Smartphone shipments rose overall in China in the first quarter, but iPhone shipments fell 9%, according to IDC data. Apple's Chinese competitors are hitting growth milestones boosted by government subsidies.
The NY AG, it should be noted, has been trying to nail Trump on something for years, she even campaigned on it, so she's not a neutral source.
Italy and the United States issued a joint statement against "discriminatory" taxes on digital services on Friday, in a possible signal Rome is moving away from a levy that has irked Washington.
Apple generated around $2.4 million in revenue per employee in its latest fiscal year. One of its Big Tech rivals is nearing similar levels of efficiency.
Every once in a while, the stock market breaks out in volatility pockets due to the birth and run of news cycles, as it is an inevitable fact of financial markets as a whole. What is also inevitable and natural is for the phases of these developments to go through a cycle, where new pivots and headlines start to exhaust the whipsaws caused by introducing new information to sway the outlooks being priced into asset prices.
Got an extra $1,000 you're ready to put to work for a while but don't know what to buy? Don't make it complicated.
Apple lost its top spot in China's smartphone market, dethroned by local rival Xiaomi as Beijing's consumption-boosting subsidies help buoy demand for cheaper products.
Companies generate revenue by selling something. The soundest businesses pay off their bills, invest in capital projects, and end up with free cash flow (FCF).
Warren Buffett has made no secret about how much he likes Apple (AAPL -3.82%), once referring to it as the best business he knows of. It's routinely the top holding in the portfolio of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A -2.66%) (BRK.B -2.13%), Buffett's conglomerate.
If I knew how to read tea leaves, I'd tell you how the tariff-fueled trade war will impact Apple. But I don't. So I can't.
Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon are all locked in a race to see who can zero out their carbon pollution first.
Early April's selloff after the Trump administration's "Liberation Day" tariffs was notable both because the market notched some of its highest-ever daily point losses and because even stalwart blue-chip names like Apple Inc. NASDAQ: AAPL were highly impacted.