After Earnings, Is Apple’s Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued? (2024)

Apple AAPL released its fiscal first-quarter earnings report on Feb. 1. Here’s Morningstar’s take on Apple’s earnings and stock.

Key Morningstar Metrics for Apple

  • Fair Value Estimate: $160.00
  • Morningstar Rating: 2 stars
  • Morningstar Economic Moat Rating: Wide
  • Morningstar Uncertainty Rating: Medium

What We Thought of Apple’s Fiscal Q1 Earnings

Apple’s results showed better iPhone revenue in the December quarter than we expected, as well as better profitability. iPhone revenue was driven by the launch of the iPhone 15 lineup, and the improved profitability stems from a higher mix of services and higher-end products like the iPhone Pro models. However, revenue guidance for the March quarter fell below our expectations.

In the short term, we see demand headwinds for Apple relating to elongating personal device replacement cycles and more aggressive domestic alternatives in China. In the long term, we maintain our view that Apple can drive growth from its unique combination of hardware, software, and services, which also elicits steep customer switching costs and underpins our wide moat rating.

We believe guidance for weaker iPhone revenue in the March quarter portends weaker iPhone revenue for fiscal 2024 (ending in September). In our view, Apple’s current share price reflects overly rosy expectations for iPhone sales over the next five years, and our more modest forecast leads us to see the stock as overvalued.

Apple Stock Price

Fair Value Estimate for Apple

With its 2-star rating, we believe Apple’s stock is overvalued compared with our long-term fair value estimate of $160 per share. Our valuation implies a fiscal 2024 adjusted price/earnings multiple of 25 times, a fiscal 2024 enterprise value/sales multiple of 7 times, and a fiscal 2024 free cash flow yield of 4%.

We project 6% compound annual revenue growth for Apple through fiscal 2028. The iPhone will be the greatest contributor to revenue over our forecast, and we project 3% growth for iPhone revenue over the next five years. We expect this to be driven primarily by unit sales growth, with modest pricing increases. We think pricing increases will be driven primarily by higher features and a mix shift toward the more premium Pro models.

Services are Apple’s next biggest revenue contributor over our forecast, and we predict 8% revenue growth in this segment. Services are driven in large part by revenue from Google, thanks to its status as the default search engine on the Safari browser, as well as Apple’s cut of App Store sales. We expect solid growth in Google revenue, but we see a more mixed outlook for App Store results. There we forecast growth in overall app revenue but progressively lower cuts going toward Apple as the result of regulatory pressures. Elsewhere, we see roughly high-single-digit growth across revenue from Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Pay, AppleCare, and Apple’s other services.

We see the highest growth opportunity in Apple’s wearables revenue, to the tune of 18% through fiscal 2028, primarily driven by our expectations for the ramp of the new Vision Pro headset. We project a rapid ramp for Vision Pro, approaching 10 million unit sales and $30 billion in revenue in fiscal 2028. We see high-single-digit growth for Apple Watch and AirPods sales, with both products continuing to gain share.

Read more about Apple’s fair value estimate.

Apple Historical Price/Fair Value Ratio

Ratios over 1.00 indicate when the stock is overvalued, while ratios below 1.00 mean the stock is undervalued.

After Earnings, Is Apple’s Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued? (1)

Economic Moat Rating

We assign Apple a wide moat, stemming from customer switching costs, intangible assets, and a network effect. In our view, Apple’s iOS ecosystem extends far-reaching, sticky tendrils into customers’ wallets, entrenching them with its software capabilities and integration across disparate devices like the iPhone, Mac, iPad, Apple Watch, and more.

We also see immense design prowess at Apple, most impressively from its deep integration of hardware, software, and semiconductors to create best-of-breed products. Finally, we see a virtuous cycle between Apple’s affluent customer base and its vast ecosystem of developer partners. These moat sources elicit great profitability and returns on invested capital. In our view, Apple can likely leverage these moat sources into continued economic profits over the next 20 years.

To us, Apple’s most important moat source arises from the switching costs for its ecosystem of software, driven by iOS on the iPhone. The firm enjoys terrific customer retention and satisfaction, even despite pricing its products at a significant premium to its competition. First, Apple offers software capabilities that are only available to iPhone users—iMessage messaging, FaceTime calling, AirDrop sharing, the Apple Pay digital wallet, and location sharing are among the most used. Apple’s products become even more entrenched when a customer adopts two or more. Users who combine the iPhone with a Mac, an iPad, and/or a Watch are offered more features, which in turn creates a higher switching cost.

