Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Apple's earnings to showcase one-two punch

SAN FRANCISCO - Apple Inc should affirm next week that its six-month-old iPad tablet computer is selling well despite a shaky consumer market, while the iPhone continues to fend off a strong challenge from rival Google Inc.

Analysts expect fourth-quarter earnings to showcase Apple's powerful one-two punch of the iPhone and the iPad, although some still question whether, with a plethora of rival products set to hit store shelves, Wall Street can justify Apple's stratospheric valuation.

The shares of the second largest corporation in the S&P 500 jumped more than 4 percent on Friday as anticipation mounted ahead of Monday's report.

As has been the case for many quarters, iPhone growth will be the main driver, even as anticipation builds over an iPhone early next year tailor-made for the network of top mobile carrier Verizon Wireless Inc -- a move that would instantly boost Apple's consumer reach in the US.

Apple's shares stand at a record high after breaking through the $300 mark for the first time this week. The company has so far proved resilient in the face of weak US consumer spending. At the same time, gross margins should get a boost from falling component costs.

Although there is little doubt September quarter numbers will be strong, investors have come to demand an out-sized performance, so the bar is raised every three months.

Analysts say a big upside surprise may be tougher to achieve this time around given constraints in iPad and iPhone supply.

But the iPad is playing a bigger role in Apple's business and could be a wild card this quarter, and Wall Street is eager to gauge consumer enthusiasm for the tablet. While demand has been strong, manufacturing bottlenecks have limited production.

Apple trades at nearly 21 times forward earnings, a healthy premium over smartphone and PC rivals.

A second leg

Investors are looking at the iPad as the second pillar of growth along with the iPhone, which has keyed Apple's surge over the past few years, but is facing stiff competition from smartphones based on Google's Android software.

"It's going to be a combination this time of their two most important products, iPhone and iPad, and both are going to do very well," said Gleacher & Co analyst Brian Marshall, who expects Apple to pass Exxon Mobil Corp as the largest company in the S&P 500 in short order.

Apple launched the iPad in April and sold 3.3 million units in the June quarter. Analysts expect sales of 4.5 million to 5 million units for September.

Susquehanna Financial analyst Jeff Fidacaro noted that because investor expectations are so high, there may be some disappointment if the iPad number is below 5 million.

Fidacaro said that, despite Apple's size, there is still room to grow because its key markets -- smartphones and tablets -- are young and expanding.

"You've got two huge product cycles going on right now," he said. "And the iPad has no competition."

iPhone sales should continue to be strong following the June launch of the iPhone 4, with estimates in the 11 million to 12 million unit range.

Fidacaro said Apple is building a CDMA iPhone for expected launch early next year, potentially with Verizon, that would add more than 10 million units to his 2011 sales estimate.

But the threat from Google looms and new rivals are emerging. Android was the most popular platform among US smartphone customers in the past six months, according to Nielsen.

"There's going to be no shortage of competition next year," said Pacific Crest Securities analyst Andy Hargreaves.

Elevated expectations

Apple, famous for its low-ball forecasts, stunned investors in July when it set a revenue outlook for September that was $1 billion higher than Wall Street's target.

The company has beat the consensus estimate in each of the past eight quarters by a minimum of 13 percent and has bested revenue estimates for the past seven quarters.

Hargreaves said investors should expect another beat this time around.

"I don't think it will be a big as what we've seen in the past, at least relative to our numbers, because of supply constraints early in the quarter," he said.

Apple is expected to post earnings of $4.08 a share on revenue of $18.9 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

According to StarMine's SmartEstimate, which places more weight on recent forecasts by top-rated analysts, Apple should post EPS of $4.17 on revenue of $19.1 billion.

Analysts expect a gross margin of 38.2 percent. Apple's margin has been pinched by the iPad, but falling prices for components such as NAND flash, which Apple consumes in huge amounts, could help in the September quarter.

Wall Street expects Apple to report sales of roughly 10 million iPods and 3.5 million to 4 million Mac computers.

Macs have been a steady source of strength for Apple over the past few years. Sales surged 24 percent in the US in the July-September period, according to industry tracker IDC, a far stronger performance that its rivals.

Apple could dominate the headlines next week. After its earnings report on Monday comes a media event on Wednesday focused on Mac computers. That is followed by quarterly results from AT&T Inc, the exclusive US iPhone carrier, and Verizon.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Samsung takes aim at Apple's iPad, iTunes

WASHINGTON - South Korea's Samsung took aim at Apple's iPad and iTunes on Friday with the US launch of its new Galaxy tablet computer and an online entertainment hub for movies and television shows.

Samsung said US wireless carriers AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon will sell the Galaxy Tab, which was unveiled at the IFA electronics trade fair in Berlin, Germany, in early September.

Samsung said the Galaxy Tab would be available in the US in the "coming months" but did not provide pricing details of the touchscreen device seen as its answer to the iPad.

The South Korean electronics giant said the Galaxy Tab will offer access to "Media Hub," a new content service at Samsung.com.

MTV Networks, NBC Universal and Paramount are among the partners in Media Hub, which Samsung said will offer a "robust library" of movies, including new release films, next day television episodes and full TV show seasons.

Movies and TV shows can be rented or purchased and shared with up to five devices including Galaxy S smartphones, Samsung said.

