Apple’s iPhone sales disappoint 	  		   	      				 		 			by 						 Nick Farrell 					 						 		 			on31 October 2025   	   	   	  	   	    		   		  	  		  		  		  	 		    		   		   		  
  Cash cow continues to die
   The Fruity Cargo Cult Apple has  managed another quarter of solid numbers while admitting that the iPhone  cash cow is looking a bit sad.
   	  	 In its fiscal fourth-quarter report, Job’s Mob posted earnings of  $1.85 per share on revenue of $102.47 billion, slightly ahead of what  the cocaine nose jobs of Wall Street had expected. But investors were  less impressed once they spotted that iPhone revenue fell short of  forecasts again.
   The company brought in $49.03 billion from iPhones, below the  predicted $50.19 billion. Tim Cook blamed supply constraints, claiming  that “we’re supply-constrained on several models of the iPhone 17.”
   For the full fiscal year, Apple booked $416 billion in revenue, up  six per cent, and a net income of $27.5 billion. The market barely  moved. Cook went on CNBC to reassure everyone that things were fine,  predicting sales growth of between 10 and 12 per cent next quarter.
   “We expect that this will make the December quarter the best ever in the history of the company,” he said.
   Apple’s forecast would mean roughly $137.9 billion in sales next  quarter, which is more optimistic than Wall Street’s $132.3 billion  estimate. Cook also said the iPhone 17 had received an “off the charts”  reception and that store traffic was up significantly. He stopped short  of explaining why sales were still lagging.
   In China, one of Apple’s most important markets, revenue slipped by  four per cent to $14.5 billion. Cook insisted that growth would return  in the next quarter thanks to stronger iPhone 17 availability.
   The iPad division continued to stagnate, stuck at $6.95 billion in  sales. The Mac did slightly better, pulling in $8.73 billion, helped by  refreshed models using the M5 chip.
   Services rather than hardware were Apple’s real moneymaker, growing  15 per cent to $28.75 billion. The division covers App Store sales and  subscriptions for Apple Music, iCloud and other services, which remain  the company’s most reliable source of recurring revenue.
   Chief financial officer Kevin Parekh told investors that services  would accelerate further growth in the current quarter. In other words,  Job’s Mob plans to extract more money from subscriptions rather than  selling new hardware.
   Apple’s talk about artificial intelligence did little to impress.  Cook confirmed plans for a revamped Siri and an “Apple Intelligence”  suite that uses OpenAI Group PBC’s ChatGPT.
   Unlike Microsoft, Amazon and Google, the company is keeping its AI  spending small, with capital expenditure at $12.72 billion, up 35 per  cent from the previous year.
   Parekh said Apple would “leverage both first-party capacity as well  as third-party capacity,” meaning it will mostly rent cloud power rather  than build it.
   The cautious approach has saved money, but it leaves Apple lagging  behind rivals that are investing heavily in AI infrastructure. Early  reviews of Apple Intelligence have been mocking, with users saying the  features feel half-baked compared with ChatGPT and Google Gemini.
   Cook mentioned the ongoing hit from US President Donald Trump’s trade  tariffs, claiming Apple absorbed $1.1 billion in additional costs  rather than raising prices. He expects that to rise to $1.4 billion next  quarter.
   Shares in Job’s Mob rose by two per cent after-hours, leaving the  stock up only eight per cent so far this year. The broader S&P 500  has climbed nearly sixteen per cent.
  fudzilla.com
        |