Babar Khan Javed
Nov 3, 2017

Apple: 62% of revenue is from outside the US

Apple's revenues in China rose from millions to billions in just one year, due to an aggressive channel strategy targeting consumer and corporate engagement.

Apple concluded the fiscal 2017 fourth quarter with $52.6 billion in revenue.
Apple concluded the fiscal 2017 fourth quarter with $52.6 billion in revenue.

The conventional wisdom that Apple has a problem in China may need some updating. 

In its fiscal 2017 fourth quarter financial results published last week Apple once against beat analyst estimates, bring in $52.6 billion in revenue, a rise of $10.71 billion. In Q4 2016, the revenue was $9.01 billion.

Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple, said in the earnings release that the company is looking forward to a great holiday season, led by the strong sales of the iPhone X. In the fourth reported quarter, Apple sold 46.7 million iPhones, without specifying the breakdown between SKUs, at an average price of $618 each. This contributed $28.85 billion to the American technology and electronics firm.

Revenue in China spiked, growing from $8 million to $9.8 billion year-on-year.

The 12% year-over-year increase in revenue has been credited to Apple's channel strategy, which extends beyond the consumer space, entering corporate partnerships for the dual purposes of scale and establishing familiarity of its devices as essential tools in the engineering workspace. Apple has been working with leading business to business (B2B) companies to help them build out software and data analysis support offerings.

Last month, for example, Apple announced a partnership with General Electric (GE) that would help the conglomerate develop mobile apps for managing machinery, factories and power plants as the industrial giant steps up efforts to sell software and services. 

Meanwhile, the gadgets and tech used by the next James Bond could very well be made by Apple; Apple revealed a billion dollar bid for the rights to the James Bond franchise.

The bigger picture is that the company has set aside over $1 billion to acquire and produce its own original content, placing itself in the running for the OTT space, thereby competing directly with Netflix, iFlix, and Amazon.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

15 hours ago

Cannes Lions 2025: APAC winners

Asia-Pacific wins its first 16 Lions in Pharma, Health & Wellness, Audio & Radio and Outdoor ahead of the full winner list.

17 hours ago

Omnicom Group plans full buyout of Clemenger Group

Omnicom is set to fully acquire Clemenger Group and launch a new Oceania management structure, with ex-executive Nick Garrett tipped to lead.

18 hours ago

Advertisers of the month in Australia: Budget ...

These brands saw jumps in advertising awareness in Australia in May onYouGov's BrandIndex, led by Budget Direct and its 'Balloons' campaign.

18 hours ago

Agency Report Card 2024: OMD

OMD APAC kept competitors on their toes with major account wins, standout campaigns, and a clean sweep of top industry awards. But with the incoming complexities of the Omnicom-IPG merger, questions remain about its next phase of growth—and how integration could reshape its market edge.