Apple analysts’ earnings smackdown: Final Q217 spreadsheet

“The individual analysts’ estimates — as complete, accurate and up-to-date as I can make them,” Philip Elmer-DeWitt reports for Apple 3.0.

Revenue ranges from a high of $55.0 billion (Gene Munster, Loup Ventures) down to $50 billion (Andy Hargreaves, Pacific Crest).

iPhone unit sales ranges from a high of 54.80 million (Gene, again) down to 47.50 million (Andy, again).

The full spreadsheet is here.

MacDailyNews Take: We’ll bring you Apple’s Q217 results as soon as they’re released, right around 4:30pm today – just check our home page. Following that, we also plan to cover Apple’s Q217 conference call with live notes starting at 5pm.

SEE ALSO:
Analyst: Apple may boost dividend and buyback program to reward shareholders – May 1, 2017
Get ready for up to 10.5% hike in Apple’s dividend – April 21, 2017
Analyst: Apple could double dividend, buy Netflix with repatriated cash under President Trump’s U.S. corporate tax changes – March 17, 2017
Apple’s real dividend yield is much higher than you might think – March 10, 2017
Apple preps to distribute dividends totaling $3.1 billion to shareholders – February 8, 2017
Cramer: Apple won the Samsung war; don’t trade Apple stock, own it – January 13, 2015

2 Comments

  1. I’m willing to bet Facebook will put Apple share price gains to shame this quarter. I don’t get it. How does Facebook keep making all that money? I simply don’t understand what makes that social media stuff so valuable. A couple of years back I’d heard that Facebook wasn’t all that relevant to people anymore but obviously that was a poor assessment of the company’s staying power. It’s another one of those companies with a jacked-up P/E and supposedly huge future potential that excites investors to no end. Beats me. It kind of seems to me like AOL used to be in the 1990s and early 2000s.

    Apple pulls serious revenue and profits and has a reserve cash pile with no equal yet Facebook outperforms it. That’s so odd. I feel really stupid that I can’t find the key metric that makes companies valuable.

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