Wall Street: Apple earnings 'nothing short of a blowout' after record quarter

Posted:
in AAPL Investors edited January 2014
Wall Street analysts were stunned by Apple's record quarterly earnings on Tuesday, noting that there seems to be no end in sight for the company's "upside parade."



Apple CEO Steve Jobs revealed on Tuesday that the company had just finished its "best quarter ever," as profits surged 125 percent to $7.31 billion on record quarterly sales of $28.57 billion. The Cupertino, Calif., company sold a record 20.34 million iPhones and 9.25 million iPads.



The Wall Street consensus had stood at $24.99 billion in revenue and $5.85 earnings per share. By comparison, Apple posted a massive $7.79 EPS.



Ticonderoga Securities



In a note to clients on Tuesday, analyst Brian White responded to Apple's quarterly results with an emphatic "WOW!," noting that Ticonderoga Securities remains "aggressive buyers" of Apple at current levels. Shares of Apple are at an all-time high, having briefly burst through the $400 mark during after-hours trading following the results.



"Apple [delivered] nothing short of a blowout performance," said White, who believes the current "leg up in the stock price" could lift shares 100 points and ultimately push the stock up to the firm's previously estimated $612 price target. In light of Apple's impressive results, the firm's estimates and price target are currently under review.



The analyst highlighted a strong upside to the company's gross margin of 41.7 percent, which was well above the firm's estimate of 38.7 percent and better than last quarter's 41.4 percent margin. Apple's operating margin of 32.8 percent was also an improvement, up from 31.9 percent in the second quarter of fiscal 2011.



Apple's iPhone sales of 20.34 million handily surged past White's estimates of 17.53 million units, while iPad sales of 9.25 million beat his 8.5 million projection. Mac sales, however, did not enjoy the same levels of astronomical growth as the iPhone and iPad did, with sales of 3.95 million units narrowly missing the analyst's 3.98 million projection.



White commented that Apple's ultra-conservative outlook for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2011 came in "typical Apple fashion." He sees the company benefitting strongly from seasonality in the second half of 2011, namely back to school and holiday seasons.



"We continue to believe Apple holds the hottest hand in the tech world that is driving market share expansion and high rates of profitable growth," White said. "We believe no company in the tech world is better positioned to benefit from seasonal second-half strength this year than Apple."



RBC Capital Markets



Mike Abramsky of RBC Capital Markets noted Tuesday that Apple's results were a "massive beat" with blowout iPhone and iPad sales and better-than-expected gross margins.



He commented that Apple's conservative EPS outlook was "deeper than normal," as it came in 15 percent below street expectations, compared to the typical 6 percent. The analyst attributed the abnormally conservative estimates to possible "timing and channel inventory transitions" for upcoming products, such as the iPhone 5 and the iPad 3.



Abramsky cautioned that that the lower estimates could "cause some debate," but noted that the numbers are no unprecedented. For example, Apple guided EPS for the third quarter of fiscal 2010 17 percent below street.



According to the analyst, pending product launches are the main reason for Apple's lower guidance, rather than a downshift in gross margins. As such, Abramsky believes that investors are likely to overlook the "soft Q4 guidance" given the company's record performance in the June quarter and the anticipation of product launches.



"The massive power of AAPL's beat may offset any debate around the guide," he said, adding that positive commentary on the company's conference call will help to reassure investors. In spite of the conservative guidance, the analyst expects Apple's stock to react positively.



Abramsky attributed the iPhone's performance, which surpassed his expectations, to "resilient sell-through ahead of iPhone 5 launch, international momentum, and domestic share gains."



Update: Added additional analyst commentary:



Morgan Stanley



Morgan Stanley's Katy Huberty said Apple beat expectations with a triple play of the iPhone, iPad and margins. She believes shares of Apple will continue to climb, adjusting her price target to $468, up from $428 last month.



Apple trounced the firm's estimate of 16.5 million iPhones and 7.3 million iPads and beat her gross margin estimate by 2.5 percent. But, sales of Macs and iPods missed its estimates by 6 percent and 8 percent.



Huberty noted that the key debate over Apple's financials is over the company's next quarter guidance. "Our view is that management guidance does not incorporate upside from the new iPhone and lower priced iPhone 4/3GS that we think are likely to be announced in September," she said.



Source: Morgan Stanley



The analyst viewed Apple COO Tim Cook's remarks on Tuesday's conference call as evidence that the company plans to introduce a smaller iPhone for the pre-paid market.



"On today?s conference call, management noted that the iPhone growth focus has been and will continue to be in developing markets, like China, where pre-paid Smartphones are the majority of the market," Huberty wrote in a note to clients. "Management understands that it must offer pre-paid phones and has more work to do on this front."



