Apple reported its fiscal Q3 earnings today, delivering better-than-expected performance across iPhone, Mac, and Services. Revenue reached $94.04 billion, up 10% year-over-year, while net income rose to $23.43 billion, or $1.57 EPS, surpassing analyst consensus comfortably .
iPhone revenue surged 13% YoY to $44.58 billion, reflecting strong demand ahead of forecasted tariffs. Mac sales grew 15% to $8.05 billion, while iPad revenue declined 8% YoY to $6.58 billion . Services—a polished and stable revenue stream—hit a record $27.42 billion, up 13% YoY, contributing to a robust 75.6% gross margin.
Apple’s active devices base also reached an all‑time high, reinforcing the growing installed user ecosystem that powers long-term Services growth. The company also confirmed a $0.26 per share dividend, payable on August 14, 2025.
Despite the strong beat, several headwinds are evident. Tariff pressures—particularly from evolving U.S. trade policy—remain a concern. Apple reportedly faces $900 million in tariff costs for products sourced from China, prompting greater manufacturing migration to India, where production expanded by 240% in Q2 to mitigate exposure .
Perhaps the most critical area of scepticism is Apple’s slow pace in artificial intelligence innovation. Apple’s AI suite—Apple Intelligence—continues to develop incrementally, most notably with Siri enhancements delayed until 2026. Analysts warn that without more significant progress or potential moves like acquiring Perplexity AI, Apple risks falling behind rivals in the AI race.
According to CEO Tim Cook, this quarter marked “revenue records with double‑digit growth in iPhone, Mac and Services across all geographic segments,” including China and India—ensuring Apple remains competitive in emerging and mature markets alike.
Why This Quarter Matters:
- Strong device and services growth across core segments, driven by timely demand and conversions ahead of trade shifts.
- AI roadmap ambiguity, especially in the face of faster-moving competitors like Microsoft and Google.
- Manufacturing diversification impact, which lowered tariff exposure but may complicate supply chain dynamics moving forward.
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