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A user holds an Apple iPhone 5

Apple Shares Hit Record Close on Optimism for Next iPhone

Feb. 14, 2017
While the iPhone 7 failed to convince as many existing customers to upgrade as its predecessor did, it did succeed in attracting new smartphone buyers to the company. That bodes well for the next iPhone, which is expected to be a more substantial upgrade, according to analysts.

Apple Inc. shares hit a record on optimism that the next iPhone will drive a resurgence in sales and help the company’s services businesses grow.

The stock climbed less than 1% to $133.29 at the close Monday in New York, the highest on record. The increase valued Apple at about $699 billion, making it the world’s most highly capitalized company. Google parent Alphabet Inc. is next at $573 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Analysts are predicting a further gain in Apple shares in the next year, based on the average 12-month target price of $142.58, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The intraday peak for the shares is $134.54, set in April 2015. The previous closing record was $133 in February of that year. The stock then dropped for more than a year on concern about waning smartphone industry growth and Apple’s prospects beyond the iPhone. However, the company recently reported stronger-than-expected iPhone sales during the key holiday quarter, helping the stock reach a new high.

While the iPhone 7, introduced in September, failed to convince as many existing customers to upgrade as its predecessor did, it succeeded in attracting new smartphone buyers to the Cupertino, California-based company. That bodes well for the next iPhone later this year, which is expected to be a more substantial upgrade, according to analysts.

“It’s probably just a continuation of the rally following the last quarter report and guidance for the second quarter that’s giving investors a bridge to the next iPhone that many are getting excited about,” BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk said.

The stock was also buoyed by the equity market, with all U.S. benchmarks ending the day at records. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which includes Apple, climbed past 20,400 for the first time.

More iPhone users increases the chances Apple can sell software, services and subscriptions like Apple Music and iCloud. Services revenue grew 18% to $7.2 billion in the most recent period, and the company aims to double the annual total to more than $50 billion by fiscal 2021.

“A lot of it comes from the fact that our installed base of devices around the world continues to grow very well,” Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri said in a recent interview.

Still, Apple has struggled to expand into other businesses that are big enough to move the needle at a company with more than $200 billion in annual revenue. Its secretive car project got off to a slow start and the Apple Watch, while popular, hasn’t come close to matching the iPhone’s success. The business can’t continue to rely only on hit smartphones.

“We know what a smartphone looks like and does,” billionaire technology investor Peter Thiel told the New York Times earlier this year. “It’s not an area where there will be any more innovation.”

By Alex Webb

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Bloomberg

Licensed content from Bloomberg, copyright 2016.

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