J.P. Morgan



Analyst Mark Moskowitz called Apple's results "a ridiculously big June quarter beat" and raised his December 2012 price target from $450 to $525. "There appears no end to the upside parade," he said, adding that the company's results should restore the "wow factor" to its stock.



He also reiterated his position that the jump in shipments of the iPad 2 should ease investor concerns of supply constraints. The analyst also pointed out that Apple's Mac results outperformed a weakened PC market by a factor of five.



Source: J.P. Morgan



Moskowitz saw little to be concerned about in Apple's conservative guidance, noting that investors should build positions now, as "there will be no pullback in the stock." The firm revised its estimates to position "position Apple as the breakout star in large cap tech."



J.P. Morgan now sees Apple posting $29.628 billion in revenue and $7.15 earnings per share in the September quarter.



Piper Jaffray



Analyst Gene Munster raised his price target from $554 to $607, pointing out that Apple beat Wall Street estimates by 16 percent more than "a typical Apple beat." The company has beat estimates for 21 consecutive quarters.



He recommends investors buy shares of Apple because "the news flow should turn progressively more positive" in the second half of 2011. "We see the following catalysts approaching in the Sept. quarter: OSX Lion, iOS 5 and iCloud launches, new MacBook Airs, the next gen iPhone launch with new carriers (possibly Sprint and T-Mobile), and new iPods," he wrote.



In the December quarter, Munster sees optimism around holiday iPad sales and talk of an Apple Television, which he expects in late 2012, to boost Apple shares. He also highlighted continued growth from emerging markets such as China as a catalyst.



Munster believes Apple will probably ship a next-generation iPhone in September, possibly on Sprint and T-Mobile. Adding the two other major wireless carriers in the U.S. would increase the company's potential stateside subscriber base by roughly 30 percent and could help it sustain its phenomenal growth levels.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 20
    bageljoeybageljoey Posts: 2,004member


    The annylists are always right *after* Apple issues a report...

    "Wow!"
  • Reply 2 of 20
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    The analysts suck. Plain and simple.
  • Reply 3 of 20
    granmastakgranmastak Posts: 298member
    Many of these analysts appear to have a firm grip on the obvious!
  • Reply 4 of 20
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    Ballmer and Schmidt are probably throwing chairs by now.
  • Reply 5 of 20
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SpamSandwich View Post


    The analysts suck. Plain and simple.



    Abramsky thinks everyone is stupid. He is providing cover for PPS manipulation. He knows the estimates are a joke. He also knows that apple will not hint on a release of anew iPhone unless the release is imminent. There son way that apple will risk a big drop in sales. I bet the new iteration of the iPhone is released in early august.



    The SEC isinutile and will not bother to investigate the manipulation and allow the inane and idiotic spouts by the analyst to go unchallenged. Well, shysterism is the underlying schooling provided by the ivy leagues, so I am not surprised.
  • Reply 6 of 20
    blursdblursd Posts: 123member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by lkrupp View Post


    Ballmer and Schmidt are probably throwing chairs by now.



    With regards to Balmer (at least) I've always wondered what an "angry" monkey dance looks like ... Whatever it looks like I'm sure he's doing it right now (and creeping out everyone around him).
  • Reply 7 of 20
    kibitzerkibitzer Posts: 1,114member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post


    Apple CEO Steve Jobs said during a quarterly earnings call that the company had just finished its "best quarter ever," as profits surged ...



    Steve Jobs said what? Interesting. He's quoted in the news release but did not participate in the Q3 conference call.
  • Reply 8 of 20
    bageljoeybageljoey Posts: 2,004member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Kibitzer View Post


    Steve Jobs said what? Interesting. He's quoted in the news release but did not participate in the Q3 conference call.



    I know! Cool, right? You can be sure Ballmer and Schmidt will be making comments without being in on their conference calls in a few quarters...
  • Reply 9 of 20
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    I want to know what Andy Zaky and these other, more accurate, Apple stock bloggers said. Who cares what the clowns at the big firms say.
  • Reply 10 of 20
    cloudgazercloudgazer Posts: 2,161member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by blursd View Post


    With regards to Balmer (at least) I've always wondered what an "angry" monkey dance looks like ... Whatever it looks like I'm sure he's doing it right now (and creeping out everyone around him).



    I believe it involves him throwing excrement.
  • Reply 11 of 20
    Sorry, wrong article.
  • Reply 12 of 20
    kibitzerkibitzer Posts: 1,114member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SpamSandwich View Post


    I want to know what Andy Zaky and these other, more accurate, Apple stock bloggers said. Who cares what the clowns at the big firms say.



