ATR analyst Wu reacts to Apple's 'Let's Rock' - in full
Once again, we thought our readers may take an interest in the latest post-event client bulletin from American Technology analyst, Shaw Wu.
While he maintains Apple is a stock to buy with a $220 value, Wu seems a little unsure on Apple's announcements, saying, “while we are pleased to see lower pricing, we are concerned that price points may remain too high given the tough macroeconomic environment and relative to the 3G iPhone at $199 and $299.”
Without further ado, here's Wu's message to clients, in full:
"Yesterday (09/09/08), at AAPL's "Let's Rock" special event, Steve Jobs announced new iPods with lower price points and a renewed content partnership with NBC.
New iPod nano Pretty Much As Expected.
While we find the new fourth generation iPod nanos impressive with 9 bold colors and an accelerometer, the refresh is arguably moderate, similar to its earlier 1G and 2G designs. We find the $50 price cut to $149 and $199 for 8 GB and 16 GB models positive and believe it should help make this an attractive holiday item.
Price Cut On iPod Touch Nice, But May Not Be Enough.
As expected, the new second generation iPod touch has a slimmer form factor with lower price points of $229, $299, and $399, respectively (from $299, $399, and $499) for its 8 GB, 16 GB, and 32 GB models. While we are pleased to see lower pricing, we are concerned that price points may remain too high given the tough macroeconomic environment and relative to the 3G iPhone at $199 and $299.
Minor iPod Classic And Shuffle Updates.
Other minor updates Steve didn't mention in his keynote include consolidation of its iPod classic to one price point ($249) with two colors, and new colors (but no price cut) for its iPod shuffle.
No Material Change In Build Plans.
From our supply chain checks, we have not picked up a material change in iPod build plans. At this point, we remain comfortable with our forecast of 11 million iPods for the September quarter and 24 million for the December quarter.
Conclusion:
While AAPL shares will likely remain volatile given market sentiment, we view current levels as a buying opportunity for longer-term investors. AAPL remains one of the best positioned large-cap technology companies. We see upside to $220 based on 32.5x our CY09 EPS of $6.73.
Favorable Component Pricing Trends Should Help Offset Lower Price Points:
We believe continued favorable component pricing trends, particularly in NAND flash and memory, as well as less upward pressure on commodities and plastics should allow AAPL to absorb these iPod lower price points without impacting its margins materially. Arguably there could be room for upside given the lack of pricing change for the iPod shuffle.
Renewed Content Partnership with NBC:
AAPL also announced that NBC Universal content will return to its iTunes store including programming from NBC, USA Network, SCI FI Channel, Bravo, Sleuth and NBC News. We view this as a positive that demonstrates AAPL's market power and ability to negotiate deals. Hit shows include “Heroes”, “The Office”, “Battlestar Galactica”, and “30 Rock”.
New Macs Likely At A Later Event:
We continue to believe that MacBook Pro and MacBook are due for refreshes with more radical redesigns, likely at a special event later this fall. In addition, we are picking up that MacBook Air could see a minor refresh and potential price cut to increase its value proposition as build plans have slowed from earlier robust levels as customers have opted for MacBook or MacBook Pro instead.
Competitive Advantages Intact:
We believe AAPL's key competitive advantages remain its 1) strong brand loyal customer base; 2) vertically and horizontally integrated hardware, software and service model (iPod + iTunes, Mac, Apple TV, and iPhone); 3) proprietary interface technologies (clickwheel and multi-touch); and 4) unique and pleasant customer experience with its Apple stores.
Macro headwinds are becoming more apparent:
We continue to see AAPL as the best play on digital media in the home and a large beneficiary of the shift to mobile computing. In two of its three big franchises, Mac and iPhone, penetration is very low and starting in the higher-income demographics. The disturbance in the macroeconomic environment is within lower-income demographics and financial institutions with exposure and impact to overall liquidity. This could certainly spread, but we believe AAPL’s business will remain strong in the near- to medium-term. Enough high-end consumers are still buying tech, though commodities inflation could pressure future margins."
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Comments (7)
I don't quite understand why people keep comparing the touch to the iPhone. I guess there's a general idea that $200 is less, but the reality is that there is a sizable phone plan behind it. There's also the idea that Apple would be cannibalizing no one but themselves if people are buying the iPhone over a touch (instead of neither due to cost), and the subsidized iPhone will give them a much better margin.
^^^yea
for the touch u pay $229-399, but with the iphone u pay close to $3000 dollars after 2 years, so there's definitely a huge market for the touch.
i also started noticing alot of people are converting to the touch, slowly but surely.
I see Apple transitioning people over to the iPod touch. I really don't believe 229 is too much. If they did nothing to the touch, just dropped it to 199, that would have been one thing. But at 229, there are plenty of compelling NEW features...
1. Speaker for casual gaming
2. Headphones with volume, pause/forward/back, and MICROPHONE!
3. integrated Nike+
4. improved battery life
I don't see the 229 as too much. Not for what that iPod touch (and now it is open to the world of VoIP)
iPod Touch has no competition other than the iPhone. It's ridiculous to compare it's cost to iPhone and ignore the service plan. Duh!
Watch the keynote again, you got it wrong, Steve DID mention dropping the 'fat' iPod classic and said everyone wants the thin one.
At the next earnings anouncement, Apple is going to be dropping jaws. The education buyers got FREE iPod touches, that will be an incredible goose to the laptops (even if there was no profit on the iPods).
The iPod Nanos have an X-factor that just about everybody missed, but which will fuel their success beyond prediction: Fashion. By offering a spectrum plus silver and black, Apple has made the iPod Nano into a piece of techno jewelry. The price makes it just slightly higher than a casual bauble, and the obvious stand-out colors make it fit with many more situations than a poop n pink Zune.
We will see how the numbers evolve with this one. I predict that a significant number of sales will be repeat sales in different colors. That may be only a few percent with most purchasers getting just one.
It lends itself to bulk purchases by corporate presenters, too.
I love my Touch, but I got it for free. I would never pay $229 for it, or 299. Maybe at 32 gig for 229, but 8gig is too much money for too little.
Apple has yet again lowered its obscenely high price to a lower obscenely high price.
Also, Mr. Wu is a moron and has no understanding of micro and macro economics. He is an educated lemming.
Think Different
Wu and most analysts in his ilk do not live in the real world. Their predictions are seldom on the mark and the whole exercise is fruitless. The market decides, not analysts.