 million iPads sold in January, February, and the beginning of March. 

iPod: 6.8 million (25% yoy decline)

  • Representing only 2.7% of estimated 2Q12 revenue, the iPod is a footnote. 

iPhone: 36.4 million (95% yoy growth)

  • My estimate reflects an average 2.2 million weekly sales run rate and the addition of approximately 6 to 8 million iPhones into the distribution channel (approaching Apple’s desired 4 to 6 week range). For some perspective, Apple saw a 1.6 million weekly iPhone sales run rate during 2Q11 (pre-iPhone 4S).  My 2Q12 estimate assumes 38% yoy growth in the weekly run rate, which I think is reasonable given  the iPhone 4S and increased iPhone penetration at newer carriers (including Verizon and Sprint) and countries (China). 

When Apple releases earnings on April 24, many will look at iPad and iPhone sales as an indicator for continued strong consumer demand. I suspect Apple may be allowed some breathing room on iPad sales given the supply/demand imbalance and trickiness surrounding a new product launch. Meanwhile, iPhone lacked any significant interferences during the quarter, with results dependent on demand, and to a lesser extent, the number of units added into the distribution channel. 

Apple 1Q12 Preview: Tale of Two Products

Apple’s 1Q12 earnings report will boil down to two simple data points: iPhone and iPad sales. Guidance will take a back seat, as will margin expectations and management commentary. The market wants confirmation that iPhone and iPad demand is robust, especially after Apple’s disappointing 4Q11. 

The magic numbers will be 31 and 13. If Apple sold more than 31 million iPhones and 13 million iPads, Apple will have met expectations (sky-high for iPhone and lukewarm for iPad). Whisper numbers (the numbers that analysts secretly discuss) probably stand somewhere near 34 million iPhones and 15 million iPads, but missing whisper numbers usually won’t lead to negative EPS estimate revisions.

In an attempt to put the last few weeks of heightened iPhone 1Q12 expectations (and reduced iPad expectations) within context, and using my 1Q12 estimates published on November 18, 2011, I would put 27 million iPhones and 12 million iPads as the minimal bar Apple has to jump over in order to avoid significant negative EPS revisions and price target cuts. 

AAPL 1Q12 Estimate



  • Revenue: $39.4 billion (AAPL guidance: $37 billion/Consensus: $37.9 billion) 
  • I expect iPad and iPhone to represent nearly 70% of Apple’s quarterly revenue.  My projected revenue is 38% higher than any previous quarter (closest was $28.6 billion revenue reported in 3Q11). 

  • GM: 41.3%  (AAPL guidance: 40%/Consensus: 41.6%)
  • Apple’s margin in 2011 ranged from 38.5% to 41.7%.  A higher iPhone mix during 1Q12 (including 3GS and 4 models) should benefit overall GM with component pricing remaining largely unchanged from previous quarters. 

  • EPS: $10.50  (AAPL guidance: $9.30/Consensus: $9.72) 
  • I expect Apple to report 63% yoy earnings growth.

    Product Unit Sales and Commentary

  • Macs: 5.2 million (25% yoy growth)
  • Mac experienced 22% yoy growth in 2011 (34% growth in portables and 1% in desktops) and I expect similar growth during 1Q12 as consumers flock to the MacBook Air.  Apple will continue to take market share from Windows (early stages of 5-10+ year trend). As the PC market struggles to grow (thanks in part to the proliferation of smartphones and iPad), I view long-term Mac growth near 10% as very respectable. 

  • iPad: 14.7 million (100% yoy growth)
  • iPad supply/demand returned to equilibrium during 4Q11 with Apple reporting an average weekly sales rate of 925,000 iPads.  My 14.7 million iPad estimate assumes an average 1.1 million iPad weekly (13 weeks) sales rate (higher than 4Q11 due primarily to holiday shopping). I am not forecasting any significant change to the iPad channel.  While there have been many rumors and reports indicating softening iPad demand, I think some of that is the reduction of overly optimistic iPad expectations towards a more conservative consensus expectation.  I think iPad will remain a top holiday gift. My 100% yoy growth does contain some conservatism when compared to 334% yoy iPad growth reported in 2011. 

