Concern over Apple's 'cyclical' margins called 'overblown'

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Comments

  • Reply 21 of 30
    jungmarkjungmark Posts: 6,926member


    to those timid short term investors of Apple, we don't want you. Dont buy it. Don't screw with the long term investors. Buy bonds if you don't like the risk.

  • Reply 22 of 30


    Originally Posted by Maury Markowitz View Post

    New features?


     


    That's obviously what I meant.

  • Reply 23 of 30

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Maury Markowitz View Post


     


    Oh, absolutely... but I'm not concerned about Apple's sales, I'm concerned about the health of the Apple market. These two go hand in hand, don't get me wrong, but they're *not* the same.


     


    But there's a fundamental difference between computers and, say, stereos. For stereos, you can sell dramatically overpriced gear as long as someone buys it and you keep your margins. That's because (generally) anyone can plug any bit of stereo into any other bit of stereo. So buying one doesn't mean you have to buy everything else for that. The same is not true for computers, where you cannot plug a Windows application into a Mac.


     


    So, it's perfectly OK for B&O to sell dramatically overpriced gear. The high price of their gear does not lower the size of the overall market. If someone chooses to buy a lower priced amp, say a Sony, all of the other companies in the ecosystem will still have the same number of customers. And those customers still pay the same price for everything else in the "audio world", say an iTunes download or a pair of speakers.


     


    The same is not true for a closed platform ecosystem like iOS. If a customer chooses to buy a lower cost solution, like a freebee Android phone, then *everyone* in the iOS ecosystem loses a customer. You can't buy an iOS app for Android, so all of that money goes away. 


     


    Do you see the fundamental difference there?


     


    This fact does not mean there *is* a problem, just that one can occur. There is a balance between number of customers and profit margins that is almost certainly in Apple's favour right now. But if that were to change, and developers were to find greater profits in Android, the market would dry up as fast on Apple as it did on RIM, even if sales of the devices themselves continued at the same pace.


     


    And on top of that, there is the coolness factor issue to consider. Developer's only have so much time, and brainshare. When a platform becomes less attractive, they stop supporting it, quickly. "Less attractive" can mean many things. It could be a lousy return on investment, like RIM (ask any RIM developer). But it could also mean having to jump through hoops and pay lots of money to distribute your app.


     


    Right now it is clear that iOS still has relatively strong coolness, but certainly not what it had two years ago. It also has a better ROI, although I suspect that is being eroded too. It definitely is better to develop on. On the other hand, Google has dramatically increasing market share in all segments, and no signs of slowing. It also has an open platform for both development and distribution. Both of these are *major* plus points, do *not* discount this.


     


    I think it's perfectly valid to look at the past for hints of the future. Apple lost the coolness battle prior to the release of Windows95. Sales staggered on for some time, even increasing in cases, but as the developers fled the platform the applications dried up and suddenly there was no software for the platform. This has happened to many platforms even over the last decade - Palm, Symbian, BREW, etc. Anyone who thinks that it couldn't happen to Apple is dreaming.



    You definitely make some excellent points.  As far as the smartphone market is concerned, some developers are actually developing for Android first, iOS second due to the sheer market share of Android on smartphones.  On tablets, iOS still is king but there's increasing competition on the low end (Nexus 7) and the high end (Windows 8/RT).  I love the Apple ecosystem but no doubt Apple has to be feeling the heat.  Their hardware is great but personally, I think it's their software / services that are holding them back.  

  • Reply 24 of 30
    herbapouherbapou Posts: 2,228member


    Wall street decided to hate Apple for no reason, stock is trading at 14 PE and is near its 200 DMA.  Unless you think Apple is really Doom my recommendation is to buy here and if we get below 580, back up the truck and load with everything you can.


     


    Apple is forecasting 52 billions in sales, and 11.7 EPS.   If for whatever reason they get better margins or they buy back shares (like they are suppose to do) the EPS guidance is going to be blown out of the water.  I think Apple lowball EPS in an attempt to keep analyst to over-estimate.


