Apple is challenging India's new antitrust penalty law under which the U.S. company could potentially face a fine of up to $38 billion, a court filing at the Delhi High Court, seen by Reuters, shows.
Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL, XETRA:APC) is set to take back the top spot in the global smartphone market for the first time since 2011, driven by strong demand for its iPhone 17 lineup, according to projections from Counterpoint Research. Apple is expected to achieve a 19.4% share of worldwide smartphone shipments in 2025, edging past Samsung, which is forecast to hold an 18.7% share.
Apple will ship around 243 million iPhone units this year versus 235 million shipments from Samsung, Counterpoint Research said. It will be the first time in 14 years that Apple will have shipped more smartphones than Samsung.
Samsung has been the smartphone industry's market-share leader, but iPhone 17 momentum puts Apple on track to reclaim its crown.
Apple's evolution from a hardware-centric company into an AI-enabled, services-heavy cash machine positions it well for the next phase of tech market leadership.
Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL, XETRA:APC) has laid off dozens of employees in sales positions globally in a a rare round of layoffs at the technology giant, according to media reports. The reductions reportedly affect account managers serving enterprise, education, and government clients, as well as staff at Apple's briefing centers, which host product demonstrations for major customers.
DIS' streaming turnaround, rising Experiences income and bold ESPN push set up a compelling contrast with AAPL's ecosystem-driven momentum.
Apple (AAPL) has been one of the stocks most watched by Zacks.com users lately. So, it is worth exploring what lies ahead for the stock.
Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) got off to a rough start to the year, as skeptics slammed the iPhone maker for a lack of an AI strategy.
Poland's anti-monopoly office UOKiK is investigating whether Apple is restricting competition in the mobile advertising market through its privacy policy, it said on Tuesday.
Singapore's police have ordered Apple AAPL.O and Google GOOGL.O to prevent the spoofing of government agencies on their messaging platforms, the home affairs ministry said on Tuesday.
Financial statements don't always have to be confusing when you narrow down to a few key parameters.