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AAPL Earnings Recap; iPhone Growth Accelerating

Apple reported a 4Q14 earnings beat to consensus and my estimate with strong guidance driven by iPhone sales strength. 

Few takeaways and notes:

Mac. Over the past few weeks I was noticing that the Peak Mac theory, which stated that Apple will never sell as many Macs in a single quarter as occurred in 1Q12 (5.2 million Macs), was at risk of breaking apart as my long-term 4Q15 estimate was for 5.4 million Macs. Apple ended up reporting 5.5 million Mac unit sales last quarter, representing strong 21% year-over-year (yoy) growth, and a new quarterly unit sales record. Recent price cuts and upgrades resulted in strong Mac sales to college students.  

iPad. Apple reported a 13% decline in iPad unit sales, which was in-line with my expectation.  People calling for iPad’s death will likely be disappointed though given the likelihood of a new iPad Pro model in 2015, along with the recently announced cheaper iPad mini and refreshed iPad Air 2. I still think iPad sales will pale in comparison to iPhone over time and the iPhone 6 will continue to cannibalize iPad sales, but Apple management seemed confident that there are enough niches (education and enterprise) to at least keep iPad sales from collapsing. I think it is appropriate to view iPad more like Mac, and given Mac’s respectable growth last quarter, the iPad is far from over.

iPhone.  Apple’s overall earnings per share (EPS) beat my estimate by $0.10/share on stronger iPhone sales (39.3 million vs. my 36.5 million estimate).  Management provided very bullish iPhone commentary with the expectation that iPhone will remain supply constrained through the end of the year. Apple shared other data points that reinforce iPhone momentum is accelerating from 13% yoy unit growth in 3Q14 to 16% growth last quarter to expected 30% growth in 1Q15. 

Margins. According to management, the stronger dollar will be a “significant headwind” for Apple in the near-term, but the 37.5-38.5% guidance range already reflects the FX impact. On a normalized basis, I wouldn’t be surprised if margin is closer to 40%, compared to 38.6% in 2014, on iPhone 6 strength. 

Apple Watch Disclosure.  Apple caused a minor Twitter uproar with new disclosure commentary concerning the way operating segments will be reported, including Apple Watch being lumped in with a few other products within the ”Other Products” segment.  Is Apple trying to hide something? I suspect the main reason for the classification is that Apple doesn’t want to release too much information to competitors. If Apple disclosed Apple Watch revenues and unit sales, it would be possible to obtain average selling prices (ASP) and then back into which models were selling well, thereby giving key data to both low-end and high-end watch competitors. It isn’t clear if Apple will disclose Apple Watch unit sales, such as opening weekend sales. I think it is reasonable to think if the sales are good, Apple may want to say how many units are sold without breaking out revenues. 

Guidance. Apple provided strong guidance beating my revenue estimate and consensus. Most of the beat can be attributed to iPhone, where Apple could sell upwards of 65-66 million iPhone units, which would be the strongest yoy growth (30%) in over two years. The exact sales number will depend on how many iPhones Apple can produce, but it is safe to say that iPhone’s growth is accelerating.

Apple is now trading at 13x forward EPS with net income growing 15-20% yoy. 

Current Tech Musings and 2014 Predictions

Let’s take a step back and see how things look around the world.

Apple is Fine.

Similar to 2012, Tim Cook back-loaded Apple’s 2013. Apple went so far as to release the retina iPad mini pretty much as late as it could and still guarantee that supply would be adequate before the key holiday shopping season.  From all indications, the new hardware is selling well - as one would expect - although many Apple bloggers whiffed when judging 5c popularity.  While the sales gap between the 5s and 5c may shrink going forward, I would be quite surprised if the 5c becomes “the real iPhone” as many predicted. The sheer uproar over 5c pricing appears to have quieted down as well.  Apple’s redesigned iOS 7 doesn’t seem to have created any new “–gate” controversies, with the only complaints coming from design snobs (I say that with genuine respect).  Apple accomplished a lot in 2013, and 2014 looks to be just as jam-packed with what I would expect to be iPhone bifurcation (two distinct iPhone form factors with simultaneous development – a really big deal). An iPad pro (think larger iPad Air with possible dedicated accessories for professionals) would also seem to fit very well in Apple’s 2014 resource timeline.

Tech Industry Hardware Becoming a Snooze.

