iPad and Mac growth continue unabated in Q2 2021
Apple saw revenue from its iPad line grow 79% and its Mac line grow 70.1% in record breaking second quarter.
Mac and iPad revenue continue to grow
Apple announced new budget iPads and M1-based Macs at the end of 2020, which fed growth for Q2 2021. The pandemic and work from home efforts have boosted sales of tablets and computers in most markets.
During the second quarter earnings call, Apple CEO Tim Cook said that the last three quarters for Mac were its best ever. The momentum of Mac growth will only be aided by the recently announced 24-inch iMac.
"The demand feels very strong right now," continued Cook. "Both on the Mac side, you have the combination of work from home and remote learning. And in iPad, you've got remote learning and work from home as well."
Mac Quarterly Earnings
The Mac saw revenue of $9.1 billion, up from $5.4 billion in the year-ago quarter -- a 70.1% increase. Customer satisfaction is at 97% for the Mac.
The iPad grew to $7.8 billion from $4.4 billion in the year-ago quarter. This 78.7% growth occurred before Apple updated the iPad Pro with an M1 processor, which could accelerate growth further.
iPad Quarterly Earnings
CFO Luca Maestri said the iPad grew in every geographic segment with sales records in Japan. Customer satisfaction of iPad is at 94%, with half of all new purchases belonging to new users.
The "Spring Loaded" event released new colorful iMacs and powerful iPad Pros that will enter the market during Q3. Expect further growth from each segment thanks to the ongoing hype surrounding the transition to Apple Silicon.
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Comments
Just the other day, I too was thinking to myself, gee, I wish that Tim Cook would give the Mac more attention. Then I remembered that Apple just recently disrupted the PC business with the M series, and there is still another year and then some of more powerful M series releases just to fill out the existing Mac product line. Heck, Apple is at the front of the line for all of TSMC nodes. I mean, what is that all about?
So now I'm confused.
Is Tim Cook, et al, actually giving too much attention to the Mac?
Why isn't there an M1 iPhone Mega Super Pro Plus model, so I can get me 16 GB of RAM and some USB 4 lovin?
I noticed you avoided responding to my comment about Mac sales being flat for the last 8 years.
Whilst the update rates have definitely improved in the last couple of years, probably in an attempt to counter those flat sales - and the M1 is absolutely disruptive to those who don't need Windows, just look at the rates of updates over the last 8 or 9 years. The Mac Pro went 6 years without an update. The Mini 4 years. The MacBook Pro, iMac and Macbook Air all had periods where updates were only once every 2 years. A lot of those updates were just minor spec bumps too, but even then Apple missed out entire new generations of CPU and left the rapidly advancing GPUs to stagnate. The iMac Pro was introduced then abandoned. They were selling the Mac Pro for the same price as it was introduced for, 6 years later. If that's not taking the piss, I don't know what is.
Other than the Mac Mini, the rest of the M1 Macs remained the same price or increased slightly so saving money on the CPU wouldn't affect revenue at all. If anything, it'll positively affect gross margin / gross profit.
Here's what happened in the PC world during that time;
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/01/pc-sales-finally-saw-big-growth-in-2020-after-years-of-steady-decline/
"During the Consumer Electronics Show this week, research firm IDC released a report on worldwide traditional PC sales in 2020, and it tells a rosier story than we've been used to in recent years. In the fourth quarter of 2020, PC shipments grew 26.1 percent over the same period last year.
That means 13.1 percent year-over-year growth overall, and the best year and quarter for PC sales in quite some time. In total, 91.6 million traditional PCs were shipped in the fourth quarter of 2020. "Traditional PCs" in IDC's report include systems like desktops, laptops, and work stations. For years, sales of these kinds of computers were declining at worst or growing negligibly at best even as other, newer computing gadget categories like smartphones, smart speakers, and tablets grew relatively rapidly.
IDC notes that the last time the market saw this kind of growth was way back in 2010, when modern multitouch smartphones were still building momentum and Apple's very first iPad had only just launched.
Good luck on any PC growth as the pandemic ends.
EDIT;
"Half of people buying iPads and Macs are new to the product categories. It's been that way for a while now and it's still a shocking statistic."
As per below, sales numbers is doing really well. Fundamentally, Macs were never Windows computers. The fact Windows could run on Intel Macs were a side benefit. Yes some people want windows on Macs, these sales records are not driven by people who want Windows. Adding to that, Apple said at this last event that they are selling more ASi Macs than Intel Macs.
Apple is performing a Major revamp of it's Mac line, and Rosetta has operated smoothly so I really don't understand how you can say Cook doesn't care about Macs at all.
https://appleinsider.com/articles/20/11/30/m1-mac-mini-catapulted-apple-to-number-one-in-japanese-desktop-pc-market
You seem to be confusing wider PC market growth with Mac growth. As I said, there is no Mac growth, it is largely flat, aligned with the rest of the PC market. The bump we are seeing now in both Mac and PC market is due to the pandemic, and Mac sales will decline back to pre-pandemic levels just like PCs. No matter how you try and spin it, Mac sales are not outpacing the wider market unlike pre-2012. They are too expensive, they are not good value anymore especially in the face of Windows 10 not being anywhere near as bad as previous versions, and macOS getting buggier.
