Stuck in neutral, Apple misses the AI moment

Stuck in neutral, Apple misses the AI moment


Apple’s earnings report is unlikely to give investors the catalyst they’ve been looking for to revive the iPhone maker’s struggling stock price.

The technology behemoth is expected to post profit and revenue growth that severely lags the industry when it reports its fiscal third-quarter results on Thursday after the market closes.

Apple shares are down almost 17% this year. Compounded by the lack of a strong artificial intelligence strategy, high exposure to tariff risk and regulators targeting its highly profitable relationship with Google, it’s hard to see them rebounding anytime soon — especially as they continue to trade at a premium valuation.

“Apple’s embarrassing AI shows how it has lost its mojo with innovation, and the lack of innovation speaks to the lack of revenue growth, and that speaks to why we don’t see upside in the stock,” said Peter Andersen, founder and chief investment officer of Andersen Capital Management.

“It is valued like a growth stock, but I’m very sceptical about the potential for a significant inflection in growth, and I think it will eventually lose that premium.”

Analysts expect the company to report a 2.4% rise in quarterly profits on a 4.1% gain in revenues, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The overall tech sector’s anticipated earnings growth is 16.8% on a 13% jump in revenue, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

This helps explain why Apple is among the 15 worst-performing stocks in the Nasdaq 100 Index this year and why it lags every one of the Magnificent Seven tech giants other than Tesla.

Overvalued?

But even with this year’s slide, Apple’s stock still trades at almost 28x estimated earnings, higher than its 10-year average of 21x. The shares are pricier than the Nasdaq 100 as well as megacap peers that are far better positioned in AI, like Alphabet, Meta Platforms and Amazon.com.

The combination of tepid growth and a high valuation is why sentiment towards the one-time consensus favourite has become “fairly negative”, according to Bank of America. In a sign of their historically weak momentum trends, shares have been below their 200-day moving average since 10 March, a 98-session streak that matches its longest since February 2023. Should it close below the key technical level on Thursday, that would represent its longest streak in almost a decade.

Read: Apple plans product blitz to reignite growth

Apple’s failure to capitalise on AI is particularly important to investors, who are calling for a dramatic pivot in strategy. Many would like to see a management shakeup — or even a big acquisition, something Apple has historically shunned in favour of in-house development.

The problem is Apple’s in-house AI features, such as those unveiled at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June, have been delayed or underwhelmed. The company has reportedly considered using AI tech from outside companies to power a new version of its Siri digital assistant. Executives have also discussed making an offer for AI start-up Perplexity AI, it was reported last month.

AppleApple’s failure to establish a firm AI strategy stands in contrast to its Big Tech rivals, which have largely carved out niches in the technology and have put up impressive earnings this season.

After the market closed Wednesday, Microsoft reported significantly better-than-expected revenue on the back of strong cloud demand, while Meta Platforms — which has poached major AI talent from Apple with substantial pay packages — posted healthy results and gave a far better than anticipated outlook. Last week, Alphabet said that strong demand for its AI services boosted quarterly sales.

Amazon also reports on Thursday after the close, and investors are looking for signs that AI is having an impact across the company’s business, not only in its cloud computing division, and improving efficiencies.

“It’s hard to be excited about Apple when you can look to the other Magnificent Seven stocks and find double-digit growth that should continue for a while amid the AI wave, especially since those are often cheaper,” said Bill Stone, chief investment officer at Glenview Trust, who owns the stock but hasn’t been adding to positions amid the selloff.

“Apple would be a lot more interesting if the multiple was lower, since it remains an extremely high-quality business with great cash flow and an ecosystem that will be tough to dislodge,” he added. “But what finally gets growth going again is the biggest question.”  — (c) 2025 Bloomberg LP

Get breaking news from TechCentral on WhatsApp. Sign up here.

Don’t miss:

Apple loses fourth top AI researcher in a month to Meta