Take a look around and there really isn’t much in the way of exciting and flashy hardware innovations geared for the masses. Yes, the 5s is forward-thinking, and has the internal composition that will rival next year’s iPhone 6, but it’s hardly something to get people talking at the holiday party.  The iPhone 5s fingerprint scanner is nice (continues to work well for me), but I’m not finding it nearly as much of a salesperson as Siri (those initial demos were unbeatable).  On the tablet front, it has become an even bigger bore.  I use an iPad 2 and have absolutely no desire to upgrade to a newer iPad anytime soon.  Outside of Apple, Google is busy publicly beta testing hardware products with the ultimate intent of controlling our data and attention.  Amazon is busy spending money left and right in an attempt to sell Amazon Prime subscriptions, and Samsung is twiddling its thumbs waiting for Apple to release new products. 

Smartwatches Selling Like Cold Cakes.

The smartwatch appears to have finally hit mainstream in 2013 as Best Buy is now carving out more square footage to the concept.  Sales are, and will probably remain, “okay” for early adopters where massive sales are certainly not on the radar, but mass adoption remains out of reach.  The idea of a smartwatch makes perfect sense as the phone form factor contains numerous inefficiencies, but the smartwatch industry lacks the needed design and fashion acumen to really get things moving.  The technology does appear to be available though. Interestingly, one company has been beefing up their design and fashion human capital resume. 

Mobile Messaging App Fever. Yawn.

I’ll be honest, I get bored with the never-ending updates on how many users certain mobile messaging apps have.  In the U.S., this fascination with mobile messaging apps remains subdued as Facebook, Twitter, iMessage, (and I suppose you can include Snapchat), pretty much represent the bulk of how people communicate with each other – oh and the phone feature on the iPhone as well.  Maybe I’m just naïve (and only friends with Apple users), but I really have no desire to follow which mobile messaging app is selling “stickers” or making a play for the Indonesian mobile app market.  I never have used Whatsapp and don’t know anyone who has either. The mobile space is fast moving and people love stories of how start-ups will displace incumbents, but from my vantage point in the U.S. – Facebook and Twitter will remain important communication channels, while iMessage continues to be the sleeper hit. I still think mobile carriers are the big winner as my monthly bills will continue to rise regardless of which start-up does well. Of course critics will say the U.S. doesn’t matter, or is behind the times (and that I am clueless), to which I respond as long as the Valley remains the focal point of technology and entrepreneurship in the world, the U.S. matters.

Changing of the Tech Review Guard.

Yesterday, The Wall Street Journal announced Walt Mossberg’s replacements – relatively new names that probably will get paid a fraction of Mossberg’s current salary. I actually don’t think the WSJ will miss a beat with such a strategy, which may say more about Mossberg’s inflated salary than anything else.  Nevertheless, WSJ tech reviews still matter and companies will continue to treat them accordingly. The overall tech product review industry continues to morph and traditional sources for the “yea or nay” for a new product are now shifting to bloggers turned journalists where personal trust outshines all else.   As seen with Apple’s latest products, tech specs don’t matter as much these days and this trend will only intensify as fashion bleeds into personal technology.

Other Random Musings.  

  1. It is now easier than ever to grab a few of your journalist friends and start a new company focused on delivering news.  Oh, and charge people a lot of money to read what you have to say.  I imagine this trend will only intensify as it is becoming clear that 1-5 person shops are finding a particular niche in online journalism. Some personal bloggers are pulling in more than $500,000 a year, which traditional media companies will have a hard time matching (or even justifying), while start-ups with minimal expenses require only a modest subscription base to break-even. Of course, aggregators will continue to do well in this world as well where expense growth via headcount is one differentiator versus the small shops.  Slideshows put food on the table. One has to start worrying about information overload though, right?  Hopefully?  Yeah, I know, wishful thinking.
  2. A wildcard for 2014 includes Apple’s new retail chief, Angela Ahrendts, which some have already labeled as Apple’s next CEO.  My response would be let’s wait to see how she fits within the Apple culture, then we can start talking. Regardless, Apple retail needs some urgent help, so Angela will be busy.
  3. The tech IPO window is wide open and many signs point to 2014 being another good year.  Housing continues to stabilize and contrary to the perma-bears, I think the housing industry will be fine from here on out.  The theme of rising interest rates (due to a stronger economy) makes sense to me as well.  While I won’t comment on which companies will see an IPO in the coming quarters, I would focus on the quality of these IPOs as one would assume quality will decline as we move past the economic recovery years of 2010-2013.
  4. Angry Birds (and paid iOS app?) fever is over. It was fun while it lasted. I would be interested to see if Rovio can find another “Angry Birds”, although I remain skeptical. In addition, the overall paid app boom appears to be dead (was there ever a boom?). While there will still be winners going forward, companies solely focused on selling apps for money face dwindling prospects of success. App development, as part of a bigger strategy, seems to have a much brighter future

Predictions for 2014.