  • iPod: 16.5 million (15% yoy decline)
  • Continued strong iPod touch sales will partially offset the continued decline in Apple’s other iPod models.  Apple refreshed the iPod line-up in 4Q11 and iPods do make great stocking stuffers, so my 15% yoy decline is slightly higher than the 20% and 27% yoy declines registered in 3Q11 and 4Q11, respectively.

  • iPhone: 28.4 million (75% yoy growth)
  • iPhone 4S sales are off to a fast start with 4 million devices sold during opening weekend, a 1-2 week backlog on Apple’s online store (my iPhone 4S ordered from Apple took 15 days to arrive), and continued extended shipping waits at mobile carriers. It is clear that iPhone 4S supply/demand is not in equilibrium. iPhone 3GS (and iPhone 4) price reductions should also benefit 1Q12 sales. Apple’s largest iPhone quarter prior to 1Q12 was 20.3 million sold during 3Q11 (average of 1.7 million per week). My 28.4 million estimate reflects an average 2.2 million per week sales rate, but I admit that sales will be limited to Apple’s iPhone production levels. Another way to conceptualize my estimate: I am assuming 4 million iPhone 4S devices sold during opening weekend and then a subsequent 2 million units sold each following week (not out of the question given continued stockouts and the impact from 3GS and 4 models). 

    Questions can be addressed to me through twitter. 

    Final Thoughts on Apple's 4Q11

    iPhone. We Still Don’t Know How People Buy Phones. 

    While everyone has been quick to blame unrealistic expectations for Apple’s 4Q11 “miss”, I think the rare earnings disappointment was partially due to a lack of understanding on how iPhone demand fluctuates and how people buy phones. Apple just became a much harder company to model.

    It is incorrect to say that analysts never considered people waiting to buy iPhones ahead of a rumored iPhone refresh. Almost every analyst note published in the past three months mentioned an iPhone refresh and the tendency for pent-up demand to build as consumers wait on iPhone purchases.  Apple management forewarned the same scenario on Apple’s 3Q11 earnings call. People were expecting it.  Even my analysis was based on the idea that a slowdown in iPhone 4 sales in countries that typically get the new iPhone on launch would be offset by continued strong iPhone 4 sales in countries where the new iPhone would take months to reach. That didn’t happen.

    Instead, the world pretty much stopped buying iPhones in September.  I don’t think it’s much of an exaggeration to say that iPhone sales almost came to a screeching halt towards the end of September. Apple specifically mentioned that sales slowed further in the second half of the quarter.  Running rough calculations, I estimate iPhone sales may have been tracking down 20-40% yoy in the U.S. towards the end of September. Pretty remarkable. I wonder if Apple retail stores saw this noticeable decline in demand? Analysts underestimated how many people were aware of iPhone rumors and were waiting to buy. Apple was surprised too, with both Tim Cook and Peter Oppenheimer mentioning “rumors” as one cause for weak iPhone sales.  Anecdotally, I talked with quite a few BlackBerry and Android users over the summer, all of whom were well aware of a new iPhone coming out sometime in the fall. I assumed there were other people still buying iPhones.

    The iPhone miss (and let me be clear, the iPhone number was pretty negative at only 21% yoy growth) came as a huge surprise with analysts and the investment community thinking the iPhone demand cycle had become independent of product transitions. We thought that sequential quarterly iPhone growth is the new normal, regardless of how a new iPhone impacts deferred sales. Apple’s significant 3Q11 iPhone beat cemented the idea of sequential quarterly growth. Ironically, many analysts thought the new iPhone was going to be unveiled at WWDC and had modeled for declining iPhone sales in 3Q11 due to deferred sales (people waiting). Instead, Apple beat everyone’s iPhone estimate by a mile as iPhone rumors really didn’t grow until August. Independent Apple analysts (including myself) concluded it would be unlikely that Apple would report a sequential quarterly decline in iPhone shipments in 4Q, which meant Apple would sell more than 20.3 million iPhones (their 3Q11 total). We weren’t necessary making a call on growth assumptions, or at least I wasn’t. Some analysts did get it right. Goldman Sachs modeled 16.9 million iPhones – essentially spot on. Still wondering why Goldman was picked first for Apple’s earnings Q&A?

