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 iPhone 5 may be worth $3.2 billion to U.S. economy: economist
 September 10, 2012, 2:52 PM
 
 The iPhone 5 could inject $3.2 billion to the U.S. economy in the fourth quarter, an economist estimated Monday.
 
 The iPhone math, courtesy of J.P. Morgan’s Michael Feroli, goes like this.
 
 The bank’s equity analysts expect around 8 million iPhones will be  sold in the fourth quarter in the U.S., even while sales of prior  generation iPhones are maintained. Assuming a $600 price tag — remember,  this is for the phone itself, not the retail price minus the subsidy  provided by the wireless operator — and $200 worth of imported goods per  phone, sales of the iPhone 5 could boost Q4 GDP by $3.2 billion, or  $12.8 billion at an annual rate.
 
 That also equates to roughly a 0.33-percentage-point boost to GDP —  which is substantial, given that the bank forecasts a 2% growth rate for  the entire U.S. economy.
 
 Feroli acknowledges it’s a big estimate but explained why he expects such a boost.
 
 “In October of last year, when the iPhone 4s first became widely  available, overall retail sales that month significantly outperformed  expectations. Essentially all iPhone sales occur either on-line or in  retail stores. Over half of the 0.8% increase in core retail sales last  October occurred in two categories: on-line sales and computer and  software sales, which combined had their largest monthly increase on  record. The incremental growth of Q4 sales at those stores over Q3, if  due to the iPhone, would have added between 0.1% to 0.2%-point to Q4  growth, after subtracting the import drag. Given the iPhone 5 launch is  expected to be much larger, we think the estimate mentioned in the first  paragraph is reasonable,” he said.
 
 – Steve Goldstein
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