"The new site further shifts the company from a product and technology provider to providing an overall digital experience," Samsung said in a statement.

Releasing the Galaxy Tab in the US, Samsung sought to emphasize its differences with the iPad, which has been a hot seller for Apple since it hit stores in April.

Samsung noted that the Galaxy Tab has front- and rear-facing video cameras, allowing for video chat, and runs the popular Flash video software from Adobe.

The iPad does not have a camera and Apple has banned Flash from the device.

"With support for Flash Player 10.1, the Galaxy Tab delivers an enhanced content experience when compared to other tablets currently available in the US," Samsung said.

The Galaxy has a seven-inch (17.8-centimeter) touchscreen, smaller than the iPad's 9.7 inches, weighs 0.8 pounds (380 grams), almost half the iPad's 1.5 pounds, and is powered by Google's Android operating system.

"The Samsung Galaxy Tab is designed for people who want a premium mobile entertainment experience on the go, but don't want to be weighed down by a bulky device," Samsung said.

The Galaxy Tab provides access to the more than 80,000 applications available on the Android Market, Samsung said.

The Galaxy Tab is one of a number of tablet computers slated for release in a bid to challenge the iPad.

US computer maker Dell offers the "Dell Streak," an Android-powered device with a five-inch screen, and Japan's Toshiba unveiled its "Folio 100" at the IFA in Berlin.

US handset maker Motorola said this week it hopes to release a tablet computer powered by Android early next year and South Korea's LG Electronics has promised to release an Android-based tablet computer before December.

US computer giant Hewlett-Packard is pinning its hopes on its Slate.

Glenn Lurie, president of AT&T's emerging devices, welcomed the arrival of the Galaxy Tab.

"We're looking forward to expanding our computing device portfolio and giving our AT&T customers more great choices with this innovative device," Lurie said.

AT&T is the exclusive provider of 3G cellular service in the US for Apple's iPhone and iPad.

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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Samsung, Toshiba take on Apple with 'iPad killers'

toshiba
Photo: Photo Courtesy of Toshiba

BERLIN - Competition to Apple's highly successful iPad heated up on Thursday as Samsung and Toshiba unveiled rival tablet PCs that they hope will steal some of the Californian giant's thunder.

Samsung's Galaxy Tab, presented at the IFA electronics trade fair in Berlin, Germany, has a seven-inch (17.8-centimeter) touchscreen, slightly smaller than the iPad's 9.7 inches, and uses Google's Android 2.2 operating system.

"Samsung recognizes the tremendous growth potential in this newly created market and we believe that the Samsung Galaxy Tab brings a unique and open proposition to market," said mobile communications unit head JK Shin.

The Galaxy Tab, weighing 0.8 pounds (380 grams) -- almost half the iPad's 1.5 pounds -- launches in Europe in mid-September, and in other markets including the US, South Korea and elsewhere in Asia in the coming months.

But the South Korean firm gave no indication however of whether the Galaxy Tab will undercut the iPad on price, which retails from $499 in the US -- or 499 euros in Europe -- for the basic model.

Reports in the trade press said that the Galaxy Tab will be more expensive, at 799 euros ($1,025) in Germany and 699 euros in France.

Toshiba meanwhile lifted the lid in Berlin on its Folio 100, which boasts a slightly bigger screen than the iPad -- 10.1 inches -- and which will reportedly sell for a competitive 399 euros.

The Japanese firm aims to have the Folio 100 hit the shops in Europe in the fourth quarter. And in another blow to Microsoft, the gadget runs off Android.

Apple sold more than three million iPads in the 80 days after they went on sale in the US in April, with demand so strong that some US customers had to wait several weeks to get their hands on one.

Since then, the device, which uses Apple's own MAC iOS operating system, has gone on sale in more than a dozen other countries and is poised to hit the shelves in China, the world's largest Internet market, later this month.

The success caught California-based Apple's competitors on the hop and they have been rushing to respond with their own tablet PCs, or "iPad killers" as they are collectively known.

Samsung's South Korean rival, LG Electronics, has promised to release a tablet PC using Android before December. Microsoft is also said to be about to unveil the Courier while Hewlett-Packard is pinning its hopes on its Slate.

Another rival is Dell's Stealth -- with a five-inch screen more smartphone than tablet, however -- while Lenovo of China, Motorola of the US, Archus of France, Germany's E-noa and Taiwan's Asus are others to watch out for.

Tablets are smaller both in size and in memory than a desktop, notebook or netbook computer, but are bigger than smartphones, offering users video, music, games, Internet and electronic books -- all with touchscreen.

Apple has a year's head start, according to Joerg Wirtgen from German tech magazine c't.

"The biggest market (for tablets) is for leisure. The iPad is becoming the main computer, the first to be switched on in the morning and the last one at night," Wirtgen told AFP.

"But you can't do everything, only the pleasurable stuff. For lots of tasks you still need a PC or a notebook."

He also said they were more versatile than electronic book readers like Amazon's Kindle, which are however considerably cheaper. Amazon unveiled two new versions in late July, including one that sells for just $139.

Gadget website T3 said the Galaxy Tab is "coming for the iPad and it means business," saying it was on "everyone's 'must see' list" for this year's IFA, which opens to the public on Friday.

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