You obviously don't understand why "half of people buying iPads and Macs are new to the product categories" is a bad thing. If the sales were up year on year then great, adding 50% more new Mac users is a good thing. But that's not happening. Sales are flat, which means the number of people new to the Mac is equal to those leaving the Mac too. That is not a good thing. It could be that Mac users are keeping their Macs for much longer all of a sudden, which no doubt is happening due to the cost of a Mac, but it's likely not significant (otherwise there would be an eventual upward trend again, and there isn't).
Let me put it into numbers for you. Mac sales are flat, so there are the same number of new users joining the Mac platform each year. So if Apple sells 100,000 Macs each year for 3 years and 50% of those sales are to new Mac owners, that is 150,000 Macs sold to new users, and 150,000 to existing Mac users; or 50,000 Macs to each group per year. Assuming people keep Macs for 3 years before buying new, and if 100% of those Mac users bought Macs again, then in the fourth year, there should be the 100,000 from existing users (people new to Mac and those who are not), added to the 50,000 new users, resulting in an exponential growth curve. But there is no growth. Because people aren't sticking with the Mac. And once people leave, they don't go back.
I know plenty of people who I have personally persuaded to buy a Mac who have gone back to Windows. And the reason is cost. I know people too who will not buy a M1 Mac as they need Windows since they use more than Pages and Safari, and I am in that group. For the first time in 25 years of Mac ownership, I am going to have to seriously consider switching to a PC when my iMac gets too old. It saddens me that the Mac going in the same direction it was in the '90's. Expensive, proprietary and incompatible.
The PPC to Intel transition took 210 days, so following Apple's projection the x86 to M1 transition is much slower right off the bat. But it remains to be seen if Apple gets bored of the Mac again and abandons it stuck with old CPUs like the did in the Intel days. I hope they don't, I want Macs to be successful enough that big devs take notice and produce their apps for more than Windows; especially important with Windows support being dropped.
The market is up due to the pandemic. It will likely return to normal soon, and Mac sales will be down next year, along with PC sales. Good that in one traditionally Mac loving market sales are up, but this is not a normal year, look at pre-2020.
The ability to run Windows on Macs was more than a "side benefit" and more "critically important" for many. The business I worked at used to dual boot, almost everyone I know with a Mac has Windows on it too, including me.
I imagine they are selling more ASi Macs than Intel ones: who would buy an Intel Mac now when it'll be forcibly obsoleted in a few years?
You can see Cook's lack of interest in his presentations, though I admit that is a pretty general thing (especially when compared to his introduction of AppleTV+ where he was like a kid in a sweet shop). Ex-engineers have said he seems to dislike the Mac too.
I dunno, but 110% unit sales increase YoY indicates other than a trend of "flat sales".
Still, I'm willing to wait until after further M series releases this fall, to see how that trend holds up, but my instinct, is that people really, really, like the new mac's, and they aren't in fact too expensive, based on sales.
Buh bye, and don't let that proverbial door hit you in the ass on the way out, and more to the point, does that mean you'll stop posting too?
Running Windows on a Mac was always a side benefit, period. You may not want to hear that, but that has always been true. It doesn't matter if many people want to do that, or even if it was a critical part of some people's workflow. Software developers are working to make it happen again. Your choices are find alternatives to Windows, wait for software developers or get a windows PC. Windows is not a part of my home life. As you are ignoring the data that ASi Macs are a success, you are also ignoring that Windows is NOT important to these people who buy ASi Macs.
Why "should" Mac sales be outperforming the market if the market is in a boom? If Mac sales are matching the market then they're booming. Apple has run out of people to buy Macs even thought they're matching market growth in a boom period? I'm scepitcal of your scepticism. Sounds like you're scratching around trying to find negatives in a blowout report.
There hasn't been a new Mac specific (AKA AppKit) app in a long time. Any reinvigoration of the Mac app market will come from iOS / iPadOS developers which is why Apple is heavily promoting Catalyst & SwiftUI and I suspect Apple knows this. I don't foresee a bright future for Mac-only developers. Apple's interest with respect to its developers lies in promoting cross-platform (Apple's platforms of course) apps.
"Ex-engineers have said he seems to dislike the Mac too."
I'd be surprised of this considering the amount of investment they're pouring into creating a family of SoC's for the Mac and the redesigned Macs that will be coming, starting with the current new iMac. Why go through all of that if you don't like the Mac?
Apple stopped reporting sales on everything because it confused people and made analysts manipulate the stock and gave away secrets to knockoff Apple companies. Keeping them in the dark has helped Apple a ton!! (Notice the smartwatch industry is confused?)
This reminds me of the idiots(not calling you one) who said Apple Watch was a failure because Apple was “hiding” sales figures even though Apple announced they would stop reporting sales BEFORE the Apple Watch launch.
”Tim doesn’t care about Macs” meme.
That’s what we thought for years until M1.