  • Pundits will say Apple made numerous mistakes, either in terms of product pricing, marketing, or strategy.  The new iPhone will also be classified as marking the end of Apple’s popularity.
  • VCs will continue to pass off personal marketing blogs as independent sources of knowledge and wisdom.
  • Pundits will say Facebook is dead.
  • Mobile messaging app fever will continue.
  • Humans will continue to be inundated with useless information and inconsequential data points. 

I Like Apple's iPhone Strategy

I felt Apple did a good job today. For the first time Apple will be selling two brand new phones, including one for under $100 in the U.S. A brand new iPhone for under $100. I wouldn’t underestimate the impact of such a feat. 

While there were some interesting technologies introduced, including a fingerprint scanner and a motion coprocessor, I have learned to control my long-term predictions on what such technologies may mean for Apple’s product line. Time will tell if such innovations become major cornerstones in future Apple products. 

The most controversial aspect of today’s event was iPhone pricing. I see a schism developing among the tech punditry. On one hand, there is the belief that market share is king and Apple must address the bottom of the market because developers will begin to focus on Android’s sheer numbers instead of iOS. On the other side, where I stand, market share is not created equal. It is okay if Apple doesn’t address the lower end of the market since five consumers who don’t buy mobile apps or content is not equal to one who does. Looking at today’s events, I think Apple is doing the right thing gradually moving down market (iPhone 4 and 4S have not been discontinued). This strategy will only expand in coming years. With approximately 400M-500M (and growing) active iOS users with credit cards, I view the iOS ecosystem as now self-sustaining, capable of app innovation as long as the hardware and software back developers up.  If I changed sides and instead only looked at market share, I’m sure I would have been championing Symbian, then Blackberry, and now Android. Market share is not everything. 

Moving to more minor topics, Apple is still addicted to case money, now selling iPhone 5s and 5c cases. Selling cases is a good and easy business decision and judging from the popularity of iPhone cases, Apple will make a decent amount of profit (and margin) from going down that road.  Apple also announced it will give away $40 of software with new iPhone and iPad purchases. While I am not a big user of Apple’s mobile productivity apps, quite a few people are and I suspect there will be many happy iOS users. 

There are still plenty of questions remaining about Apple and strategy. 

Did Apple’s keynote contain a bit too much of tech jargon? Maybe. 

Will mainstream consumers accept iOS 7 without any major complaints? Maybe. 

Will Apple’s margin actually benefit from the new iPhone line? Maybe. 

Nevertheless, with a new flagship phone that has enough differentiation to stand out from competitors, a more value-oriented option for consumers with slightly different priorities, and the desire to maintain older iPhone models in order to address the mid-tier phone market, I like where Apple is sitting and the outlook for the iPhone business over the next 6-12 months. 

Apple 1Q13 Review; Thoughts on Guidance and AAPL

1Q13 Review

Apple’s 1Q13 results were largely in-line with my expectations.

  • Revenues beat ($54.5 billion vs. my $53.1 billion)
  • Margin beat (38.6% vs. my 37.9%)
  • EPS beat ($13.81 vs. my $12.75)
  • iPhone was an exact match (47.8 million - equal to my estimate)
  • iPad was slightly stronger than expected (22.9 million vs. my 22.4 million)

While I was pleased with the quarter, my estimates were considered somewhat bearish compared to the crowd; so needless to say, there were more disappointed faces than smiles.  Apple reported healthy growth metrics for iPhone and iPad, while iPhone ASP remained strong and iPad ASP declined due to the iPad mini.  

2Q13 Guidance

Management altered the way guidance is presented. While the reasoning was not disclosed, I don’t think its much of a stretch to assume its management’s way of ending analysts’ nasty habit of severely overestimating guidance.  When Apple’s earnings report was initially released, the stock was trading in the $490-$495 range.  Guidance seemed to be of Apple’s conservative nature - in that case, guidance was O.K.  When Apple clarified that it would no longer give EPS guidance, but instead release ranges (including upper limits) for several line-items used to reach EPS, the stock quickly fell to the $460-$465 range as guidance was considered NOT O.K. (it can be debated what management meant by guidance ranges, but I am assuming Apple’s actual results will fall within these ranges). 

