Previous close | 67.00 |
Open | 67.00 |
Bid | 68.65 |
Ask | 69.65 |
Strike | 100.00 |
Expiry date | 2024-06-21 |
Day's range | 67.00 - 67.00 |
Contract range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open interest | 5.8k |
While Apple (AAPL) deals with a lawsuit by the Department of Justice (DOJ), the Magnificent Seven member stock could be losing ground in one of its most valuable markets: China. Recently, reports have shown that iPhone sales have slumped in China. Is Apple up for the challenge to reinvigorate its position in international markets and how will all this manifest in its May 2 earnings release? TECHnalysis Research President and Chief Analyst Bob O'Donnell joins Yahoo Finance to give insight into Apple's largest problems in the domestic US market and abroad, and how the iPhone maker might go about solving them. "Between the iPhone sales, between the geopolitical issues in China, which is still a very big market for them, and now they're having to do a little bit more of what the Chinese government is requesting, Huawei is getting stronger in China. There's nationalistic movements there to try and pull some of the US companies out. The car project was canceled, which I think, in the long run, was the right thing to do, but it could have been interesting earlier if they kind of figured out a different path," O'Donnell lists off. "And of course, then, gen AI, what are they doing with gen AI? That's what everyone wants to know." For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode. This post was written by Nicholas Jacobino
Steve Jobs dedicated “hour after hour” to the minutiae of product design at Apple Inc., driven by a belief of “God being in the details,” according to esteemed biographer Walter Isaacson, chronicler of some of the most influential figures in technology. This philosophy was evident in Jobs’s hands-on involvement in creating iconic Apple products. Isaacson noted how Jobs's obsession with design extended to every aspect of a product, even those components that consumers would never see. This approa
Counterpoint Research data shows a 19% year-on-year decline in smartphone sales for Apple in China, versus a 70% jump for Huawei.