*By Chloe Aiello* Apple spiked in extended trading on Tuesday after reporting earnings and revenue that pleased Wall Street. Apple ($AAPL) reported earnings per share of $4.18 on revenue of $84.31 billion, just exceeding the expectations of analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters for earnings of $4.17 per share on $83.97 billion in revenue. Earnings increased year-over-year, thanks partially to [Apple's generous share buy-back program](https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-investment-that-cost-apple-9-billion-in-2018-11545925184?mod=hp_lead_pos2), but revenue slid about 4.5 percent from the prior year. Apple’s reported revenue beat guidance the tech behemoth issued in early January, but easily missed the $89 billion to $93 billion revenue range Apple guided toward in November, when it last reported earnings. “While it was disappointing to miss our revenue guidance, we manage Apple for the long term, and this quarter’s results demonstrate that the underlying strength of our business runs deep and wide,” Apple CEO Tim Cook [said in a statement](https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2019/01/apple-reports-first-quarter-results/). Apple's Chief Financial Officer [Luca Maestri last quarter announced Apple would no longer break out iPhone unit sales](https://cheddar.com/videos/apple-trying-hide-something-reporting-shakeup). But in its earnings statement, Apple acknowledged that iPhone revenue declined 15 percent from the prior year, as revenue from other products and services grew 19 percent. But Maestri added on a call with analysts Tuesday that the global active install base of iPhones is growing and "reached an all-time high at the end of December." He said it surpassed 900 million devices, up year-over-year in all geographic segments, even China, and grew almost 75 million in the last 12 months. Services alone generated an all-time high revenue of $10.9 billion, up 19 percent year-over-year. Apple has been positioning itself to grow its services offerings, like iCloud and App Store, as sales have faltered for the iPhone, its core product. Apple also offered guidance for the ongoing quarter. The company said it expects revenue between $55 billion and $59 billion. Heading into its last earnings report, Apple was on top of the world. Despite stagnating sales of its core product, the iPhone, the tech behemoth had breached $1 trillion in market capitalization ー the first publicly traded U.S. company to do so ー and it had just unveiled several new iPhone models that promised to propel its average selling price further skyward. But what followed was a turbulent quarter for the markets and for Apple. Cook’s preemptive outlook downgrade in a note to investors on Jan. 2 sent shares tumbling. Cook blamed weakness in the Chinese market for most of the revenue shortfall to its guidance, and for all of the year-over-year worldwide revenue decline. Per Cook's warning, Apple's earnings report showed a notable slowdown in China. Sales in the last three months of 2018 declined about 27 percent year-over-year from $17.96 billion to $13.17 billion in Apple's Greater China segment, but sales in the Japanese and European markets also dipped. Apple shares were up about 3.6 percent in after hours trading, but down about 2 percent year-to-date. Since it hit $1 trillion, the tech behemoth’s market cap has slid about 27 percent to $734 billion.

Share:
More In Business
Busting an Important 'Work From Home' Myth
Amy Leschke-Kahle, Vice President of Performance Acceleration at The Marcus Buckingham Company, an ADP company, joins Cheddar to discuss how encouraging employee engagement and empowering employee voices can benefit every workplace and busts a myth about employee engagement while working from home.
A Data-Driven Approach to Workplace Mental Wellness
Jim Huether, CEO of Hyperice, joins Cheddar to discuss Hyperice's new employee mental health initiative, known as the Workplace Alliance, with 100-plus companies to combat the ongoing mental health crisis and how they're taking a hands-on, data-driven approach to the mental health crisis.
Biden Calls Out Big Oil for Corporate Greed but Production Complicated by EV Future
Consumer prices saw an 8.6 percent jump in May, with fuel prices showing the biggest surge, climbing 17 percent last month. As inflation continues to climb to levels not seen in 40 years, President Biden took to calling out ExxonMobil and other major oil companies, accusing them of holding back production while continuing to collect huge profits at the cost of the consumer. Mark Avallone, the president of Potomac Wealth Advisors, joined Cheddar's Opening Bell to discuss. “They have reduced long-term expenditures. But why? Because the world is going to alternative energy and as consumers, if we thought that that welcome change to alternatives was going to happen without pain, we might have been mistaken," he said. "The less investment they make in oil because they're getting ready for a new world of electric vehicles, the less we're going to be prepared for oil shocks such as the one we got when Russia invaded Ukraine."
N2K: Gun Reform In Congress, Jan. 6 Hearings, SCOTUS Decision On The Way
Catching you up on the stories you need to know this morning, the U.S. could soon get its first major gun safety law in years, the House Select Committee investigating the January 6th attack on the U.S. capitol holds its second hearing, and today might just be the day the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, and decides on new gun laws.
U.S. Stocks Close at Session Lows
U.S. stocks closed Thursday at their lowest levels of the trading day, as investors continue to eye inflation ahead of the May CPI report out Friday. Art Hogan, Chief Market Strategist for National Holdings, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss.
Load More