Last week ended with a string of results from some of the biggest companies in the tech sector. Positive results continued with
earnings beats from Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN), Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL), and Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT). AMZN and GOOG also beat revenue estimates, but MSFT came up shy of Wall
Street’s top-line estimates. Tech earnings continue this week with Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) reporting fiscal Q2 results after market close tomorrow.
AAPL is expected to report earnings of $2.01 per share, up from $1.90 in the same period last year, on revenue of $52.61
billion, according to consensus third-party analyst estimates. In the last quarter, AAPL reported all-time record quarterly revenue
on strong holiday results, with international sales accounting for 64% of the quarter’s revenue, according to its earnings press
release.
The big focus this quarter is on the company’s flagship smartphone products. iPhone sales are expected to increase 4.3% from a
year ago, according to Wall Street estimates. In the last quarter, AAPL benefited from a rise in average selling prices, jumping to
$695 from $619 in fiscal Q4. The company attributed the increase to a “very strong product mix and the amazing success of iPhone 7
Plus” on its earnings call.
Analysts at Raymond James think smartphone sell-through weakened in the U.S. in the past quarter, which matches softer demand
reported in recent earnings from Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ), AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) and T-Mobile US Inc (NASDAQ: TMUS). Later this year, the company is expected to launch a new version of its
iPhone.
Potential Benefit of Recently Announced Tax Plan
Many tech companies could potentially benefit from President Trump’s tax plan if it is passed in its current form. CFRA analysts
think AAPL would be one of the “biggest beneficiaries from the possibility of foreign cash repatriation and/or lower tax rate by
the new administration”. AAPL has been using its cash holdings to fund a capital return program of $250 billion through share
repurchases and dividends—so far it’s returned $201 billion of that total amount. At the end of the last quarter, AAPL had $230.2
billion in cash plus marketable securities outside the United States, according to CFO Luca Maestri.
Apple Trading and Options Activity
Since the start of the year, AAPL stock is up just under 24%. That’s outpaced the NASDAQ (COMP) as well as several of its tech
peers, shown in figure 2 below. Some analysts caution that rally could include a lot of anticipated growth, potentially diminishing
future returns.
The options market has priced in just over a 3% potential stock move in either direction around the company’s earnings release,
according to the Market Maker Move indicator on the thinkorswim platform. In short-term options trading at the May
5 weekly expiration, calls were active at the 144 and 145 strike prices while puts were active at the 138 and 140 strikes. The
implied volatility sits at the 61st percentile. AAPL is heavily traded so keep in mind this data will change leading up to when the
company reports.
Note: Call options represent the right, but not the obligation, to buy the underlying security at a predetermined price over
a set period of time. Put options represent the right, but not the obligation, to sell the underlying security at a predetermined
price over a set period of time.
Earnings season is starting to quiet down after last week, but there are two major companies reporting on Wednesday. Both
Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) and
Facebook Inc (NASDAQ: FB) release
first-quarter results after market close.
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