In our view, Apple’s ability to widen its portfolio of user devices helps augment its existing switching costs. The Apple Watch and AirPods are good recent examples of new products that we see raising the stickiness of customers. A Watch user can answer calls, read and respond to messages, and keep track of notifications, but must have an iPhone to use these capabilities. AirPods connect with marked ease to Apple devices but have to be manually repaired if joined to a non-Apple device. As customers use more point devices, we believe they are less likely to leave Apple’s ecosystem. We view Apple’s nascent push into augmented and virtual reality as the next step in this strategy. The firm’s Vision Pro headset offers yet another auxiliary form factor that relies on the iPhone as the focal computing point.

Read more about Apple’s moat rating.

Risk and Uncertainty

We assign Apple a Medium Uncertainty Rating. We think the firm’s greatest risk is its reliance on consumer spending, for which there is great competition and cyclicality. Apple is at constant risk of disruption, just as the iPhone disrupted BlackBerry in the budding smartphone market. The iPhone could be unseated by a new device or “super app.” We believe the firm defends against this risk by introducing new form factors (like a watch and an augmented reality headset) and selling an ecosystem of software and services on top of hardware.

We also see geopolitical risk arising from Apple’s supply chain. It is heavily dependent on Foxconn and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing TSM for its assembly and chip production, respectively. The majority of iPhones are produced at a factory in China by Foxconn, and the majority of Apple chips are produced in Taiwan by TSMC. If there were a souring of relations between the United States and China, or if China threatened Taiwan, the firm could see a severe hit to its supply. Additionally, the Chinese government has recommended that government officials not conduct business on iPhones, which presents a current and potential future risk to sales in China.

We see a low level of environmental, social, and governance risk for Apple. The firm has committed to full carbon neutrality by 2030, and we believe it will achieve this goal. The potential future loss of talented human capital could be another risk on this front.

Read more about Apple’s risk and uncertainty.

AAPL Bulls Say

  • Apple offers an expansive ecosystem of tightly integrated hardware, software, and services, which locks in customers and generates strong profitability.
  • We like Apple’s move to in-house chip development, which we think has accelerated its product development and increased its differentiation.
  • Apple has a stellar balance sheet and sends great amounts of cash flow back to shareholders.

AAPL Bears Say

  • Apple is prone to consumer spending and preferences, which creates cyclicality and opens the firm to disruption.
  • Apple’s supply chain is highly concentrated in China and Taiwan, which leaves the firm vulnerable to geopolitical risk. Attempts to diversify into other regions may pressure profitability or efficiency.
  • Regulators have a keen eye on Apple, and recent regulations have chipped away at parts of its sticky ecosystem.

This article was compiled by Quinn Rennell.

The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article.Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.

After Earnings, Is Apple’s Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued? (2024)

FAQs

Is Apple a buy after earnings? ›

We believe investors would need to assume close to 20% iPhone growth in fiscal 2025 to justify Apple's current share price, compared with our expectations of closer to 10%. With its 2-star rating, we believe Apple's stock is overvalued compared with our long-term fair value estimate of $185 per share.

Is Apple stock a buy sell or hold? ›

Is AAPL a Buy, Sell or Hold? Apple has a consensus rating of Moderate Buy which is based on 23 buy ratings, 8 hold ratings and 1 sell ratings.

Is Apple stock a buy? ›

Is Apple Stock A Buy Right Now? No, Apple stock is not a buy right now. However, it soon could be. Apple shares are approaching a buy point of 232.92 from a handle formation, based on IBD analysis.

Is Apple undervalued or overvalued? ›

However, we continue to see shares as overvalued. Apple's current stock price implies closer to 20% iPhone revenue growth in fiscal 2025, which we see as lofty given headwinds to growth in China and slowing consumer phone upgrade cycles.

What is the fair value of Apple stock? ›

As of 2024-09-16, the Fair Value of Apple Inc (AAPL) is 86.15 USD. This value is based on the Peter Lynch's Fair Value formula. With the current market price of 222.5 USD, the upside of Apple Inc is -61.3%.

Is Apple a good buy for 2024? ›

Apple stock forecast 2025

EPS is expected to increase to $7.48. AAPL soared after the announcement of the AI platform in mid-2024. The stock is up more than 20% in 2024. But given the $244.31 one-year price target, analysts don't expect eye-popping returns, at least not immediately.

Will Apple stock split in 2024? ›

Apple probably won't split its stock in 2024. The stock price today is about half what it was when the company announced its last split, a four-for-one exchange, in 2020.

Is Apple expected to beat earnings? ›

Apple is expected to report fiscal adjusted earnings rose 6.3% year over year to $1.34 a share and revenue grew by 3.2% to $84.4 billion, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet. A year ago, the company reported $1.26 a share in earnings on revenue of $81.8 billion.