    That's the funny one. Everybody missed this quarter on the low side. Zaky's estimates are usually within a couple percent of actual, but this time he was significantly low. In fact, Apple's actual revenues, EPS and gross margin substantially exceeded EVERY estimate by 48 street and amateur analysts, except for one single revenue guess by one amateur.
  • Reply 13 of 20
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Kibitzer View Post


    That's the funny one. Everybody missed this quarter on the low side. Zaky's estimates are usually within a couple percent of actual, but this time he was significantly low. In fact, Apple's actual revenues, EPS and gross margin substantially exceeded EVERY estimate by 48 street and amateur analysts, except for one single revenue guess by one amateur.



    Well... I wonder who came closest? Maybe Phillip Elmer deWitt will have an article soon.
  • Reply 14 of 20
    cvaldes1831cvaldes1831 Posts: 1,832member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SpamSandwich View Post


    I want to know what Andy Zaky and these other, more accurate, Apple stock bloggers said. Who cares what the clowns at the big firms say.



    I linked to blogger predictions (and specifically Andy Zaky here:



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by cvaldes1831 View Post


    By contract, here's the Apple Finance Board consensus:



    Revenue: $26.556B

    EPS: $6.66



    Macs: 4.33M

    iPods: 8.335M

    iPhones: 17.602M

    iPads: 8.325M



    It's worth pointing out that Shaw Wu is not a star-rated (four or five stars) analyst per Starmine.



    Here's Andy Zaky's numbers



    Revenue: $27.32B

    EPS: $6.84



    Macs: 4.28M

    iPods: 8.8M

    iPhones: 16.5M

    iPads: 10M



    Sources:

    http://www.postsateventide.com/2011/...ate-index.html

    http://seekingalpha.com/article/2778...estimate-index



    Apple blew doors on EPS. It basically comes down to iPhone sales which exceeded everyone's expectations. That's Apple's cash cow and most profitable product line.



    Very, very impressive.



    Where are all the naysayers who said that iPhone sales would be depressed because of anticipation of a delayed next-gen handset?



    Eating crow, I believe.
  • Reply 15 of 20
    bsgincbsginc Posts: 78member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by lkrupp View Post


    Ballmer and Schmidt are probably throwing chairs by now.



    Ballmer is probably pulling his hair out ... Oh, wait, he doesn't have any!



    Apple's financials are the stuff of dreams for most execs. And, while pricey, Apple has proved that you can make a good product, provide good service, and make a good profit at the same time, without trying to screw people. Maybe other companies will take note and copy that. After all, good business practices aren't patented.
  • Reply 16 of 20
    cvaldes1831cvaldes1831 Posts: 1,832member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Bsginc View Post


    Ballmer is probably pulling his hair out ... Oh, wait, he doesn't have any!



    Apple's financials are the stuff of dreams for most execs. And, while pricey, Apple has proved that you can make a good product, provide good service, and make a good profit at the same time, without trying to screw people. Maybe other companies will take note and copy that. After all, good business practices aren't patented.



    That's the curious thing to me.



    Some people here like to moan about the way Apple runs its business and yet it's most of the other 499 companies in the Fortune 500 who should be explaining why they aren't as profitable as Apple.



    Steve gets paid $1 per year. Why are these other CEOs getting paid so much for so little result?
  • Reply 17 of 20
    philboogiephilboogie Posts: 7,675member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by blursd View Post


    With regards to Balmer (at least) I've always wondered what an "angry" monkey dance looks like ... Whatever it looks like I'm sure he's doing it right now (and creeping out everyone around him).



  • Reply 18 of 20
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by cvaldes1831 View Post


    I linked to blogger predictions (and specifically Andy Zaky here:







    Apple blew doors on EPS. It basically comes down to iPhone sales which exceeded everyone's expectations. That's Apple's cash cow and most profitable product line.



    Very, very impressive.



    Where are all the naysayers who said that iPhone sales would be depressed because of anticipation of a delayed next-gen handset?



    Eating crow, I believe.



    If the day ever dawns when AAPL fall short of analyst quarterly expectations by even a few thousand dollars, the naysayers WILL return, they haven't gone away.



    How long can this growth last?
  • Reply 19 of 20
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by JackTheRat View Post


    If the day ever dawns when AAPL fall short of analyst quarterly expectations by even a few thousand dollars, the naysayers WILL return, they haven't gone away.



    How long can this growth last?



    ...21 consecutive quarters (~5 years) and counting. That's in terms of growth exceeding Wall Street expectations, in terms of profitability, much longer.



    The cool thing is when you are a nay-sayer or a doom-and-gloom predictor, the laws of thermodynamics are on your side - everything fails eventually. So by channelling Eeyore you lose nothing - "just wait - it'll all fall apart any day now, you'll see..."



    In the meantime, stating the obvious is no longer an exercise, it is simply mindless repetition in place of actual thought.
  • Reply 20 of 20
    dr millmossdr millmoss Posts: 5,403member
    It's the stopped watch principle. If you always predict the same thing, you are bound to eventually be right.
Sign In or Register to comment.