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Apple tops estimates, fueled by iPhone and Mac demand




Apple issued a better-than-expected revenue forecast for the current period after beating on sales and earnings but the looming memory crunch will take hold later this year, Apple said.

Sales for iPhones, which rose 22% missed estimates for the second time in three quarters, the only significant number that came up short of expectations in Thursday’s report.

Along with strong revenue guidance, Cook made clear to investors that the memory crunch isn’t going away. He said the impact in the December quarter was “minimal” and that there was a bit more of a hit in the March period.

In the current quarter, “we expect significantly higher memory costs,” Cook said. Going beyond that, “we believe memory costs will drive an increasing impact on our business,” which will lead the company to “look at a range of options,” he said.

Incoming Apple CEO John Ternus joined the call at one point and thanked Cook and Apple’s shareholders saying, the company has an “incredible roadmap ahead.”

Research and development costs increased at a much faster pace than revenue, growing 33% in the quarter to $11.42 billion from $8.55 billion a year earlier. Cook said, about the R&D figures, that the company is “clearly investing more,” in part due to the AI growth potential it sees.
Apple's impressive quarter is still an iPhone-dependent story. When Does That Become a Problem?

Apple delivered a strong iPhone-led beat, but the print did not force investors to rethink the size or durability of the next growth cycle.

The quarter confirmed that the current product cycle is healthy — especially in iPhone and China — and that Services remains a powerful margin contributor. But it did not show a clear shift in the company’s growth economics.

Services reached a new all-time high, but Services mix was roughly flat year over year because iPhone revenue was also very strong. So the quarter was not really a mix-shift story; it was still primarily a hardware-cycle story, with Services providing margin support rather than doing the heavier lifting investors may want to see as AI-related investment rises.

Moreover, Apple’s cash generation remains exceptional, but the most visible use of cash was another $100 billion buyback, not evidence that higher AI/R&D spending is creating a new growth vector.

Buybacks have been a core engine of Apple’s stock price growth for years, but in a more competitive innovation cycle, they do not resolve the question of whether innovation spend can translate into a larger revenue opportunity in FY27 and FY28.

Until that becomes clearer, the stock gets credit for financial durability, but not necessarily for the type of growth we're seeing from some of its big tech peers.

Here are the numbers behind the print:

- Revenue: $111.2B, +17% y/y

- EPS: $2.01, +22% y/y

- iPhone revenue: $57.0B, +21.7% y/y

- Greater China revenue: $20.5B, +28.1% y/y

- Services revenue: $31.0B, +16.3% y/y (New all-time high and strong margin support, but not a dramatic mix-shift story.)

- Services mix: ~27.9% of revenue vs. ~27.9% last year

- Gross margin: 49.3% vs. 47.1% last year

- Products gross margin: ~38.7%

- Healthy hardware profitability, helped by iPhone strength and mix.

- Services gross margin: ~76.7% (Shows why Services remains critical to Apple’s margin structure, even if it did not become a bigger share of revenue this quarter.)

- R&D: $11.4B, +33.6% y/y

- Operating income: $35.9B, +21.3% y/y

- Operating cash flow: over $28B in the quarter; $82.6B for the first half (Cash generation remains exceptional, supporting the durability/buyback story.)

- Buyback authorization: additional $100B

- Dividend: $0.27/share, +4% (Nice capital return signal, but not central to the growth debate.)

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