Apple Declares That Unit Sales Are No Longer Relevant. The Impact

Apple with a big pile of money

During Apple’s Q4 Financial Results Conference Call, Apple CFO Luca Maestri announced some new fiscal reporting policies. Staring with the December quarter, unit sales will no longer be reported.

Apple with a big pile of money

The announcement came in the opening remarks by CFO Luca Maestri along with some other changes to come in Apple’s fiscal reporting.

Later, in the Q&A session, Shannon Cross of Cross Research asked for more color on this change. Maestri explained that unit sales is no longer an indicator of the strength of a business. “There is no correlation,” he said, so unit sales are less relevant. And, he pointed out, the competition doesn’t supply unit sales, although he wasn’t specific about who or the products. He continued, basically saying that “if unit sales is relevant, we’ll do so.” That is, report.

Near the end of the call, Jim Suva, analyst from Citigroup asked again about this change. Maestri pointed out that revenue and cost of sales will be reported. He also explained that there’s an effect regarding the (high) unit sales growth at the top end of the iPhone line that’s not reflected in the total unit sales. Accordingly, Apple believes that optimizing revenue is the most important focus of investors.

At the end of the call, Tim cook added some color by explaining how, when a grocery customer arrives with a grocery cart at checkout, the cashier doesn’t ask how many items are in the cart. But the total amount of the order does matter.

Observations

Cook’s analogy appeared, at first glance, a bit condescending to experienced financial analysts.

It remains to be seen how investors end up responding to this reporting change. And how that perception is driven by the fact that unit sales of iPhones, quarter-by-quarter appear to be flattening out.

iPhone sales flattening.

On the other hand, unit sales are used to calculate market share, and Apple has never been all about market share. For example, the company is well known for extracting a major fraction of the available profits in the smartphone market. And that is indeed an indicator of the strength of Apple’s business.

In the final analysis, while it seems Apple has become gun shy about its smartphone growth, hiding numbers won’t solve any problem. If indeed there is one.

4 thoughts on “Apple Declares That Unit Sales Are No Longer Relevant. The Impact

  • As others have already pointed out, there’s a simple reason why Apple is doing this … there unit sales, especially on their most important product (the iPhone) aren’t growing like they used to.

    So Apple is taking a two-pronged approach to solving this problem: 1) trying to hide it (Hey Tim Cook, YOU better never criticize Trump for failing to release his tax returns), and 2) charging more for their products. I’m somewhat OK with the 2nd one IF they were providing more value, too. They’re doing that in some areas, but one area where they’re definitely not is in their CrapBook line of laptops…

    Old UNIX Guy

    1. In a mature / saturated market, unit sales becomes irrelevant and the size / strength of total user base becomes more important. The size and strength of the user base becomes a more important with respect to Apple’s ability to grow in other areas like services and accessories. This is not reflected in yearly unit sales.

      What I’d like to see Apple provide are numbers indicating the size of the installed base for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Watch.

  • Amazon does not report unit sales of its Echo or Kindle products. Google does not report unit sales of its Pixel products. MS does not report unit sales of its Surface line of products.

  • All other companies are evaluated based on their revenues and profits. Apple is the only company whose main performance criterion is unit sales. At least as viewed by market analysts and self-appointed genius pundits. It would be nice if Apple kept reporting unit sales but the outsized emphasis it gets punishes not really Apple, but its shareholders.

    People, remember this: If stock analysts are so good at predicting the future performance and stock price of a company, why do they share their knowledge with other people rather than just keep it to themselves and instead make a killing in the stock market? Snake oil salesmen –that’s all they are.

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