I didn’t find Apple’s 2Q13 guidance (with the new ranges) to be overly concerning. Going into the quarter, I knew 2Q13 was going to be tough due to difficult year-over-year comparisons to 2Q12. Judging from the stock’s decline, I guess I was in the minority. 

Did Anything Actually Change? 

Taking a step back from all of the earnings noise, I didn’t learn much new about Apple. Both iPhone and iPad unit growth is slowing, margin remains pressured due to newer products, and EPS growth will be difficult to achieve in 2013.  Minor details such as the iPhone 4 remaining supply-constrained (most likely due to limited resources and parts allocated to iPhone 4 production), iPad mini coming into supply/demand balance by the end of this quarter, and the mix between new and old iPhones remaining constant weren’t exactly market-moving data points.  

AAPL 

It is interesting to read the differing opinions on Apple’s quarter between the Valley’s reaction and that of Wall Street.  In the Valley’s eyes, Apple did great and is firing on all cylinders, but according to Wall Street, AAPL stock is broken as growth is slowing. I think reality is somewhere in the middle of those two extremes.  

AAPL has now been in a 4-month tailspin, including widespread shareholder rotation (meaning many of Apple’s shareholders as of the end of September are selling and being replaced by new shareholders). Such a rotation is often quite volatile, resulting in lower stock prices as the new shareholder base has different priorities and expectations for Apple (often of a lesser nature).  

Back in January 2012, the consensus view on Apple was that EPS from iPhone and iPad would plateau around $60. An additional premium for Apple optionality (i.e. new products) may push EPS to $70. P/E multiple and dividend payout ratios were then calculated accordingly.  Things certainly have changed.  The consensus view is now of Apple EPS topping out around $40. It’s tough for a stock labeled as *the* momentum tech growth story to keep its luster when EPS expectations are cut by 30%. Of course, investors and traders love to panic and overreact, so not only is Apple’s EPS problematic, but Apple’s business model is apparently broken, management is clueless, and the company is the new Microsoft. It is what it is and I don’t see a reason to fight it. 

Investors buying AAPL today (or for that matter - the past year) should not be buying it on iPhone and iPad predictions, but rather Apple’s ability to disrupt itself and introduce new product categories. Not surprisingly, when things are good and AAPL is up, everyone assumes Apple is in great shape. When AAPL is down, management is assumed to be inept; unable to innovate and remain relevant. 

Looking ahead, I think it will be difficult for Apple to report EPS growth in 2Q13 and 3Q13, due to tough year-over-year comparisons related to margins. Modest growth should come back in 4Q13 and moving into 2014.  I am assuming anyone with an earnings model is well aware of these trends, but judging from today’s stock price action, I may be too generous in my assumptions.  Catalysts such as China Mobile selling the iPhone (not in my model) or new products are most likely not being contemplated by Wall Street and one can argue even if catalysts come to fruition, many will simply brush them off as a non-event.  Just as funds had to own AAPL last year to beat certain performance benchmarks, many funds now have to sell AAPL because the stock is down. 

Many are trying to find rational answers with AAPL’s price action, but since the following statements are often true, I’m not sure how many answers are actually out there:

A stock often goes up because it has been going up. 

A stock often goes down because it has been going down. 

A stock’s valuation matters only when valuations start to matter. 

Fundamentals are important only when fundamentals become important. 

AAPL 1Q13 Preview; Near-Term Volatility Continuing

Revenue: $53.1 billion (AAPL guidance: $52.0 billion/Consensus: $54.5 billion) 

  • I expect Apple’s revenue to increase 23% year-over-year after adjusting for the 14 weeks in 1Q12.

GM: 37.9% (AAPL guidance: 36.0%/Consensus: 38.4%)

  • Apple’s margin is expected to decline sequentially from 4Q12 primarily due to the wide range of updated products. Margin remains a key near-term unknown for AAPL. Management’s 36% margin guidance is 870 basis points less than the 44.7% margin reported in 1Q12, making EPS growth difficult to achieve. I still include expanding margins throughout 2013.  Further weakness, or a shallower rebound, may result in an additional EPS growth headwind.

