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Monday 12 November 2018 10:59 pm  |  Updated:  Monday 03 June 2019 2:56 am

Apple loses $50bn in market valuation as fears grow of slowing iPhone sales

By: James Booth

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Apple's  shares fell five percent tonight after a major supplier cut its financial outlook, leading to fears demand for the iPhone has plateaued.

The fall slashed $50bn (£38.9bn) from Apple’s market valuation with shares falling $20.30 to $194.17.

The losses mean Apple’s market capitalisation has fallen $190bn since October, more than the entire market value of US bluechips such as McDonalds, Walt Disney and Oracle.

Lumentum Holdings, a supplier of 3D sensors used in the iPhone’s facial recognition technology, cut its financial guidance for the second quarter today, citing a fall in orders from an unnamed major customer.

Chief executive Alan Lowe said: “We recently received a request from one of our largest industrial and consumer customers for laser diodes for 3D sensing to materially reduce shipments to them during our fiscal second quarter for previously placed orders that were originally scheduled for delivery during the quarter.”

Separately, Japan Display, which supplies iPhone liquid crystal display screens, also cut its full-year guidance today, blaming volatile demand from customers. Apple warned earlier this month that its Christmas sales would miss market expectations, blaming the fall on weakness in emerging markets and foreign exchange costs.

Elazar Capital analyst Chaim Siegel said: “Many suppliers have lowered numbers because of their unnamed ‘largest customer,’ which is Apple. Apple got cautious in their guidance and it’s hitting their suppliers.”

JP Morgan analysts cut their target price for Apple by $4 to $270, citing poor orders for the new iPhone XR.

Apple’s fall led a larger retreat across US equities tonight with the S&P 500 closing down two per cent at 2,726.22 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq dropping three per cent to 210.05.

Fellow tech giants Facebook and Google parent Alphabet also fell 2.3 per cent and 2.5 per cent respectively.

 

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