Apple – Middle of the road.

Mid-market makes sense for services.

  • Behind the funky new watch features and the new, more expensive iPad Air are cheaper versions which are clearly aimed at keeping shipments going through what is going to be a difficult period.
  • Apple also moved to add life to its services offerings which outside of Music have not fared very well to date.

Apple Watch 6

  • A better screen, blood oxygen monitoring, new colours and straps made up the bulk of this release.
  • At the same time, Apple is taking on Peloton et al with the launch of Fitness Plus which offers virtual workouts in the most popular categories for $9.99 per month (5 users).
  • This is where Apple excels because it has elegantly integrated this service with the Watch, iPhone and TV to make a much more interesting experience than Peloton et al can offer.
  • It also has the added benefit of not having to buy a really expensive piece of kit as all the monitoring is done by Apple Watch.
  • Apple is also moving to address the lower end of the market with a stripped-down version of the Watch called Apple Watch SE which starts at $279 and will also be offered on a $12 per month instalment plan.
  • This is a recognition that harder economic times are coming and that a lower-priced product might be a good way to keep the ecosystem growing.
  • This plays well to the services where the opportunity to sell subscriptions is directly related to the number of unique users of the ecosystem.

iPad

  • A run of the mill update to the iPad Air with nicer hardware allowed the price to increase, but the real story here is the cheaper product.
  • This is the iPad 8th generation which looks just like a regular iPad but has better compute performance and comes at a more attractive price of $329.
  • Again, this is a story of a slight repositioning ahead of an expected period of economic difficulty where many consumers have less disposable income.

Services

  • The offering of cheaper devices fits well with the services the opportunity for which is determined by the number of users that are in the ecosystem.
  • However, outside of Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple News and Arcade have not done as well as hoped.
  • Apple is moving to address that by creating the Apple One bundle which puts together Music, TV and Arcade as well as 5GB of iCloud storage for $14.95 per month.
  • In some countries, an extra bundle adding in Fitness+ and News will also be offered for $29.95 per month.
  • I think that Fitness+ is by far the most interesting service that Apple is offering as it plays directly to all of its strengths.

Take-Home Message

  • The launch of lower-priced products makes more sense than ever given the focus is gradually switching to services and the economic outlook.
  • In the context of multiple services, the One bundle makes economic sense, but it does not address the reasons why some of these services have underperformed expectations.
  • However, with Apple on nearly 7x forward EV/Sales and 35x forward PER, any semblance of value has long since vanished.
  • Furthermore, the outlook for its end markets is not particularly great in the short-term meaning that growth is going to be increasingly hard to come by.
  • In this context, I can not see value in Apple which has become a pure momentum and sentiment-based investment.
  • I would exit and find something with a more reasonable price.

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.