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Industryweek 10380 021916applelogoandrewburton
Industryweek 10380 021916applelogoandrewburton
Industryweek 10380 021916applelogoandrewburton
Industryweek 10380 021916applelogoandrewburton
Industryweek 10380 021916applelogoandrewburton

What's Bad for Apple Can be Terrible for Suppliers

Nov. 13, 2018
While Apple has other income streams, cuts in production orders can leave components makers in the cold.

n a world where iPhone demand is on the wane, Apple Inc. has a Plan B. As customers wait longer between upgrades and the smartphone market saturates, Apple can fall back on charging higher prices for each handset and raking in more money from services such as streaming music, digital videos and data storage.

But there’s no back-up for many of the companies that supply components for the iPhone.

The latest evidence that what’s bad for Apple can be terrible for suppliers came on two continents within hours of each other. Japan Display Inc., which gets more than half its revenue from the iPhone maker, cut forecasts. Then Lumentum Holdings Inc., a top maker of iPhone facial-recognition sensors, lowered its second-quarter outlook. On Tuesday, Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., the biggest assembler, missed estimates.

“Suppliers are more dependent on volume than Apple,” said Woo Jin Ho, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “This raises an incremental risk for the rest of the supply chain.” Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Apple shares fell 5% on Monday, but Lumentum slumped more than 30% and rival II-VI Inc. dropped 13%. Japan Display dropped 9.5%, while Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. slipped to the lowest level in five years.

In Europe, Dialog Semiconductor Plc, which gets most of its sales from Apple, fell as much as 3.6%  in early Frankfurt trading. Austria’s ams AG, another supplier, slid as much as 3.2%  after plunging 22% on Monday.

Faced with a maturing smartphone market, Apple’s strategy has been to entice customers to pay more for phones with new features such as facial recognition and more vibrant screens.

The 3-D sensing components from companies like Lumentum are found in iPhones that often cost more than $1,000. Fewer people can afford to pay that much for a new device. But when a sale does happen, suppliers get a one-time payment for their component, while Apple can generate hundreds of extra dollars per gadget. In its most-recent quarter, Apple reported almost no increase in the number of iPhones sold, but revenue from that business jumped 29% from a year earlier.

If demand for newer, pricier iPhones wanes, Apple can cut component orders or delay shipments, leaving suppliers with more inventory. That makes them more likely to cut prices when Apple comes back to the negotiating table.

Lumentum’s weaker sales forecast was the result of a shipment reduction from its largest customer just a few days ago, Chief Executive Officer Alan Lowe said at a conference in San Francisco on Monday. Lumentum didn’t identify the customer and a spokesman for the company declined to comment, but Apple is its biggest customer, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Apple is increasingly touting its base of 1.3 billion installed devices, rather than how many iPhones it sells each quarter. And the company has been making changes to keep these existing customers happy while selling more services to them.

“Apple is no longer a traditional hardware business,” said Gene Munster, a veteran Apple analyst at Loup Ventures. “The Apple investment paradigm is moving away from a focus on device sales toward a more predictable services-driven business.”

This year, Apple has taken steps to lengthen the amount of time iPhones can be used. That will likely discourage people from upgrading to newer devices -- another ominous sign for suppliers.

Early in the year, the company confirmed it had been intentionally throttling the speeds of some older phones to avoid battery-related problems. After an outcry, the company offered cheap battery upgrades, extending the life of many handsets.

More recently, Apple launched a new version of its operating system, iOS 12, that supports an unprecedented 28 of the company’s devices, including models that went on sale in 2013. Previous iOS upgrades supported gadgets dating back several years, but this is the first time Apple has prioritized enhancing the speed of older iPhones. The refreshed software can open the camera on older iPhones 70 percent faster and the keyboard 50 percent faster, compared with iOS 11, last years’ update.

“Longer-lasting products could lead to higher customer satisfaction, potentially enable Apple to charge higher prices for its devices, and would help fulfill the company’s environmental objectives,” Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., wrote Monday in a note to investors.

That could extend iPhone replacement cycles by six months to 3.2 years and push unit sales down by 6 percent a year for three years, he estimated.

With longer-lasting iPhones, users may be more likely to subscribe to new services, making the devices more lucrative to Apple than just the upfront cost. But these services are not additional revenue sources for component suppliers.

While suppliers have fewer options, they are reacting to a slower smartphone market. Like most device makers, Apple prefers at least two suppliers for each component. The $3.2 billion combination of optical component makers II-VI and Finisar Corp., announced last week, will create a larger company that’s better able to negotiate on prices.

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