Showing posts with label apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apple. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 August 2011

Aapl

What Happens To Apple Now? (AAPL)
The stock market obviously views Apple as Steve Jobs -- shares are off 5% in the wake of his retirement announcement.But Apple is a company with more than 45,000 employees, including some of the greatest product designers, engineers, and marketers of any company in the world. Apple has an incredible product pipeline: the iPad 2 is the only tablet that matters, the iPhone takes the lion's share of profits in the smartphone market, and the Mac is the only personal computer brand that's growing as the rest of the market is shrinking.All of those products have at least one, maybe two, more updates already in the pipeline.Strategically, Apple is in the right place: both Google (with the Motorola acquisition) and Microsoft (with its Nokia partnership) have basically acknowledged thatthey need both hardware and software to compete in smartphones.Apple is behind those two companies in terms of online services -- the third part of the equation -- but at least it's recognized the problem and will try to address it with iCloud.But two or three years down the road? If Jobs does not come back, here's what Apple will lose:
Pop culture icon.
Steve Jobs's keynotes are packed with press -- including popular press. Will the media fawn over Tim Cook or Phil Schiller when they talk? Don't count on it. And that means that you might not see every Apple product announcement featured on the local TV news as it was today.
The recruiter and magnet.
Apple already lost its retail planner Ron Johnson, and product design head Jony Ive was reportedly making noises about leaving as well. More to the point, everybody wants to work at Apple today. That's party because of the company's record of success -- but it's probably also in good part because of the mythos of Jobs.
The ultimate arbiter;
A lot of big companies are bogged down with bureaucratic infighting -- it's endemic at Microsoft, and Hewlett-Packard's botched earnings/strategy/acquisition announcement last week point to political problem there as well. That has never been a problem with Steve Jobs in control of Apple. Everybody there respects him, he knows what every part of the company is doing, and he's not afraid to make big changes when something's broken. Other CEOs may be as smart and as strong-willed, but they can't possibly garner the same level of respect as the founder who returned to bring his company back from near death.
The product planner.
obs is obsessed with simplicity and leaving things out: he culled the Mac product line down to a couple models when he returned, refused to let the Apple mouse have two buttons, and insisted that the iPhone NOT try to do everything at once. Other Apple employees understand that, but it's unknown whether anybody else will be able to execute that art as well as Jobs has. Especially when product groups and individuals see a new and fresh chance to gain status and get their ideas heard (see last point).

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Apple Stock:Apple drops in after-hours trade as Jobs resigns


Apple drops in after-hours trade as Jobs resigns:
I have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple’s CEO, I would be the first to let you know,” Jobs wrote in a letter to Apple’s board. “Unfortunately, that day has come.Following a brief trading halt, Apple shares /quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl AAPL +0.69%   fell more than 6%, and recently traded down 5.1% at $357.Jobs also urged the board to name Tim Cook as chief executive. Cook, who has served as chief operating officer and has taken the helm for Jobs during Jobs’ battle with cancer in recent years, assumes control immediately, Apple said. Read more about the resignation of Apple's Steve Jobs.Before the trading halt, Apple shares were off 0.2%. They closed the day session up 0.7%, and have climbed roughly 57% over the past year.Elsewhere in late trading, stock in Collective Brands /quotes/zigman/479385/quotes/nls/pss PSS +2.59%  surged 33% to $13.70 as the holding company for Payless ShoeSource and Stride Rite said its board, along with management, will “conduct a review of strategic and financial alternatives to further enhance shareholder value,” but that no assurance can be made that the review will result in any additional action Collective Brands also plans to close about 475 underperforming stores in the next three years, with 300 of those closures by the end of the fiscal year. Costs for lease terminations, severance, and other exit-related costs could range between $25 million to $35 million, the company said.Second-quarter adjusted earnings at Collective Brands were 16 cents a share. Revenue rose to $882.4 million from $841.3 million. Analysts surveyed by FactSet Research expected earnings of 12 cents a share on revenue of $866.2 million. The company swung to net loss of $35 million, or 58 cents a share.Guessshares/quotes/zigman/166567/quotes/nls/ges GES -0.48%  lost 4.6% to $31.75. The apparel retailer forecast third-quarter earnings of 71 cents to 74 cents a share, less than the 84 cents a share analysts had anticipated.Guess, which logged a $19.5 million settlement charge, said second-quarter 2012 net profit fell to $60.7 million, or 65 cents a share, from $66.8 million, or 72 cents, a year ago. Revenue, however, rose 17% to $677.2 million from $577.1 million. Excluding one-time items, Guess earned 84 cents a share. Wall Street was looking for 81 cents a share on $656.4 million in revenue.Also lower were shares of Applied Materials /quotes/zigman/19895/quotes/nls/amat AMAT -0.70%  , down 4.1% at $10.90, with the chip-equipment maker saying it expects fourth-quarter sales to be down in the range of 15% to 30% from the third quarter. It also expects adjusted earnings of 16 cents a share to 24 cents a share. Analysts had forecast earnings of 31 cents a share, on revenue of $2.6 billion.
For its third quarter, Applied Materials said profit was $476 million, or 36 cents a share, up from $123 million, or 9 cents a share, a year ago. Sales were $2.8 billion, up from $2.5 billion. Adjusted income was 35 cents a share. Analysts had expected earnings of 33 cents a share, on revenue of $2.7 billion.U.S. stocks rallied ahead of the late-trading session, with a larger-than-anticipated rise in durable-goods orders overriding worries about the global economy. Read about Wednesday's action in U.S. stocks.The Dow Jones Industrial Average /quotes/zigman/627449/delayed DJIA +1.29%  jumped 144 points, or 1.3%, to 11,320.71. The S&P 500 Index /quotes/zigman/3870025 SPX +1.31%  rose 1.3% to 1,177.60, and the Nasdaq Composite Index /quotes/zigman/123127 COMP +0.88%  gained 0.9%