    I don’t think our iPhone expectations were overly optimistic though as our previous demand forecasts have now shifted to 1Q12. Our annual iPhone sales estimates remain largely unchanged. Instead, our timing was wrong. I think iPhone’s increasing demand complexity was the main culprit for the iPhone miss. Even Apple management thought they would sell more iPhones in 4Q11.* We still don’t understand how consumers buy phones. For many, buying a phone is categorized as “the big purchase” even though the actual cost of the phone is spread over 2 years. A $110 monthly cell phone bill 17 months from now is not as important as the difference between a free subsidized phone and a $199 subsidized phone today. People wait to buy phones until their contract is up and - this is key - they are willing to wait after their contract is up to take advantage of the carrier’s subsidy and buy a phone that they really want, even if it means holding off on a new cellphone for an extra 4 or 5 months. This trend will only grow as smart phones flourish.

    Reports of record iPhone 4 sales over opening weekend (including positive commentary from AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint) are evidence that iPhone demand is back. Going forward, analysts should model a slowdown in iPhone sales during product transitions. If a new iPhone is rumored for October 2012, one should assume people will stop buying iPhones in September. Seems obvious now, but many got it wrong. In addition, a new form factor will also lead to difficultly in meeting initial supply, which could hurt early sales.

    iPad. The Wild West. 

    Apple sold 11.1 million iPads in 4Q11. I expected 11.7 million and I had originally expected 11.1 million, so iPad is performing near my expectations. Unfortunately, many independent analysts have been running with extremely aggressive iPad expectations. I do think these expectations need to come down.  Apple noted iPad supply and demand is now in balance. Apple sold every iPad that consumers desired; 11.1 million/quarter.  I still get nervous with iPad because it is such a young product.  What if demand really isn’t as good as we think? It doesn’t mean the product is a failure, instead maybe people just haven’t yet become comfortable with tablet computing. Sales fluctuations will occur and people need to plan for it. I found it interesting that Tim Cook made the claim that iPad could turn out to be larger than the PC market. In the past, Apple’s remarks were more vague and general. Apple wants to set the tone for iPad. This is the bet. This is the future.

    Mac. Steady as She Goes. 

    Apple’s forgotten child (at least in many investor’s eyes) continues to do well, taking market share from Windows with both hands. Strong 37% yoy growth in portables (thank you Macbook Air) speaks well of Apple’s growing brand in the traditional PC market. Yet compared to iPad and iPhone, Mac’s influence is just too small to impact earnings to any large degree.

    iPod. Out to Pasture.

    Declining iPod sales are now normal and to be expected. In fact, iPod declines are accelerating. Sure, the “newer” iPods might change this trend a bit in the near term, but when excluding iPod Touch, the iPod is only a fraction of its former self.

    Guidance. Strong. 

    Apple’s 1Q12 guidance was very strong, near current consensus (which is very rare). Management indicated they will sell a record number of iPhones and iPads during the holiday quarter (not that shocking). Since Apple “missed” earnings, analysts will be more conservative with their forward expectations, unsure of how much cushion Apple built into its guidance. Many analysts were already running with conservative assumptions so the 4Q11 “miss” should not weigh much on forward EPS estimates.  

    Thoughts on Apple. Quarterly Results Rarely Matter For Superior Management Teams

    Earnings misses are not the end of the world.  They can be healthy, serving as a foundation for further gains. Misses act as a reset for increasingly lofty expectations. Problems arise though when people look for answers to an earnings miss and are quick to make incorrect assumptions.  A prime example is Apple’s retail store trends. Same store sales were down approximately 10% (which means that your local Apple store reported 10% less revenue, on average, this past quarter vs. last year – a pretty sizable decline). Well, hello, iPhone sales were miserable. With an ASP of over $600 and a concentration of Apple retail stores in the U.S., a slowdown in iPhone sales (maybe as much as 30-40% in September in the U.S.) will have an impact on total retail store revenue. It doesn’t take a genius to figure that out. 

