Apple's Q2 2024 earnings results may have some drama -- what to expect

Posted:
in AAPL Investors edited April 30

Apple's Q2 financial results are being announced on May 2, and it might be rough, compared to the financial victories of the last five years. Here's what to expect, and what the analysts are saying.

Apple CEO Tim Cook
Apple CEO Tim Cook



Apple will be issuing its second-quarter results on May 2, with the figures anticipated to be released at around 4:30 p.m. EDT that evening. Not long after, at 5 p.m. EDT, Apple CEO Tim Cook and CFO Luca Maestri will be explaining the finer details of the results as part of its usual call with analysts.

Ahead of the financial results release, analysts have offered their own estimates of what Apple will declare, passing comment on what happened in the quarter and what the company faces in the future.

What Apple reported in the year-ago quarter



The year-ago quarter, Q2 2023, will be what Apple's Q2 2024 period will be directly compared against, in a year-on-year comparison.

In Q2 2023, Apple reported $94.3 billion in revenue, as well as an EPS of $1.52.

The iPhone brought in $51.3 billion, iPad managed $6.7 billion, and Mac had dipped down to $7.2 billion. Wearables, Home, and Accessories reached $8.76 billion, and Services was reported at $20.9 billion.

What happened in Apple's second fiscal quarter of 2024



In early February, the Apple Vision Pro became available to purchase. Customers were able to finally try out and buy the spatial computing headset.

Despite a promising launch, the relatively small sales of the Apple Vision Pro when compared to things like the iPhone means it won't make much of a meaningful impact on the results. Even so, analysts will want to know more about how it fared.

The period also saw Apple bring out updates to the M3 Apple Silicon lineup, specifically to the MacBook Air range.

Analysts will also want Apple's opinions on other things that happened in the period that could affect the company's position. For example, antitrust lawsuits against the iPhone maker, as well as Europe bringing the Digital Markets Act into force.

What Wall Street thinks about Apple's second fiscal quarter of 2024



As of April 22, the Yahoo Finance consensus of analysts puts Apple at earning an average of $84.4 billion, with a low estimate of $82.32 billion and a high estimate of $86.15 billion. This is based on the opinions of 24 analysts, and represents a year-on-year sales reduction of 5.1 percent.

Based on 27 analysts, the earnings per share estimate is at an average of $1.41, with the range between $1.32 and $1.45.

Yahoo Finance consensus vs Apple's results
Yahoo Finance consensus vs Apple's results



By comparison, the same consensus forecast an average of $92.94 billion for Q2 2023, with an EPS of around $1.43. In reality, Apple managed $94.8 billion and $1.52 respectively.

That same consensus reckoned Apple would make $94 billion in Q2 2022, with an EPS of $1.43. At the time, Apple reported $97.3 billion in revenue and a $1.52 EPS.

On April 29, Zacks Equity Research said its consensus expected quarterly earnings per share of $1.51, down 0.7% year-on-year. The revenue is forecast to be $89.99 billion, dropping 5.1% year-on-year.

Individual analysts on Apple's second fiscal quarter of 2024

JP Morgan



In a note to investors seen by AppleInsider on April 30, JP Morgan expects $89.1 billion in revenue, which is "modestly below" its own consensus measure of $90.3 billion. The gross margin is expected to beat consensus at 46.8%, with an EPS of $1.49.

Citing cyclical challenges, pressured consumer spending, and China headwinds, JP Morgan thinks investors will try to "size the magnitude of downside risks." This could be a positive to savvy investors "if earnings downgrades are considered to be modest and better-than-feared."

Beyond Q2, the Q3 results are expected to be a "more significant miss to revenues."

TD Cowen



A note from April 29 offers year-on-year expectations for the quarter of a 5% downswing in revenue. Expecting a report of in-line results, the analysts say that iPhone has tough year-on-year comparisons, with segment revenue at about $38.4 billion.

Mac sales are "soft" due to consumer trends while iPad is set to see its year-on-year trends "stabilize" thanks to some enterprise exposure. That and new iPad models are thought to be on the way.

Services will still be strong, and will partially offset negative trends in the products business.

Wedbush



In an April 30 note, Wedbush forecasts Apple to report $94.8 billion in revenue, with an EPS of $1.52. With softer iPhone sales in China expected for the quarter, revenue is anticipated to "decline modestly" year-on year.