     


    That being said, Apple is experiencing decelerating growth, look at the number for the past 3 years:


     


    PREVIOUS EARNINGS:


    2010 Q1 (Ending 12/31/10) Guidance = $4.80; Actual = $6.43;(Beat = 40.0%)


    2011 Q2 (Ending 3/31/11) Guidance = $4.90; Actual = $6.40; (Beat = 30.6%)


    2011 Q3 (Ending 6/31/11) Guidance = $5.07; Actual = $7.79; (Beat = 53.6%)


    2011 Q4 (Ending 9/24/11) Guidance = $5.50; Actual = $7.05 (Beat = 28.2%)


    2012 Q1 (Ending 12/31/11) Guidance = $9.30; Actual = $13.87 (Beat = 49.1%)


    2012 Q2 (Ending 3/31/12) Guidance = $8.50; Actual = $12.30 (Beat = 44.7%)


    2012 Q3 (Ending 6/30/12) Guidance = $8.68; Actual = $9.32 (Beat = 7.4%)


    2012 Q4 (Ending 9/29/12) Guidance = $7.65; Actual = $8.67 (Beat = 13.3%)


     


    Normaly a stock with growth like Apple should trade at a multiple of 20 or more.  When a company is seeing decelarating growth, its normal to have its multiple compress. But the problem is Apple was already trading at a very low multiple of 15, so PE compression put the stock in defensive value stock territory.  And Apple is trading below the averave value stock. That makes Apple a very very cheap stock.

  • Reply 25 of 30
    There were moans about Apple making too high a profit margin.

    So it sounds like the timing of the margins when the new releases are taking place was strategically clever.
  • Reply 26 of 30
    cameronjcameronj Posts: 2,357member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by BandiTT View Post


     


    I don't think that the Android turnover rate is what is discouraging customers. I think it is the fragmentation of products and features from different companies. And the Android OS upgradability seem to be a real sore for some Android users.


    I think that Apple as the manufacturer of the hardware and software has much less fragmentation - even at faster product cycles. The next phone will just be faster and better every 9 instead of 12-15 month.



    Uh... doesn't seem like ANYTHING is discouraging Android buyers.  Hello?

  • Reply 27 of 30
    hmmhmm Posts: 3,405member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by maccherry View Post



    Apple=Money

    Period.

    Like Maury pointed out, Apple has 129 billion in the bank.Damn!

    But greed is crazy.

    We could give Wall Street the printing presses, plates and paper from the treasury department and tell them to go ape sh** with it. You know what would happen?

    Wall Street would still cry poor mouth.

    The government could tell the private sector:No more taxes nor regulation. No more paying out to FICA, nothing. But it would still not be enough.


    Stock values bet on future growth. The analyst here merely suggested that while margins do affect growth, they're likely to rebound here. If anyone is anticipating newer processes with higher margins than the last over their first months of production, they are likely trying to influence the stock price.


     


    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Tallest Skil View Post


     


    Hey, at least they're consistent.


     


    "Apple Is Doomed!™"





    I realize yours is sarcastic, but I get so tired of uninformed predictions (note that mine are more of possible things I'm going to watch than actual predictions).

  • Reply 28 of 30

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by cameronj View Post


    Uh... doesn't seem like ANYTHING is discouraging Android buyers.  Hello?



     


    This was in reply to Tallest Skil "Yeah, because fewer people will be buying the iPhone, turned off by its Android-like turnover rate."


     


    I was saying that a faster product cycle would benefit the amount of iPhones beeing sold and this could counter act a smaller margin. Android devices are having a faster refresh rate and people get the latest speed and features quicker. And Android devices are having a faster growth rate than iPhones (patially due to cheaper prices but they also surpas iPhones features quicker in the shorter refresh cycle).


     


    I would not buy an iPhone once it has been out for 6 month. I would wait 6 (or more) month till the next refresh. I have skipped iPhone purchases due to this 12 - 15 month cycle and would have bought at least two extra iPhones if the cycles would have been shorter. My carrier allows me to get a subsdidized new phone every 18 month.

