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Examining Apple’s Wall Street-beating third quarter by the numbers

Apple CEO Tim Cook

Last updated 22 hours ago

Apple’s third-quarter financial results were a significant improvement for 2024. Here’s how the figures visually break down in a quarter where Apple soundly beat Wall Street’s forecasts.

Ahead of the quarterly results for the third quarter of 2024, Wall Street had predictions that Apple would do better than last year. However, the reality was that Apple soundly beat the forecasts in many areas.

This is the breakdown of Apple’s figures for the period compared to previous quarters, providing a fuller picture of Apple’s financial journey.

Apple’s main financial figures for Q3 2024

The headline number for Apple is its revenue, which hit $85.78 billion for the quarter. This is up from the $81.8 billion reported one year prior, representing a rise of 4.9%.

Bar chart showing Apple's quarterly revenue and net profit from 2015 Q3 to 2024 Q3, with revenue in blue and net profit in green.

Apple quarterly revenue and net profit

The net profit is also up to $21.4 billion, which is a rise of 7.9% over Q3 2023’s numbers.

Line graph showing year-on-year percentage changes in revenue and net profit from 2016 Q3 to 2024 Q3, with noticeable peaks in 2021 Q3.

The year-on-year change in Apple revenue and net profit

The gross margin of $39.7 billion is a sound 9% higher than the figure from Q3 2023.

Bar chart showing quarterly revenue and gross margin from Q3 2016 to Q3 2024. Blue bars represent revenue, and green bars represent gross margin, both measured in millions of dollars.

Apple quarterly revenue versus gross margin

At 46.26, the gross margin is a higher percentage of revenue than the 44.52% seen one year prior. It has been above 40% since Q2 2021.

Line graph showing year-on-year percentage changes in revenue and gross margin from 2016 Q3 to 2024 Q3, with peaks around 2021.

Year-on-year change in revenue and gross margin

Apple’s research and development spending is a phenomenally high value for any company, and it doesn’t seem that Apple will be changing its habits anytime soon.

Graph of Apple's quarterly research and development costs from 2016 Q3 to 2024 Q3, showing a general increase over time.

Apple’s quarterly research and development cost

For Q3 2024, Apple spent over $8 billion on R&D. This value has gone up 7.6% since the same quarter in 2023, indicating an increase in spending for the period.

Year-on-year change in Apple's R&D costs

Year-on-year change in Apple’s R&D costs

Apple’s per-unit revenue and earnings

These first two graphs show Apple’s individual unit revenue, to more directly compare them against each other.

Bar chart showing quarterly revenue by product unit from 2016 Q3 to 2024 Q3. Categories: iPhone, iPad, Mac, Services, Wearables, Home, and Accessories.

Apple’s quarterly revenue by unit

This first one showing the revenue directly also shows that iPhone has been the main revenue generator for Apple over many years. However, that dominance is slowly starting to dissipate.

Bar chart showing unit revenue percentage for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Services, and Wearables from 2021 Q1 to 2024 Q3 with iPhone leading throughout.

Apple’s unit revenue, by percentage

When looked at by how much revenue each unit brings in, we can see that the blue iPhone section is still major. Also, that orange Services element is gradually becoming a juggernaut in its own right.

Bar chart of iPhone quarterly revenue from 2016 Q3 to 2024 Q3, showing revenue fluctuations with peaks around Q3 each year.

iPhone quarterly revenue

Revenue from iPhone was marginally down from Q3 2023, going from $39.67 then to $39.3 billion now. Even so, that’s still better than the $38.81 Wall Street forecasted.

iPhone quarterly revenue change year-on-year

iPhone quarterly revenue change year-on-year

On a percentage basis, that’s a negligible 0.9% year-on-year shrink in iPhone revenue. Given Q3 is the seasonally quietest quarter, it’s not something Apple will really worry about too much.

iPad quarterly revenue

iPad quarterly revenue

iPad revenue has enjoyed a rebound, going from $5.79 billion in Q3 2023 to $7.16 billion. That 23.7% year-on-year increase soundly beat Wall Street’s forecast of $6.61 billion.

Bar graph showing Mac quarterly revenue from Q3 2016 to Q3 2024 in millions, peaking in Q3 2022.

Mac quarterly revenue

Mac also saw an improvement from $6.84 billion in the year-ago quarter to $7.01 billion now. That’s a 2.5% increase, which isn’t much, but still marginally under Wall Street’s prediction of $7.02 billion.

