The Silicon Valley behemoth's net income had fallen 13 percent and revenue rose 1 percent in the latest quarter, with iPhone sales continuing to decline
Apple has long performed like clockwork, growing steadily and producing an ever-growing stream of profit. Not anymore.
On Tuesday, the Silicon Valley behemoth said that its net income had fallen 13% and that its revenue rose 1% in the latest quarter, with iPhone sales continuing to decline and gains in the company’s services and wearables business failing to make up the difference.
The results showed persistent signs of weakness for one of the world’s financial standouts. Apple built its enormous business on the iPhone, but sales of the device have slipped for three straight quarters in a saturated market for smartphones.
Yet the results also suggested that the company could be starting to halt declines in those sales and other key areas, including revenue from the Chinese market. Over the previous two quarters, Apple’s profits and revenue had fallen overall.
“Obviously on the iPhone, we’ve gone through a period where we’ve seen some revenue declines,” Luca Maestri, Apple’s finance chief, said in an interview. “But we are very excited about our product road maps, and we’re very optimistic about the future.”
Apple said net income had dropped to $10.04 billion for its fiscal third quarter, from $11.5 billion a year earlier, with profit of $2.18 a share exceeding Wall Street estimates. Revenue rose to $53.8 billion from $53.3 billion a year earlier. Maestri said profits had fallen while sales had risen because of narrower margins that he attributed to foreign-exchange rates.
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