    Apple will get penalized in the near-term because of its earnings “miss”. People will remain more cautious on iPhone and iPad growth.  Expectations are being reduced (especially among the independents).  Apple bears are getting louder. People are wondering. People are asking. Earlier this week, the biggest question was how high the stock would gap up after earnings. Now people are thinking of the “what ifs”, what if people stop buying iPhones, what if iPad sales slow down. While such questions might seem silly to think given the technicalities of Apple’s “miss”, its nevertheless happening.

    Good companies sometimes have “bad” earnings reports (who would have thought 50% EPS growth would be considered bad). In such circumstances, time is your friend. For long-term investors, quarterly results shouldn’t even matter much, instead attention should be given to the current management team and its ability to innovate.  

    *UPDATE: Thanks to @adamthompson32 for pointing out that Apple actually said 4Q11 iPhone sales were better than expected. Tim Cook: “And as we have predicted…(iPhone) sell-through decline did occur in the quarter, but not nearly to the extent that we thought and therefore, we significantly beat our guidance.” 

    AAPL 4Q11 Earnings Cheat Sheet

    AAPL Orchard Estimates (change from previous estimate in italics)

    Revenue: $32.6 billion (up $600 million) (guidance: $25.0 billion/consensus: $29.0 billion)

    GM: 40.5% (down 40 basis points) (guidance: 38.0%/consensus 39.6%).

    EPS: $8.55 (up $0.10) (guidance: $5.50/consensus: $7.16).

    Product Unit Sales Estimates 

    Macs: 4.8 million (up 100,000)

    iPad: 11.8 million (up 700,000)

    iPod: 7.2 million (unchanged)

    iPhone: 23.3 million (unchanged)

    I remain confident in my initial quarterly estimates, published July 26, making only modest tweaks to a few variables. I raised my iPad sales estimate 700,000 units to reflect a higher production yield. I am maintaining my iPhone sales estimate (which I initially thought was too high) as the iPhone 4S is pushed out to 1Q12 and iPhone 4 supply draw-down did not occur to any major extent in 4Q.

    Things to look for:

    iPad Sales. Apple may provide an iPad sales update at next week’s iPhone event. Apple was successful in increasing iPad production in 3Q11 and many will look for continued gains in 4Q11. While my estimate calls for 11.8 million iPads, Street consensus may actually be slightly higher. I think iPad sales greater than 10 million will be deemed okay by the Street, while more than 13 million iPads will be considered strong.

    iPhone Sales. With the iPhone 4S launch pushed out to 1Q12, I don’t think we will see too much of a drop-off in iPhone 4 demand, especially considering iPhone 4 was recently brought to new carriers and countries. Apple may still get a pass if iPhone sales are on the weak side as analysts will simply blame iPhone 4S ramifications such as pent-up demand. iPhone sales greater than 20 million will be deemed good, while more than 25 million will be considered strong. iPhone 4S launch weekend sales figures may also be shared on the call (although it is just as possible that the iPhone launch will occur after October 18 or Apple will choose to not disclose initial sales).

    Guidance.  Similar to previous quarters, investors will look for Apple’s 1Q12 guidance for evidence of any economic impact or weaker iPad/iPhone production plans. Unfortunately, management’s conservative nature will make it very difficult to reach solid conclusions.  My initial 1Q12 EPS estimate is $10.00 (Street consensus is $8.83) on $39.7 billion of revenue.  I would consider EPS guidance around $7.00, with revenue in high $20s billion, as solid.

    Two other scenarios may occur: 1) Apple may announce extra conservative EPS guidance due to economic concerns or 2) iPhone supply concerns related to the iPhone 4S launch. I think extra conservative EPS guidance would be something like $5.50, which compares to Apple’s reported $6.43 in 1Q11 (one could make the argument that Apple will put guidance at least above last year’s $6.43 EPS).

    If Apple delivers a blow out 4Q11 quarter, chances are good Apple may run with extra conservative 1Q12 guidance as analysts won’t necessarily increase 1Q12 estimates, but would still maintain Apple target prices due to the 4Q11 beat. Accordingly, expectations wouldn’t be raised too high and Apple will be in a good position for another solid holiday quarter.