  • Reply 29 of 30


    Originally Posted by BandiTT View Post

    I was saying that a faster product cycle would benefit the amount of iPhones beeing sold…


     


    But why do you think that, is all? The iPhone is the best selling phone on the market during its entire run. All four quarters. It doesn't need any help or doubling up! It's already hard enough to make enough iPhones to meet demand as it is. 




    PLUS you get the completely beyond help imbeciles that will whine about the case "not changing" twice as often. Why would Apple want that? 






    Android devices are having a faster refresh rate and people get the latest speed and features quicker. 



     


    No! They don't! They rarely get ANY features AT ALL beyond what shipped with the device. Do you really think people are buying new phones every six months? Or every three, if you're looking at Android? It doesn't happen. Do you really want Apple to compress software support lifetimes? 






    …they also surpass iPhones features quicker in the shorter refresh cycle).



     


    Except they don't… I don't understand why you would say this.





    I would not buy an iPhone once it has been out for 6 month. I would wait 6 (or more) month till the next refresh.



     


    You're in the crazy small minority. This makes zero sense. And spin it around, if you're fine with waiting six months for a new phone, that means you're not buying an Android phone now, you're buying the model TWO MODELS later. 






    …would have bought at least two extra iPhones if the cycles would have been shorter.



     


    And received what? You wouldn't have gotten anything different. What makes you think they canmuch less would want to—speed up their processor build cycles? What else is there to update? They're not just going to keep raising the megapixelage of the camera. That's basically all that can be done. Cut the refresh rate in half and NAND chips don't have that time to come down in price, so capacities keep staying the same. 


     


    And again, aside from the case whiners, you'd then get the people whining about how even less INSIDE the phone has changed. Would anyone really want that to happen?

  • Reply 30 of 30

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by herbapou View Post


    Wall street decided to hate Apple for no reason, stock is trading at 14 PE and is near its 200 DMA.  Unless you think Apple is really Doom my recommendation is to buy here and if we get below 580, back up the truck and load with everything you can.


     


    Apple is forecasting 52 billions in sales, and 11.7 EPS.   If for whatever reason they get better margins or they buy back shares (like they are suppose to do) the EPS guidance is going to be blown out of the water.  I think Apple lowball EPS in an attempt to keep analyst to over-estimate.


     


    That being said, Apple is experiencing decelerating growth, look at the number for the past 3 years:


     


    PREVIOUS EARNINGS:


    2010 Q1 (Ending 12/31/10) Guidance = $4.80; Actual = $6.43;(Beat = 40.0%)


    2011 Q2 (Ending 3/31/11) Guidance = $4.90; Actual = $6.40; (Beat = 30.6%)


    2011 Q3 (Ending 6/31/11) Guidance = $5.07; Actual = $7.79; (Beat = 53.6%)


    2011 Q4 (Ending 9/24/11) Guidance = $5.50; Actual = $7.05 (Beat = 28.2%)


    2012 Q1 (Ending 12/31/11) Guidance = $9.30; Actual = $13.87 (Beat = 49.1%)


    2012 Q2 (Ending 3/31/12) Guidance = $8.50; Actual = $12.30 (Beat = 44.7%)


    2012 Q3 (Ending 6/30/12) Guidance = $8.68; Actual = $9.32 (Beat = 7.4%)


    2012 Q4 (Ending 9/29/12) Guidance = $7.65; Actual = $8.67 (Beat = 13.3%)


     


    Normaly a stock with growth like Apple should trade at a multiple of 20 or more.  When a company is seeing decelarating growth, its normal to have its multiple compress. But the problem is Apple was already trading at a very low multiple of 15, so PE compression put the stock in defensive value stock territory.  And Apple is trading below the averave value stock. That makes Apple a very very cheap stock.



     


    You need to compare the "Actual" from quarter to quarter, not the "Beat"... From where I'm sitting, it looks like Apple is growing, not yet slowing.

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