Will Apple’s Rotten Showing Continue? Watch the New iPhone Release

The company’s key product, the latest version of which will be unveiled Tuesday, has boosted the stock in the past.

Apple Inc., the world’s largest company by stock value, enjoyed a great first half of the year—and then it dropped. Can the new edition of the iPhone, launching Tuesday, turn things around?

The company’s share performance is important because, as the leader of the Magnificent Seven tech titans, it has a major bearing on the entire market’s direction. As of Monday’s close, Apple was down 9.2% since its peak on July 31. By no coincidence, the S&P 500 topped out that day, too, and has lost 2.2% since.

As of Monday, both Apple and the index were ahead about 0.7%. Part of the Apple share rise appears to be related to the upcoming debut of the iPhone 15. A new iPhone release has prompted an increase in Apple stock every time since the first one arrived in 2007, averaging a 14% gain after six months, according to Barron’s.

“The iPhone 15 is set to bring design and feature updates, and we think that the design changes” will result in higher sales, wrote Amit Daryanani, a senior managing director at Evercore ISI, in a report.

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Nonetheless, Apple has to overcome some headwinds. In its quarter ending July 1, overall sales fell 1.4%, and iPhone sales, which make up almost half of the total, slid 2.4%. In addition, the Chinese Communist Party announced last week that government employees could no longer use Apple phones (or those from any other non-China-based producer).

While analysts predicted the ban would have little impact, investors grew concerned that it was a prelude to a wider prohibition. China accounts for 18% of Apple’s revenue.

The iPhone downtick tracks weakness for smartphones overall: The product’s shipments globally dipped 6.8% in the quarter that ended June 30 from the same period one year earlier, marking the eighth straight quarter of year-over-year contraction, per International Data Corp

The IDC analysts cited “soft demand, inflation, macroeconomic uncertainties and excess inventory” for the general smartphone slump, although they added that the rate of decline seemed to be slowing.

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PGIM Real Estate Promotes Cathy Marcus, Raimondo Amabile to Co-CEO Roles

The duo will retain their current duties under former CEO Eric Adler, who will helm newly formed PGIM Private Alternatives.



Investment manager PGIM and parent company Prudential Financial Inc. announced a series of leadership appointments on September 6. Current PGIM Real Estate Chief Operating Officer Cathy Marcus and current PGIM Real Estate CIO Raimondo Amabile will be promoted to co-CEOs, effective October 1, as part of a broader restructuring. The pair will continue to work with current PGIM Real Estate president and CEO Eric Adler, now president and CEO of newly formed PGIM Private Alternatives, which brings together Prudential’s real estate, private capital and private equity secondaries groups.

“Cathy and Raimondo are well-positioned to lead PGIM Real Estate, having each expanded their global and regional responsibilities through a progression of leadership roles over the last several years, and through their established, decade-long partnership driving the strategic initiatives of PGIM Real Estate globally,” Adler said in a statement. “The incoming leadership team brings significant real estate investment management experience to their roles, and I look forward to continuing to work with them in my expanded role.”

The appointments follow the formation of PGIM Private Alternatives, which aims to position PGIM as a leading manager of alternative investments and unify the firm’s offerings of private equity, private credit, infrastructure, real estate and agriculture investment solutions, according to the release.

PGIM Private Alternatives will be composed of PGIM Real Estate, PGIM Private Capital (which offers private credit and infrastructure debt investments) and recently acquired Montana Capital, a private equity secondaries specialist.

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PGIM Private Alternatives will have $310.9 billion in assets under management, while Prudential Financial has $1.2 trillion in assets under management.

Other promotions within PGIM Real Estate include:

  • Soultana Reigle to head of U.S. equity strategy (replacing Marcus) from senior portfolio manager for U.S equity value-add strategies;
  • Sebastiano Ferrante to head of Europe from deputy head;
  • Enrique Lavin to head of Latin America from deputy head; and
  • Christina Hill to global head of asset management and sustainability, an expansion of her responsibilities as head of Americas asset management and global head of ESG.

 

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