The "good news" is that Webush believes pent-up iPhone demand and an AI-driven iPhone 16 will help Apple grow in China later in 2024. It expects Cook's tone on the call to be cautiously optimistic, but there probably won't be "any fireworks" for the iPhone in Q3.

Services remains the "Rock of Gibraltar for Apple," with it showing continued strength and growth in the period, potentially showing low to mid-teen growth. After Cook mentioned AI and future announcements throughout the year, Wedbush feels Apple will use more generative AI in iPhone 16, starting a "new frontier of growth" for the company.

AppleInsider will add more analyst predictions as predictions roll in ahead of the financial results.



Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 10
    Anything is possible.. -10% or -15% up to +5%. 

    My position: PUT
  • Reply 2 of 10
    ssfe11ssfe11 Posts: 31member
    Wow expectations are sooo low for March Q and June Q guidance. This looks like a nice shorterm setup for Apple. Whatever I’m a longterm guy not a stock short term Vegas guy. As always Longterm Apple business looks fantastic! 
    edited May 1
  • Reply 3 of 10
    M68000M68000 Posts: 765member
    I think Tim Cook will depart Apple by this time next year.  I really have not been a fan of the recorded product launches.  A live presentation is so much more interesting. That is not the reason i think he will be gone, but just something i wish they would change.
    edited May 1 Afarstargrandact73
  • Reply 4 of 10
    M68000 said:
    I think Tim Cook will depart Apple by this time next year.  I really have not been a fan of the recorded product launches.  A live presentation is so much more interesting. That is not the reason i think he will be gone, but just something i wish they would change.
    Agree. But I fear if their live presentation would not be full and crowded like before as Apple has not been able to show "breakthrough" features for several years. 
    I think nobody has a high expectation anymore. Nothing excited. 
    edited May 1 Afarstargrandact73
  • Reply 5 of 10
    tomasulutomasulu Posts: 61member
    Apple has peaked. It’s gonna be a slow but sure downward spiral from here on out. 
    grandact73
  • Reply 6 of 10
    CheeseFreezeCheeseFreeze Posts: 1,263member
    All their product categories (set aside Vision Pro) have matured. 
    For a company like Apple it is getting more challenging to defend any product that isn’t the base model because pretty much anything is ‘fast enough’. Hence their strategy to artificially cripple devices with a lack of memory and squeezing the mid range to push people over to the high-end. 
    But that’s a losing game. Eventually they are competing with hardware with the likes of NVIDIA, Qualcomm… Once semi-pro and pro users see a consistent discrepancy there it tips them over.

    Where their only significant growth is, is software and services. There’s a lot of work to be done there. I hope they can finally bring something to the table that can rival Google Suite so they have a native solution that is interesting to small business and large business alike.

    They have to solve for the issue of a new generation dropping macOS as soon as they get past the iPad stage: switching to Windows “because of games”. They have to focus on acquiring gaming studios for content and fire their head of gaming because an App Store filled with mobile phone ports ain’t gonna cut it. 
    Afarstargrandact73
  • Reply 7 of 10
    This article is confusing —

    Q2 2023 was $94.3B Revenue/1.52 EPS

    Webush predicts revenue to “decline modestly” but shows their numbers to be exactly the same as last year.

    Also, analysts forecasts aren’t 5.1% — based on the range you’re stating, the average is about 10%.  The other source you mentioned projecting $89.1B revenue was around 5% — but they can’t both be the same %!

    The numbers won’t matter a whole lot, even if there is significant movement initially — what matters most is the call.
  • Reply 8 of 10
    eightzeroeightzero Posts: 3,079member
    I predict Apple will announce a they made a metric buttload of money.
  • Reply 9 of 10
    OferOfer Posts: 247unconfirmed, member
    Company makes billions and billions in profits: yay!

    Company makes billions and billions in profits minus $1: oh no, they’re doomed and on the verge of bankruptcy 

    This insistence in our f’ed up capitalist system of eternal growth (which is an impossible standard) and focus on stockholder profit over actually making a quality product that serves a purpose is absolutely ridiculous and destroying our planet.
    edited May 2 DAalseth
  • Reply 10 of 10
    22july201322july2013 Posts: 3,593member
    Anything is possible.. -10% or -15% up to +5%. 

    My position: PUT
    PUT your money where your mouth is.
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