After-hours session typically have an exaggerated effect on Apple's stock in either direction compared to regular session trading the next day. It's doubtful that $AAPL will open as low as Tuesday's after-hours low, but investors definitely have things to be tense about despite record revenues and record earnings per share for the quarter.
“The real problem is the revenue guidance,” JMP Securities analyst Alex Gauna told Marketwatch. “The mid-point of the guidance has them back to a no-growth story. People were hoping for more, and they essentially guided flat year-over-year growth.”
In particular, Apple began selling iPhones with China Mobile, the world's largest carrier, in January. The company also added Japan's DoCoMo, but despite the two high-profile deals, Apple's only guided for revenues between $42 billion and $44 billion.
At the mid-point, Apple would turn in flat revenue growth, and that's not what investors were expecting as they pushed Apple's stock higher in the weeks leading to Tuesday's earnings report.
In addition, Apple's record iPhone sales for the quarter—51 million units—were below consensus estimates of 55 million to 56 million units. That's a significant miss, and it played a big role in initial investor disappointment.
“The iPhone number was much less than expected,” Mike Walkley of Canaccord Genuity told Marketwatch. ” And the seasonality is off despite China Mobile., even though the overall gross margins were strong.”
Apple ended the regular session on Tuesday at $550.50, up $4.43 (+0.81 percent), on heavy volume of 17.45 million shares trading hands.