iPhone 12 cycle still strong despite 'weaker demand,' analyst says

Posted:
in General Discussion
Demand for the iPhone 12 lineup is starting to wane, but investment bank JP Morgan is still tracking a year-over-year increase in shipments because of 5G adoption.

Credit: Andrew O'Hara, AppleInsider
Credit: Andrew O'Hara, AppleInsider


In a note to investors seen by AppleInsider, JP Morgan analyst Samik Chatterjee revised his 2021 iPhone shipment estimate to 230 million units, down from around 236 million units. Despite that, Chatterjee notes that the number still represents a 13% shipment volume increase from 2020.

The analyst cites a downward revision of JP Morgan's iPhone electronics manufacturing service (EMS) build estimates, as well as recent channel checks in China that suggest weaker-than-expected smartphone demand in the country.

Downward revisions following a holiday quarter isn't out of the ordinary. However, Chatterjee says that lackluster demand for the iPhone 12 mini and a major cut to iPhone 12 Pro shipments both make the bank "take note of a weaker demand environment." He also expects Apple to discontinue iPhone 12 mini production in the second quarter of 2021.

Chatterjee believes this is because of weaker consumer spending in China, as well as a normalization of demand trends following the initial uptick in iPhone 12 shipments. He attributes that uptick to 5G early adopters.

In the March quarter, Chatterjee has revised his shipment estimate to 52 million units, down from 55 million. For the June quarter, he revised the number to 42 million units from 36 million units.

"However, at this time we do not see any reason to change our 2H21 volume forecast," he wrote, adding that the supply chain is continuing with its 80 to 90 million build estimate for the first half of 2021.

Despite the changes, the analyst sees only "minor tweaks" to JP Morgan's AAPL earnings estimate due to the benefit from the weaker U.S. dollar. Chatterjee's 2021 earnings-per-share estimate has only moderated to $4.60 from $4.65, a 1% change.

Chatterjee notes that there's a "broad acknowledgement of near-term underperformance" among investors. The focus now is shifting to share price so that they can buy additional shares on a dip. JP Morgan still expects AAPL shares to sustain a higher earnings multiple throughout the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro cycle than in previous years. Chatterjee estimates a 23x to 25x multiple.

The analyst maintains his 12-month AAPL price target of $150. That's based on a Dec. 2022 earnings-per-share estimate of $4.96 and a blended P/E multiple of around 30x.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 4
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,167member
    I haven’t even got 5G turned on on mine. 4G is plenty fast enough around here (up to 180 Mbps) and 5G is non existent when I go to country areas.

    And this narrative of weak mini sales: any other manufacturer would weep blood to sell as many of one of their models as Apple has sold of the mini.  And did anyone expect the mini to sell in China?


    edited February 2021
  • Reply 2 of 4
    fred1fred1 Posts: 1,112member
    I can’t wait to buy a Mini. Just as soon as stores open up again . . .
  • Reply 3 of 4
    MarvinMarvin Posts: 15,324moderator
    entropys said:
    And this narrative of weak mini sales: any other manufacturer would weep blood to sell as many of one of their models as Apple has sold of the mini.  And did anyone expect the mini to sell in China?
    Some data posted recently doesn't look too bad either:

    https://www.phonearena.com/news/which-phones-were-shipped-the-most-in-2020_id130348



    For 2020, the iPhone 11 would be expected to sell the most as it was on sale for the entire year. The 2020 iPhone SE is the cheapest. Then the main lineup iPhone 12 (23.3m units), 12 Pro Max (16.8m), iPhone 12 mini (14.5m) are all pretty close.

    Those numbers don't suggest the mini should be discontinued. People who have smaller phones don't need the highest end features so will be on a longer upgrade cycle. It would be ideal as the next SE model at $399.
  • Reply 4 of 4
    bageljoeybageljoey Posts: 2,004member
    Marvin said:
    entropys said:
    And this narrative of weak mini sales: any other manufacturer would weep blood to sell as many of one of their models as Apple has sold of the mini.  And did anyone expect the mini to sell in China?
    Some data posted recently doesn't look too bad either:



    This chart cannot be right. The 12 mini is outselling the 12 Pro? 

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