Apple stock downgraded as Barclays warns on cooling iPhone demand

BLOOMBERG

Apple Inc got itself a new bear as expectations of soft demand for its latest iPhone prompted analysts at Barclays Plc to downgrade the stock. Shares fell 3.6% on January 2, their biggest one-day percentage drop since September, and the decline erased more than $107 billion in market value.
Barclays analysts led by Tim Long cut their rating on Apple to underweight and price target by $1 to $160, compared with the stock’s closing price of $185.64.
“We expect reversion after a year when most quarters were missed and the stock outperformed,” the analysts wrote in a note. “Our checks remain negative on volumes and mix for iPhone 15, and we see no features or upgrades that are likely to make the iPhone 16 more compelling.”
Apple’s shares rose around 50% to a record last year and saw its market value hit $3 trillion as investors bet that its flagship device will withstand a sluggish economy. However, doubts have emerged whether the stock will be able to repeat such hefty gains given rising competition from the likes of Huawei Technologies Co and a Chinese government crackdown on foreign-made devices.
The new underweight means Apple has five sell or equivalent ratings, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, in contrast to 34 buys and 14 holds. The stock’s recommendation consensus — a proxy for its ratio of buy, hold, and sell ratings — stands at 4.08 out of five, its lowest since October 2020. The average analyst price target suggests a return of just 7.5% over the next year.

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