Apple iPhone salesrose 11% on an annual basis during the first fiscal quarter of 2022
Let’s go right to the device that everyone wants to know about, the iPhone. The surging smartphone took in $76.63 billion which surpassed Wall Street’s guess of $68.34 billion. During the same quarter last year, Apple reported $65.60 billion in handset sales giving the company a 9% increase year-over-year.
Even though the pandemic continues, fewer people are being told to work from home and schools are open. As a result, iPad revenue declined 14.10% in the quarter to $7.25 billion from $8.44 billion during the first fiscal quarter of 2021. Wall Street expected Apple to report $8.18 billion in tablet revenue so this was one area that was a failure for Apple in Wall Street’s eyes.
What was Apple’s strongest business segment last quarter?
Apple’s Services unit, which includes a wide variety of offerings including the App Store, Apple Pay, Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Care+, Apple News, and more, saw revenue rise from $15.75 billion last year to $19.52 billion this year. That figure topped Wall Street forecasts of $18.61 billion. For the year, Services gross rose a tremendous 24% which shows how Apple expects to continue making money even when iPhone sales turn south permanently, something that might not happen for years and years to come.
Sales rose in all segments except for Japan. In the U.S., Apple took in $51.50 billion vs. $46.31 billion last year. In Greater China, revenue was $25.78 billion ($21.31 billion in 2021) and rose in Europe to $29.75 billion vs. $27.31 billion during the fiscal first quarter of 2021.
Net income for the fiscal first quarter of 2022 rose 20.41% on an annual basis to $34.63 billion or $2.11 per share. Last year’s figures were $28.76 billion and $1.70 a share, respectively.
CEO Tim Cook says that the chip and supply chain shortages for the upcoming March quarter to be less than what Apple experienced during the December quarter. “What we expect for the March quarter is solid year over year revenue growth,” Cook said. “And we expect supply constraints in the March quarter to be less than they were in the December quarter.”
On Wall Street, Apple concluded the regular trading session by declining 47 cents or .29% to $159.22. After the earnings report was released, the stock soared $7.89 or 4.96% to $167.11.
Luca Maestri, Apple’s CFO, said, “The very strong customer response to our recent launch of new products and services drove double-digit growth in revenue and earnings, and helped set an all-time high for our installed base of active devices. These record operating results allowed us to return nearly $27 billion to
our shareholders during the quarter, as we maintain our target of reaching a net cash neutral position over time.”