Wedbush raises AAPL to $185, predicts $3T market cap by early 2022

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in AAPL Investors
Wedbush has raised its AAPL price target to $185 after Apple reported "drop the mic" March quarter earning results that the bank says backs up its iPhone 12 "supercycle" thesis.

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


In a note to investors seen by AppleInsider, analyst Daniel Ives characterizes Apple's Q2 2021 as "one for the record books." The analyst says Apple crushed Wall Street expectations across the board.

The 17% year-over-year iPhone growth, Ives notes, is further evidence that the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro "supercycle" is currently playing out. A key ingredient of that thesis is sustained demand in China, which Ives says is supported by Wedbush supply chain checks and Apple's June quarter forecasts.

Ives did admit that current chip shortages plaguing the electronics industry could be a headwind for Apple, as evidenced by the company's expectation of a $3 to $4 billion revenue decline. However, the analyst maintains that the current product cycle will allow Apple to achieve a new level of growth and monetization.

On the subject of more bearish analysts, Ives says cautious investors will talk about how unsustainable the current growth cycle is. Despite those concerns, the analyst still believes Apple will hit a $3 trillion market valuation within the next 12 months.

"Apple is essentially the Tom Brady of the tech world," Ives writes. "The skeptics will continue to say the best is in the rear view mirror and the success is moderating yet Brady just won his 7th Chip and Apple just reported its most robust quarter in roughly 3 years."

In other words, Ives expects Apple's growth to be sustainable heading into 2022. Along the way, the current iPhone 12 cycle will "hand the baton" to the iPhone 13 in the second half of 2021.

Ives maintains his Outperform rating for Apple and raises his 12-month AAPL price target to $185, up from $175. The target is a sum-of-the-parts valuation based on Wedbush's 2022 estimates, and includes a 16x multiple applied to Services at $1.3 trillion and a 7x multiple applied to the rest of Apple's hardware ecosystem at $2.1 trillion.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 3
    blastdoorblastdoor Posts: 3,296member
    I'm inclined to think the Mac has better growth prospects going forward than either the iPhone or iPad. The Mac has the smallest market share and the move to Apple Silicon gives it the greatest potential to improve relative to prior models and the competition. 

    One kind of stealthy way for the Mac to grow at the high end would be for Apple to use ASi-based Mac Pro servers for their own data centers, displacing Intel servers and the cloud providers. Apple could then become a cloud provider themselves, providing an iCloud Pro type service for Mac users. 

    Using ASi Mac Pros as their own servers would also improve the economies of scale for the Mac Pro. 
    minicoffee
  • Reply 2 of 3
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    blastdoor said:
    I'm inclined to think the Mac has better growth prospects going forward than either the iPhone or iPad. The Mac has the smallest market share and the move to Apple Silicon gives it the greatest potential to improve relative to prior models and the competition. 

    One kind of stealthy way for the Mac to grow at the high end would be for Apple to use ASi-based Mac Pro servers for their own data centers, displacing Intel servers and the cloud providers. Apple could then become a cloud provider themselves, providing an iCloud Pro type service for Mac users. 

    Using ASi Mac Pros as their own servers would also improve the economies of scale for the Mac Pro. 
    I don’t think longtime Windows users will switch to macOS just because of Apple Silicon. The average computer buyer cares more about price than performance. Sure, we faithful are ecstatic about ASi’s performance gains and there will be some who value specs over anything else that may come into the fold. The rest of the market consists of mainly lemmings who go with whatever everybody else uses. I’ve always laughed at the hater claim that Apple users are the lemmings when just the opposite is true. THEY are the lemmings who go with Windows.
  • Reply 3 of 3
    crowleycrowley Posts: 10,453member
    blastdoor said:

    One kind of stealthy way for the Mac to grow at the high end would be for Apple to use ASi-based Mac Pro servers for their own data centers, displacing Intel servers and the cloud providers. Apple could then become a cloud provider themselves, providing an iCloud Pro type service for Mac users. 
    They could've done that anyway though, it wasn't silicon that was holding them back.  Intel isn't the big cloud provider; Microsoft, Google and Amazon are.  I'm not saying you're wrong, maybe Apple do want to get into that market, but I don't think they've openly shown that yet, and business-to-business services aren't really Apple's forte.
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