Apple Sells 51 Million iPhones And Breaks Records

Apple has posted record first quarter revenues as the iPad maker revealed it had sold 51 million iPhones – a new record – during the holiday-period that ended 28 December

Those sales were well above the 33.8 million Apple sold the quarter before and the 47.8 million iPhones it sold during its holiday period a year ago.

Record Quarter

Apple also sold 26 million iPads – another quarterly record, and up from 22.9 million a year ago – and 4.8 million Macs, up from 4.1 million a year ago.

Still another quarterly record was set for revenue, which totaled $57.6 billion (£34.6bn) and brought in net profit of $13.1 billion (£7.9bn). Highlighting Apple’s ongoing margins issue, however, Apple’s profit a year ago was also $13.1 billion (£7.9bn), but on revenue of $54.5 billion (£32.8bn).

Another detail that wasn’t obvious from Apple’s record-setting sales figure was that iPhone sales in North America declined during the quarter. Apple CEO Tim Cook gave several reasons for this. One was inventory.

“We actually sold more iPhone 5S’s than we predicted. It took some time to build the mix that customers were demanding,” said Cook. He also blamed changes to several carriers’ upgrade policies.

“As I zoom out [to the big picture],” Cook added, “one of the most important things for us in our iPhone business was to do well in emerging markets, and we had our best quarter ever in that respect.”

China Focus

Apple launched its new iPhones in China alongside its US launches – a first for the company – and in December, Apple announced that it had finally penned a deal with China Mobile, the largest carrier in the world. China Mobile began selling the iPhone 17 January, and days before the launch announced that it had received more than 1.2 million preorders.

“Last week was the best week for activations that we’ve ever had in China,” said Cook. “It’s been an incredible start.”

Apple is currently selling the iPhone in only a few dozen Chinese cities but has plans to expand to more than 300 cities by the end of the year.

Growth was also strong, Cook said, in Central and Eastern Europe (up 115 percent), in Africa (up 65 percent) and in Japan (up 40 percent), thanks to a new deal with DoCoMo.

When asked about Apple’s plan for the iPhone 5C – the budget-friendly iPhone Apple launched alongside the flagship 5S and which is generally thought to have sold only modestly – Cook declined to comment, saying the question fell under the topic of new products. However, he did say that the 5C has helped to bring new customers to Apple.

“We saw significant new-to-iPhone numbers [during the quarter]. It’s not a number we throw out, but we particularly saw that with the 5C, which is what we wanted to see,” said Cook.

Beyond iPhone

While Apple continues to prove it can sell iPhones, the world is growing a bit impatient for its next brand-new form factor. It is widely rumored that Apple will this year introduce a smartwatch and a television set (or an iWatch and iTV, as the media has already dubbed them), as well as possibly an “iRing.”

Apple is also said to be working on an in-store mobile payments solution, which would be a game-changer for that industry.

“It has never been stronger,” Cook said of Apple’s innovation cycle. “I think our customers are going to love what we’re going to do.”

When pressed to further expand on the topic, Cook offered, “We have zero issues coming up with things we want to do and things we think that can disrupt [industries]. … The challenge is to focus on the things that deserve our energy.”

How much do you know about the iPhone? Take our quiz!

History of the Apple Mac

Image 1 of 31

1984: Apple Macintosh
The machine that started it all, the original Apple Mac boasted a 9-inch monitor, 128KB of RAM and 400KB of storage. It was succeeded by the Macintosh 512kb a few months later

Originally published on eWeek.

Michelle Maisto

Michelle Maisto covers mobile devices, Android and Apple for eWEEK and is also a food writer.

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