- Six Nations teams strengths and weaknesses
- Pressure on Prendergast as Ireland launch Six Nations title defence against England
- Scotland eager to avoid Italy slip-up at start of Six Nations
- Fonseca set for Lyon baptism against Marseille
- Hermoso: Spanish football icon against sexism after forced kiss
- Mbappe-Vinicius connection next goal for Liga leaders Real Madrid
- Leverkusen taking confidence from Champions League into Bundesliga title race
- Man City face Arsenal test as Bournemouth eye Liverpool scalp
- Trump's point man for drilling agenda confirmed by Senate
- Chipmaker Intel beats revenue expectations amidst Q4 loss
- Key nominees for the Grammy Awards
- Beyonce leads Grammys pack at gala backdropped by fires
- Samsung Electronics posts 129.85% jump in Q4 operating profit
- 'Shouldn't have happened:' DC air collision stuns experts
- Donald Trump: air crash investigator-in-chief?
- Nicaragua legislature cements 'absolute power' of president, wife
- McIlroy launches PGA season debut with hole-in-one
- Figure skating in shock as athletes, coaches perish in US crash
- Kim opens up four-stroke lead in LPGA's season opener
- Man Utd progress to Europa last 16 'really important' for Amorim overhaul
- Postecoglou hails Europa League win 'made in Tottenham'
- 'Not interested': Analysts sceptical about US, Russia nuclear talks
- Trump to decide on oil tariffs on Canada, Mexico
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- Neymar, eyeing 2026 World Cup, announces return to Brazil's Santos
- 'The region will die': Ukraine's Donbas mines within Russia's grasp
- 'Campaign of terror': Georgia's escalating rights crackdown
- French luxury billionaire sparks tax debate with threat to leave
- Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
- Man Utd, Spurs advance to last 16 in Europa League
- Trump blames deadly Washington air collision on 'diversity'
- Itoje says England 'ready' for Six Nations kings Ireland
- Rennes sack Sampaoli, announce Beye as new coach
- Trump insists Egypt, Jordan will take Gazans
- Stones lead tributes to 'beautiful' Marianne Faithfull, dead at 78
- Washington midair crash: What we know so far
- Syria's new leader pledges 'national dialogue conference'
- McIlroy sinks hole-in-one at PGA Pebble Beach Pro-Am
- American skier Shiffrin remembers air crash victims on return from injury
- Sixties icon Marianne Faithfull to be 'dearly missed' after death at 78
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- On first trip, Rubio to wield big stick in Latin America
- Neymar announces return to Brazil's Santos
- Russian drone attack kills nine in east Ukraine
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- Elite figure skaters and coaches on crashed US flight
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- Easterby ready for long-term contest between Ireland fly-half duo
- Siao Him Fa leads on sombre day at figure skating Europeans
Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
Apple on Thursday reported its revenue was a whopping $124.3 billion in the year-end holiday quarter but sales growth fell shy of market expectations as the iPhone faces stiff competition, particularly in China.
Apple logged $36.3 billion in profit in what chief executive Tim Cook called its "best quarter ever."
Revenue growth was powered by Apple's service and digital content unit, with iPhone sales slipping in markets like mainland China where they tallied $18.5 billion.
Overall iPhone sales in the quarter were $69.1 billion, about a half-billion less than it took in for handsets in the same period a year earlier, according to an earnings release.
"Our record revenue and strong operating margins drove (earnings per share) to a new all-time record with double-digit growth," said Apple chief financial officer Kevan Parekh.
"We are also pleased that our installed base of active devices has reached a new all-time high across all products and geographic segments."
In the quarter, Apple's services segment -- which includes Apple Music, iCloud, the App Store, and Apple TV+ -- reported revenue of $26.3 billion, compared to $23.1 billion in the same period a year earlier.
Apple shares slipped slightly to $234.33 in after-market trades.
The Americas remained Apple's largest market with $56.2 billion in revenue, while Europe showed strong growth at $33.9 billion.
Investors are eyeing demand for new iPhones with artificial intelligence features, especially after Apple stumbled with the technology.
Apple pushed out a software update in mid-January which disabled news headlines and summaries generated using AI that were lambasted for getting facts wrong.
The move by the tech titan comes as it enhances its latest lineup of devices with "Apple Intelligence" in a market keen for assurance that the iPhone maker is a contender in the AI race.
Apple Intelligence is a new suite of software features for all devices that was announced at the company's annual developers conference, where it also announced a partnership with ChatGPT-maker OpenAI.
In the short-term, the new powers include AI-infused image editing, translation, and small, creative touches in messaging, but not more ambitious breakthroughs promised by other AI players, such as OpenAI or Google.
"Apple intelligence builds on years of innovations we've made across hardware and software to transform how users experience our products," Cook said on an earnings call, adding that it "opens up an exciting new frontier and is already elevating experiences across iPhone, iPad and Mac."
- Headline trouble -
Apple's decision to temporarily disable the recently launched AI feature came after the BBC and other news organizations complained that users were getting mistake-riddled or outright wrong headlines or news summary alerts.
The company hopes that customers are attracted to buy the latest iPhone models by its new AI powers.
Along with Apple, other tech giants like Google, Microsoft and Amazon are convinced that generative AI's powers are the next chapter of computing and are boosting spending so as not to be left behind.
Apple lost its status as the best selling smartphone brand in the crucial Chinese market last year with a pair of local rivals surpassing it with surging shipments, according to industry data provider Canalys.
"Intense competition has led to a constantly shifting landscape," said Amber Liu, Research Manager at Canalys.
J.Williams--AMWN