05/01/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/01/2026 10:32
Apple delivered quarterly results that topped Wall Street expectations, powered by accelerating growth in its high-margin services business and a rebound in China sales, as investors begin assessing the company's next chapter under incoming chief executive John Ternus.
The company reported fiscal second-quarter revenue of $111.18 billion, ahead of analyst expectations of $109.66 billion, while earnings per share came in at $2.01 versus estimates of $1.95. Revenue rose 17% from a year earlier, marking one of Apple's strongest quarterly growth performances in recent years.
Yet beneath the headline beat, the report also highlighted a deeper transition underway inside the company. iPhone revenue, long the core engine of Apple's business, narrowly missed expectations for the second time in three quarters, reinforcing investor concerns about whether the company can sustain hardware-driven growth in an increasingly mature smartphone market.
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iPhone sales totaled $56.99 billion, slightly below forecasts of $57.21 billion, even as overall iPhone revenue rose 22% year-on-year. The mixed picture suggests Apple continues to benefit from pricing strength and customer loyalty, but is facing a more demanding environment for unit growth globally.
The earnings release also marks Apple's first quarterly report since the announcement that Tim Cook will step down after 15 years leading the company. Cook is scheduled to become executive chairman in September, with longtime hardware chief John Ternus taking over as CEO.
That leadership transition is drawing unusual scrutiny because it comes at a pivotal moment for Apple. The company is confronting several simultaneous challenges: slowing smartphone replacement cycles, intensifying competition in artificial intelligence, supply chain constraints, and growing investor pressure to define its long-term growth strategy beyond the iPhone.
Cook sought to reassure investors during the earnings call, saying, "We have the right leader ready to step into the role," adding that Apple possesses the talent and structure to realize the "promise of this company."
Much of Wall Street's focus is now shifting toward how aggressively Ternus intends to reposition Apple around artificial intelligence.
Earlier this quarter, Apple announced a partnership with Google to integrate the Gemini AI model into Siri, a notable move for a company historically reluctant to rely heavily on external platforms for core consumer experiences. The partnership was widely interpreted as an acknowledgment that Apple has fallen behind rivals in generative AI development.
Unlike competitors such as Microsoft and Meta, which have spent aggressively to embed AI across products and infrastructure, Apple has taken a slower, more cautious approach. Investors are now looking for clearer signs that the company can translate AI adoption into consumer demand and ecosystem expansion.
But Apple's services division continues to emerge as the stabilizing force within the business.
Services revenue climbed nearly 16% year-on-year to $30.98 billion, surpassing expectations and reinforcing the importance of recurring subscription income to Apple's broader strategy. The segment includes iCloud, Apple Pay, AppleCare, and entertainment subscriptions, all of which benefit from the company's vast installed base of active devices.
The significance of services extends beyond revenue growth. It is also central to Apple's margin expansion.
Gross margin rose to 49.3%, ahead of expectations and significantly above levels historically associated with hardware-heavy consumer electronics companies. Apple's ability to extract more revenue from existing customers through software, payments, and subscriptions is increasingly helping offset slower growth in core devices.
The company's improving profitability profile also underscores why investors continue assigning Apple a premium valuation even as hardware sales mature.
Another bright spot came from China.
Revenue from Greater China rose 28% year-on-year to $20.5 billion, rebounding sharply from the prior year's weakness and easing concerns that Apple was losing ground permanently in one of its most strategically important markets. China remains Apple's third-largest regional business after the Americas and Europe.
The recovery is notable given intensifying domestic competition from Chinese smartphone makers and rising geopolitical tensions between Washington and Beijing. Apple has faced mounting pressure in China both commercially and politically, making the rebound an important signal for investors monitoring the company's international resilience.
Meanwhile, Apple's spending profile points to a company investing heavily for its next phase.
Research and development expenses jumped 33% year-on-year to $11.42 billion, far outpacing revenue growth. The increase underlines major industry dynamics, where major technology firms are racing to strengthen AI capabilities, semiconductor design, and next-generation computing platforms.
Apple is also navigating broader supply chain challenges tied to the AI infrastructure boom. Executives noted that global memory shortages, driven by surging demand for AI systems, are affecting availability and costs across the electronics industry. Similar pressures were recently highlighted by Microsoft and Meta as both companies increased capital expenditure forecasts.
In consumer hardware, Apple introduced several new products during the quarter, including the iPhone 17e, refreshed iPad Air models, and the MacBook Neo, a lower-cost laptop targeted at students and budget-conscious consumers. The Neo, priced at $599, signals Apple's attempt to widen its addressable market at a time when consumers globally are becoming more price sensitive.
The company also announced an additional $100 billion share repurchase authorization and raised its quarterly dividend by 4% to 27 cents per share, reinforcing Apple's continued emphasis on shareholder returns.
For investors, however, the central question increasingly revolves around Apple's identity in the post-Cook era.
Under Cook, Apple evolved into one of the world's most profitable and operationally disciplined companies, expanding far beyond hardware into services and ecosystem monetization. Ternus now inherits a company that remains financially dominant but faces greater uncertainty about where its next transformative growth engine will emerge.