EPS: $12.75 (AAPL guidance: $11.75/Consensus: $13.33) 

  • I expect Apple to report a 1% yoy EPS decline, when adjusting for 1Q12. While my $12.75 estimate is less than the Street’s $13.33 average, I attribute much of the variance to my lower gross margin expectation.

Product Unit Sales and Commentary

Macs: 5.2 million (flat yoy growth)

  • Mac growth continues to slow as tablets and smartphones satisfy many consumers’ computing needs. I expect 10% growth in portables driven by holiday shopping to be mostly offset by nearly a 30% decline in desktop sales due to the new iMac release schedule.

iPad: 22.4 million (56% yoy growth - when adjusted for 1Q12)

  • I expect Apple to report record iPad sales for 1Q13. My iPad estimate assumes approximately 8-10 million iPad minis and 12-13 million iPad 2 and fourth generation units. The iPad mini went on sale November 2 with an aggressive rollout, despite significant pent-up demand and limited supply. Apple was able to sell three million iPads in the three days following the iPad mini and fourth generation iPad launch. My estimate assumes approximately 25-35% cannibalization of the larger iPad models (1 out of 3 consumers willing to buy a larger iPad purchased an iPad mini instead). Going forward, I expect iPad mini sales to approach, if not exceed, those of the larger iPad models. 

iPod: 12.0 million (16% yoy decline)

iPhone: 47.8 million (39% yoy growth)

  • Apple made significant progress in reaching supply/demand balance for iPhone 5 in the U.S. and other launch countries. My quarterly estimate is largely based on AT&T’s recent comments on October and November smartphone sales (and additional extrapolation). Historical averages for AT&T’s share of global iPhones (and assuming a slighter higher mix of international sales) would imply 40-50 million iPhone sales, which I would consider the high probability estimate range.  I then assume channel fill of at least 1 million units, which positions my estimate in the narrower 46-48 million estimate range. 

Apple has missed Wall Street consensus EPS for the past two quarters, and unless estimates come down in the following weeks, a third miss isn’t out of the question. While it is hard to point to any one factor as driving a fundamental change in Apple’s operating performance, Apple’s prior two quarters have contained a few concerning metrics, including contracting margins and declining iPad and iPhone growth.  Did the weak global economy finally catch up to Apple? Were product release cycles continuing to wreck havoc with consumer demand? 

The bear argument would label Apple’s two-year stretch from 2010-2011 as an outlier, when two new products (iPhone and iPad) produced a perfect storm for EPS explosion.  Going forward, bears would argue margins will decline further, effectively limiting EPS growth. Future products would then lack the size to move the EPS needle. 

The bull argument would focus on iPhone and iPad as product leaders in its respective industries, while a temporary margin drop is indicative of product updates and not a fundamental change in the operating landscape. Apple’s future product plans would also occupy a spot in the conversation. 

Will 1Q13 represent an AAPL inflection point? I don’t think one quarter is capable of shedding enough light to figure out where Apple stands in its long, storied history. With iPhone now entering its 6th year (iPod recently celebrated its 11th birthday), the days of 100% revenue growth may be over for the product line, but should that statement even be considered controversial? There is also evidence suggesting Apple may be looking to smooth out demand cycles by updating products more frequently, a move that may bring long-term benefits, but at short-term costs.    

While much of the recent AAPL discussion has been focused on slowing growth and falling margins, it is easy to overlook fundamentals that would be considered very strong for any Apple competitor:

  • A smartphone pulling in $80 billion of revenue annually and growing at least 30%.
  • A tablet pulling in $30 billion of revenue annually and growing at least 45%.

A few AAPL loyalists have recently declared another “bad” Apple quarter (where bad is judged merely by EPS) will signal a new Apple, an Apple not deserving of their attention and instead lumped in with the rest of the tech crowd.  I disagree. One quarter, especially in the midst of an obvious change in business performance (product updates and management reshuffling), is not enough to conclude the long-term Apple story has changed. If an investor wanted to run away from Apple for near-term volatility, that decision could have been made a few months ago. Continued margin volatility may produce a scenario where EPS growth can accelerate throughout the year and 2014, even with slowing product sales growth. 

AAPL’s next 3-5 years will depend on management’s ability to introduce new product categories into an ecosystem that values a set of beliefs, including two that I tried to put into words following my first days with an iPad:

That technology is too powerful of a force to enjoy without acquired perception and natural intelligence.

That product design has the power to momentarily satisfy the never-ending search for order and reason.