Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet report combined profits of more than $50 billion
Three tech companies Apple, Microsoft and Google owner Alphabet
reported combined profits of more than USD 50 billion in the April-June
quarter, underscoring their unparalleled influence and success at reshaping the
way we live.
Although these companies make their money in different ways, the
results served as another reminder of the clout they wield and why government
regulators are growing increasingly concerned about whether they have become
too powerful.
The massive profits pouring into each company also illustrated why
they have a combined market value of USD 6.4 trillion -- more than double their
collective value when the COVID-19 pandemic started 16 months ago.
APPLE
Apple's first iPhone model capable of connecting to ultrafast 5G wireless
networks continued to power major increases in quarterly revenue and profits
for tech's most valuable company.
With iPhone sales posting double-digit growth over the previous
year for the third consecutive quarter, Apple's profit and revenue for the
April-June period easily exceeded analyst estimates. The Cupertino, California,
company earned USD 21.7 billion, or USD 1.30 per share, nearly doubling profits
earned during the same period last year. Revenue surged 36 per cent to USD 81.4
billion.
But in a Tuesday conference call with analysts, Apple CEO Tim Cook
lamented that the steadily spreading delta variant of the coronavirus is
casting doubt on how the rest of the year will unfold. The road to recovery
will be a winding one, Cook said. That uncertainty has already led Apple to
delay employees' mass return to its offices from September to October. Most of
Apple's stores, though, are already open.
The iPhone 12, released last autumn, is shaping up to be Apple's
most popular model in several years, largely because it's the first to work on
the 5G networks that are still being built around the world. Apple's iPhone
sales totaled nearly USD 40 billion in the latest quarter, up 50 per cent from
a year ago.
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