The company is best known for being the primary contract manufacturer of the iPhone.
AI boosters cling to fanciful forecasts — even if meaningful revenue and productivity has yet to materialize.
Chinese e-commerce platforms are offering discounts of up to 2,530 yuan ($351) on Apple's latest iPhone 16 models, an effort to spur sales as first-quarter shipments by the U.S. tech giant fell further in its second-largest market.
Apple (AAPL) stock jumped after the US and China agreed to temporarily ease tariffs. Maxim Group managing director and senior consumer internet analyst Tom Forte explains why Apple may still raise iPhone prices this fall despite the relief from the temporary trade agreement.
Explore Apple's (AAPL) international revenue trends and how these numbers impact Wall Street's forecasts and what's ahead for the stock.
Nevis Brands (CSE:NEVI, OTCQB:NEVIF) has announced the launch of its Major shots in Illinois and that it has grown distribution for its Happy Apple hemp-derived THC line in the southeastern United States. In Illinois, Nevis has received full state approvals for its products and packaging and completed its first production run.
The iPhone-maker is working with startup Synchron on new brain computer interface technology to help disabled people use its devices.
In a bold show of confidence, several of the most influential companies in the technology and financial sectors have unveiled a wave of massive share repurchase programs, with newly announced buybacks totaling over $130 billion. This surge in buyback activity signals that corporate America still sees value in its own equity, even as markets grapple with mixed macroeconomic signals and uneven performance across sectors.
Stocks surged on Monday as the U.S. and China announced a deal to temporarily reduce their high reciprocal tariffs, leading to much optimism that a global economic recession may be avoided.
Asking for a Trend host Josh Lipton examines the day's top market stories and trends for Monday, May 12. Yahoo Finance's Jared Blikre joins the program to recap the trading day's top trading and market themes.
Apple Inc.'s got two problems, and tariffs is just one. The main issue is declining iPhone sales in China due to competition from local brands like Huawei and Xiaomi. Some green signs from the U.S. and China this morning mean concern over higher operational costs and cost trickling over to the end consumer aren't as bad as we all expected. Apple talking about some "justified" price hikes this fall should do well to force the company to innovate and margins to expand.
President Trump says he spoke with Apple CEO Tim Cook following the tariff rollback with China. Bloomberg's Dana Wollman discusses how Apple is grappling with trade and challenges in the lead-up to big product launches in 2027.