Why did Buffett sell Apple? ›

He declared that two of his long-time prized investments, Coca-Cola and American Express, were "wonderful" businesses, but lauded Apple as "an even better one." At the same meeting, when asked why he'd sold some Apple stock during the first quarter, Buffett alluded to tax rates as a reason to take profits.

Is Apple stock currently overpriced? ›

Apple's stock is very expensive for its growth

Apple's stock trades at the high end of its recent valuation at 33.6 times earnings. If you look at forward earnings, it's clear Wall Street analysts don't expect much growth either, with just 2% growth expected until the end of this fiscal year and 13% growth next year.

Is Apple currently undervalued? ›

Over the past twelve months the share price is up 21%. Based on the DCF valuation, the stock is overvalued. The DCF value of $116.32 share is lower than the current market price of $227.57. The Margin of Safety is -95.64%.

What stock is overvalued right now? ›

Most overvalued US stocks
SymbolRSI (14)Price
TIL D97.8184.52 USD
NOVV D95.3737.00 USD
ETON D91.635.15 USD
SMMT D90.9231.93 USD
29 more rows

What is Apple price over earnings? ›

As at Sep 11, 2024, the AAPL stock has a PE ratio of 33.79. This is based on the current EPS of $6.59 and the stock price of $222.66 per share. An increase of 16% has been seen in the P/E ratio compared to the average of 29.0 of the last 4 quarters.

Is Apple doing good financially? ›

The Company posted quarterly revenue of $85.8 billion, up 5 percent year over year, and quarterly earnings per diluted share of $1.40, up 11 percent year over year. “Today Apple is reporting a new June quarter revenue record of $85.8 billion, up 5 percent from a year ago,” said Tim Cook, Apple's CEO.

Top Articles
PRS Serial Identification Numbers - Lovies Guitars
Guide to What Is (and Is Not) a Financial Emergency | SoFi
English Bulldog Puppies For Sale Under 1000 In Florida
Katie Pavlich Bikini Photos
Gamevault Agent
Pieology Nutrition Calculator Mobile
Hocus Pocus Showtimes Near Harkins Theatres Yuma Palms 14
Hendersonville (Tennessee) – Travel guide at Wikivoyage
Compare the Samsung Galaxy S24 - 256GB - Cobalt Violet vs Apple iPhone 16 Pro - 128GB - Desert Titanium | AT&T
Vardis Olive Garden (Georgioupolis, Kreta) ✈️ inkl. Flug buchen
Craigslist Dog Kennels For Sale
Things To Do In Atlanta Tomorrow Night
Non Sequitur
Crossword Nexus Solver
How To Cut Eelgrass Grounded
Pac Man Deviantart
Alexander Funeral Home Gallatin Obituaries
Energy Healing Conference Utah
Geometry Review Quiz 5 Answer Key
Hobby Stores Near Me Now
Icivics The Electoral Process Answer Key
Allybearloves
Bible Gateway passage: Revelation 3 - New Living Translation
Yisd Home Access Center
Home
Shadbase Get Out Of Jail
Gina Wilson Angle Addition Postulate
Celina Powell Lil Meech Video: A Controversial Encounter Shakes Social Media - Video Reddit Trend
Walmart Pharmacy Near Me Open
Marquette Gas Prices
A Christmas Horse - Alison Senxation
Ou Football Brainiacs
Access a Shared Resource | Computing for Arts + Sciences
Vera Bradley Factory Outlet Sunbury Products
Pixel Combat Unblocked
Movies - EPIC Theatres
Cvs Sport Physicals
Mercedes W204 Belt Diagram
Mia Malkova Bio, Net Worth, Age & More - Magzica
'Conan Exiles' 3.0 Guide: How To Unlock Spells And Sorcery
Teenbeautyfitness
Where Can I Cash A Huntington National Bank Check
Topos De Bolos Engraçados
Sand Castle Parents Guide
Gregory (Five Nights at Freddy's)
Grand Valley State University Library Hours
Holzer Athena Portal
Hello – Cornerstone Chapel
Stoughton Commuter Rail Schedule
Nfsd Web Portal
Selly Medaline
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Virgilio Hermann JD

Last Updated:

Views: 5869

Rating: 4 / 5 (61 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Virgilio Hermann JD

Birthday: 1997-12-21

Address: 6946 Schoen Cove, Sipesshire, MO 55944

Phone: +3763365785260

Job: Accounting Engineer

Hobby: Web surfing, Rafting, Dowsing, Stand-up comedy, Ghost hunting, Swimming, Amateur radio

Introduction: My name is Virgilio Hermann JD, I am a fine, gifted, beautiful, encouraging, kind, talented, zealous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.