Bar chart showing quarterly service revenue increase from $7,500 million in Q3 2017 to $25,000 million in Q3 2024

Services quarterly revenue

The ever-reliable Services business continued to turn its flywheel, growing from $21.21 billion in Q3 2023 to $24.2 billion. That represents a 14.1% year-on-year increase, and also another beat of Wall Street’s $24.01 billion guess.

Bar chart of quarterly wearables, home, and accessories revenue from 2019 to 2024, showing fluctuations and peaks in 2022 Q1 and 2023 Q1.

Quarterly revenue for Wearables, Home, and Accessories

Wearables, Home, and Accessories, covering multiple product categories, saw a small dip from $8.28 billion last year to $8.09 billion this quarter. That works out to be a 2.3% drop.

Apple’s operating segment revenue

Line graph showing operating segment revenue from 2016 to 2024. Americas leads, followed by Europe, Greater China, Japan, and Rest of Asia Pacific. Trends fluctuate quarterly.

Apple’s Operating Segment revenue

On a regional basis, The Americas brings in the most revenue at $37.6 billion, a 6.5% year-on-year rise. Europe’s $21.9 billion is an 8.3% gain.

Japan managed $5.09 billion, a 5.7% year-on-year increase, while Rest of Asia Pacific hauled in $6.4 billion, up 13.5%.

Quarterly revenue from Greater China between 2016 Q3 and 2024 Q3, shown in a fluctuating red line graph in millions of dollars.

Apple revenue from Greater China

China is the outlier of the group, being the only one to see a year-on-year shrink in revenue. While Apple managed $15.75 billion in the year-ago quarter, China’s revenue has dipped down to $14.7 billion, down 6.5%.

What the analysts say

As you’d expect, the opinions on the earnings are all over the place. Most are bullish, with still some concern about iPhone sales.

The results were “broadly in line” for TD Cowen, but the December quarter “could be the early read on AI-driven upgrades leading to a strong iPhone cycle in CY25.” It views “broadly stable iPhone and wearables trends coupled with iPad and Mac growth as encouraging”

“Despite the macro and China weakness, demand for iPhone and other hardware products remains stable,” the note concludes. “Services momentum is a positive and underpins FCF growth. Next iPhone launch event in Sep could be a catalyst.”

TD Cowen’s price target for Apple is $250.

Piper Sandler says Apple’s results were ahead of expectations “largely on the back of strong growth in iPad and services.” China’s revenue “showed further signs of improvement” for the iPhone maker.

While noting management as being “very excited” about Apple Intelligence, the analysts are concerned about it rolling out in stages globally, and it is also “cautious about the consumer entering the second half.”

It reiterates a Neutral rating and a $225 price target.

Gene Munster of Deepwater calls it a “solid quarter” for Apple in a YouTube video, one which insists investors are keen to know how AI will impact the next quarter. To Munster, iPhone, iPad, and Mac will be “accelerating revenue growth.”

In theory, Munster believes this will be around 5% growth for the units in Q4, rising to 6% and 7% over time, and possibly to 8% in the middle of the 2025 fiscal year. Apple’s guidance for the next quarter was “effectively in line” with Wall Street expectations, but Munster cautions it’s in the face of a “stronger than typical Osborne effect.”

While Munster muses that Apple’s guidance usually softens before a major release, Apple didn’t do that this time around. The analyst believes this speaks to Apple thinking the iPhone is a necessity and a sign of the strength of the product line.

In J.P.Morgan’s review of the results, it discusses how Apple’s results and execution “stood out in its non-eventful nature” with most product categories beating consensus expectations. This “is exactly what is desired as we look forward to the AI upgrade cycle.”

With Apple planning a roll-out of Apple Intelligence to English-speaking regions first then a wider release, J.P.Morgan warns it “would continue to monitor for timing of the releases, which has the potential of shifting the timing of the volume upgrade.” Namely, it thinks the higher levels of upgrade will occur when Apple Intelligence is available in more regions.

“In some sense, the magnitude of AI-led opportunity will likely be broader for Apple even relative to the 5G cycle given that the upgrade cycle opportunity extends across all devices.”

J.P.Morgan has a price target of $265.

Morgan Stanley’s view is that the results will “do little to shift the investor narrative” of an “Apple Intelligence-driven, multi-year product refresh cycle thesis.” The results “largely played out as expected.”

There aren’t many catalysts on the horizon until the iPhone 16 launch and the rollout of iOS 18 with Apple Intelligence, followed by pre-order and sell-through data in early October. But even so, Morgan Stanley feels institutional managers still view Apple as “underweight” leading to a belief Apple will “continue to outperform.”

Morgan Stanley has a price target for Apple of $273.

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