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Apple Stock Surge Raises Stakes as Earnings Loom

Published 28/07/2022, 11:34
Updated 28/07/2022, 11:34
© Reuters.

(Bloomberg) -- Even as Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) contends with rising inflation, cooling consumer demand, the strengthening dollar and lockdowns in China, its share price has surged in recent weeks and is heading for its biggest monthly gain in almost two years, up 15% in July.

The shares have beaten those of Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT), Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) this month, and also are dwarfing gains in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indexes. With the US flirting with a recession, investors are gravitating toward a household name they’re comfortable with. 

“Apple is outperforming because it’s a place of safety for investors,” said Gene Munster, who covered Apple and Google during his 21-year career as an analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos. before co-founding venture-capital firm Loup Ventures. “Every company will be impacted by the upcoming slowdown. Apple should fare better.”

The rally means investor expectations are high for the earnings report. Surprisingly positive results from Microsoft and Google parent Alphabet also have upped the ante for Apple.  

To be sure, sales growth at Apple has been slowing for five straight quarters, with the company warning in April that supply issues stemming from lockdowns in China would curb revenue by $4 billion to $8 billion in the third quarter that ended June 30 -- leading analysts to project the smallest revenue increase since 2020. 

The bullish case hinges on the slowdown not getting much worse, so Wall Street will be listening closely as Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri outlines trends for the current quarter and possible further effects from China and supply issues. 

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With inflation surging, consumers are more mindful of expensive buys like smartphones, tablets and laptops. Mid-tier smartphone makers have seen a dip in demand, and global handset shipments fell 9% in the second quarter, according to estimates from Counterpoint Research. Apple is still finding ways to fuel demand for its line of premium products. 

“Chinese brands were impacted due to weaker demand amid lockdowns in parts of China, but in the US, we’re still seeing the demand for Apple devices holding up, driven by strong carrier promotions,” said Hanish Bhatia, an analyst at Counterpoint. 

Apple also has joined Microsoft and Alphabet in slowing hiring and reining in spending as it braces for an economic downturn. The company hasn’t issued a formal financial outlook since the onset of the pandemic. 

This year’s market selloff has made Apple stock relatively cheaper at about 24 times estimated earnings, though the shares are comfortably above their 10-year average of 16.6 times. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq 100 sits at 21 times estimated profit.

“Apple still can get into large markets around wellness, AR and auto that can keep the company’s growth rates moving higher for the next decade,” Munster said. “That means investors can sleep well at night, and that is the core reason why shares of Apple have outperformed.”

Tech Chart of the Day

Three out of the four major US social media companies have reported results, and it’s clear that the slowing economy and cooling ad spend are hurting their businesses. Shares of Snap Inc (NYSE:SNAP) tumbled 39% following its quarterly report, while those of Meta Platforms Inc. are down about 6% in premarket trading after the Facebook (NASDAQ:META) owner posted its first-ever sales decline. Only Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR), which received a takeover bid from billionaire Elon Musk in April, is outpacing the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index this year.   

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Top Tech Stories

  • Meta Platforms, the social media giant that includes Facebook and Instagram, reported its first-ever quarterly sales decline, citing advertisers’ shrinking budgets.
  • The Senate on Wednesday passed legislation that includes $52 billion in grants and incentives for US semiconductor manufacturing, an industry that has steadily lost ground to foreign competitors in recent years.
    • Samsung Electronics Co.’s (OTC:SSNLF) quarterly profit missed estimates after cooling demand for consumer gadgets hit its chip division, spurring concern about the outlook for Big Tech in 2022.
    • Qualcomm Inc (NASDAQ:QCOM), the biggest maker of chips that run smartphones, gave a lackluster forecast for the current period, saying a weakening economy will hurt consumer spending on mobile devices.
    • Intel Corp (NASDAQ:INTC) is set to report second-quarter results Thursday, giving investors an update on both the state of the personal-computer market and the threat from rival Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD).
  • The euphoria surrounding Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s (NYSE:BABA) primary listing plan has evaporated in just two sessions, as focus shifts to the firm’s earnings announcement due next week.
  • Apple has enlisted one of Lamborghini’s top car-development managers in a sign that it’s stepping up work on a self-driving electric vehicle, according to people with knowledge of the situation.
  • ServiceNow (NYSE:NOW), a maker of business workflow software, declined in extended trading after reducing its full-year revenue forecast on the strength of the dollar and a potential pullback in demand.
  • Twitter snapped back at billionaire Elon Musk over accusations it’s being intransigent on setting a specific trial date and isn’t agreeing to hand over documents.
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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

 

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