Wall Street expects Apple's revenue to grow to $52.9B in March quarter
Apple's recently-concluded March quarter could see revenue once again increase year over year, investors on Wall Street believe, on continued strength of the flagship iPhone 7 lineup.

Analyst Amit Daryanani of RBC Capital Markets issued a note to investors on Monday, a copy of which was provided to AppleInsider, in which he revealed current market consensus for Apple's March quarter is at $52.9 billion in revenue and $2.02 earnings per share.
Daryanani's own estimates are slightly higher, calling for Apple to report $53.5 billion in revenue and $2.04 earnings per share. Both estimates are higher than Apple's March 2016 quarter, when the company saw iPhone sales decline year over year and revenue fell to $50.6 billion.
With Apple's net cash position having reached $159 billion, Daryanani believes the company could announce and sustain a $50-billion-plus annual capital allocation program. He projects that Apple will generate $57 billion in cash in fiscal 2017 --more than enough to finance such a program.
He noted that Apple could increase its dividend by 15 percent to get its yield to about 2 percent, and raise its buyback program to about $35 billion annual --up from the $30 billion the company spent in fiscal year 2016.
Looking forward to the June quarter, Wall Street consensus estimates call for $45.6 billion in revenue and $1.62 earnings per share. Daryanani is once again slightly ahead of market expectations, projecting $45.8 billion in revenue and $1.63 EPS.
Apple will report the results of its second fiscal quarter of 2017 after markets in the U.S. close on May 2.
RBC Capital Markets has maintained its "outperform" rating for shares of AAPL heading into the earnings report. It has a 12-month price target of $157, but RBC's "upside scenario" suggests Apple stock could go as high as $175, particularly if its services business grows at a faster-than-anticipated rate.

Analyst Amit Daryanani of RBC Capital Markets issued a note to investors on Monday, a copy of which was provided to AppleInsider, in which he revealed current market consensus for Apple's March quarter is at $52.9 billion in revenue and $2.02 earnings per share.
Daryanani's own estimates are slightly higher, calling for Apple to report $53.5 billion in revenue and $2.04 earnings per share. Both estimates are higher than Apple's March 2016 quarter, when the company saw iPhone sales decline year over year and revenue fell to $50.6 billion.
With Apple's net cash position having reached $159 billion, Daryanani believes the company could announce and sustain a $50-billion-plus annual capital allocation program. He projects that Apple will generate $57 billion in cash in fiscal 2017 --more than enough to finance such a program.
He noted that Apple could increase its dividend by 15 percent to get its yield to about 2 percent, and raise its buyback program to about $35 billion annual --up from the $30 billion the company spent in fiscal year 2016.
Looking forward to the June quarter, Wall Street consensus estimates call for $45.6 billion in revenue and $1.62 earnings per share. Daryanani is once again slightly ahead of market expectations, projecting $45.8 billion in revenue and $1.63 EPS.
Apple will report the results of its second fiscal quarter of 2017 after markets in the U.S. close on May 2.
RBC Capital Markets has maintained its "outperform" rating for shares of AAPL heading into the earnings report. It has a 12-month price target of $157, but RBC's "upside scenario" suggests Apple stock could go as high as $175, particularly if its services business grows at a faster-than-anticipated rate.
Comments
That's why I'd like to see Apple grab a stake in Toshiba's memory unit. There may be plenty of growth in that area and should be good for Apple's hardware infrastructure. Apple missed out on a cloud business opportunity and that's a really big miss. Wall Street loves companies with cloud businesses. Wall Street hates smartwatch businesses unless they have some huge dominating market share percentage. Apple keeps getting screwed with its land-locked P/E. Loyal shareholders will have to count on larger dividends in order to get significant financial gains from Apple.
One quick look today will show you the FANG stocks get the love and Apple will get the cold shoulder. All the FANG stock posted significant gains and Apple definitely not so much.