TLDR Apple stock plunged at $254.43on Sept. 24 down by 1.26% YTD but behind Big Tech peers. UBS data shows strong wait times for iPhone 17 Base but muted demand for higher-end models. ASP growth may be limited by pricing strategy favoring entry-level buyers. The iPhone 17 Air’s $999 redesign and China subsidies boost near-term [...] The post Apple Inc. ($AAPL) Stock: Turns Positive in 2025 After iPhone 17 Launch appeared first on CoinCentral.TLDR Apple stock plunged at $254.43on Sept. 24 down by 1.26% YTD but behind Big Tech peers. UBS data shows strong wait times for iPhone 17 Base but muted demand for higher-end models. ASP growth may be limited by pricing strategy favoring entry-level buyers. The iPhone 17 Air’s $999 redesign and China subsidies boost near-term [...] The post Apple Inc. ($AAPL) Stock: Turns Positive in 2025 After iPhone 17 Launch appeared first on CoinCentral.

Apple Inc. ($AAPL) Stock: Turns Positive in 2025 After iPhone 17 Launch

2025/09/25 00:24

TLDR

  • Apple stock plunged at $254.43on Sept. 24 down by 1.26% YTD but behind Big Tech peers.

  • UBS data shows strong wait times for iPhone 17 Base but muted demand for higher-end models.

  • ASP growth may be limited by pricing strategy favoring entry-level buyers.

  • The iPhone 17 Air’s $999 redesign and China subsidies boost near-term demand.

  • Apple still lags Microsoft and Google in AI, with major Siri updates delayed until 2026.

Apple Inc. (AAPL) shares were down 1.21% as of 12:46 PM EDT, dropping from around $254.43 to $251.36.

Apple Inc. (AAPL)

With these gains, Apple has erased its 2025 losses, now up 1.96% year-to-date, though still trailing the S&P 500’s 13.18% rise. The September 25 earnings report will give further clarity on Apple’s momentum.

The rally followed strong initial demand for Apple’s newly launched iPhone 17 lineup. Shares climbed 4% earlier this week as shipping times lengthened for the redesigned iPhone Air, signaling healthy interest heading into the holiday quarter.

UBS warns of ASP pressure

Despite the positive stock reaction, UBS analysts flagged potential risks for Apple’s average selling price. Evidence Lab data showed “elevated year-over-year wait times” for the iPhone 17 Base model across 30 tracked markets, while demand for higher-end models like the Pro Max looked flatter.

In the U.S., wait times for the iPhone 17 Base stretched to 18 days versus 11 days for the iPhone 16 Base. In China, wait times jumped to 25 days compared with 9 days for last year’s model, which UBS partly attributed to subsidies. However, the analysts noted that heavy mixing toward entry-level models may dampen ASP upside this quarter.

Apple’s pricing strategy

UBS pointed to Apple’s strategic pricing adjustments. The Base model now starts with 256GB storage, effectively lowering its price per gigabyte, while the Air and Pro models saw implied price increases. This mix could weigh on revenue per unit even if total shipments grow.

The $999 iPhone Air is proving a strong draw, being Apple’s first major redesign in years. Bank of America analysts reported longer delivery windows of 18 days for the Air compared with just 10 days for last year’s iPhone 16.

Broader product ecosystem and AI lag

Apple’s fall lineup also included new AirPods Pro 3 and the latest Apple Watch, which introduced AI-driven health features such as blood pressure risk alerts. Still, the company lags competitors in AI innovation. A major Siri update isn’t expected until 2026, leaving Apple behind Microsoft and Google, both of which have heavily invested in AI this year.

Performance overview

Looking beyond 2025, Apple remains a long-term outperformer. The company has returned 12.87% over the past year and 144.18% over five years, compared with the S&P 500’s 16.41% and 105.66% gains, respectively. Yet the near-term focus rests squarely on the iPhone 17’s holiday season performance and whether Apple can sustain momentum despite ASP concerns and AI challenges.

The post Apple Inc. ($AAPL) Stock: Turns Positive in 2025 After iPhone 17 Launch appeared first on CoinCentral.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Prediction markets, DATs, the fee switch, and Project Crypto

Prediction markets, DATs, the fee switch, and Project Crypto

The post Prediction markets, DATs, the fee switch, and Project Crypto appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. This is a segment from The Breakdown newsletter. To read full editions, subscribe. “If you can’t make money, you may want to consider being quiet. Maybe the market knows more than you do.” — Jeff Yass Today, The Breakdown looks at developing stories and links from around the cryptoverse. After Jeff Yass brought his math and poker skills onto trading floors in the 1980s, global options markets stopped looking like a casino and started looking like a science. Yass thinks prediction markets could do the same for the world. First and foremost, he says, “It will stop wars.” Yass cites the second Iraq War, which President Bush said would cost the US $20 billion but is now thought to have cost at least $2 trillion, and maybe as much as $6 trillion. It’s unlikely prediction markets would have settled on such an astronomical number, but Yass believes they might have predicted something like $500 billion, in which case “people might have said, ‘Look, we don’t want this war.’” That would have saved many, many lives, as well: “If people know how expensive it’s going to be and how disastrous it’s going to be, they’ll try to come up with other solutions.” Prediction markets, he says, “can really slow down the lies that politicians are constantly telling us.” He also cites applications in insurance, technology and even dating. Asked by the 16-year-old podcast host what advice he’d give young people, Yass suggested they could avoid relationship mistakes by creating an anonymous prediction market for their friends to bet on. “I believe in markets,” he concluded. It sounds like a dumb idea: Unlike stocks with their open-ended valuations, prediction markets should converge toward the single fixed probability of a binary outcome. But the author of No Dumb Ideas crunched the numbers and…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/11/14 23:52
U.S., Europe brands take on the Chinese consumer

U.S., Europe brands take on the Chinese consumer

The post U.S., Europe brands take on the Chinese consumer appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Pictured here is Louis Vuitton’s new cruise ship-shaped store in Shanghai, China, on June 28, 2025. Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images BEIJING — China’s economic slowdown isn’t discouraging U.S. and European brands from revamping their strategies to reach Chinese shoppers. Instead, the allure of the world’s second-largest consumer market is forcing companies to adapt in the face of growing competition from local brands. In the case of Kraft Heinz, getting more people in China to buy ketchup this year also meant hiring a local agency to help create catchy campaigns — decorating subway station columns to mimic ketchup bottles and promoting the condiment as a fresh twist on a popular dish: stir-fried eggs and tomatoes. It’s a hard market to tackle, even for Shanghai-based marketing firm Good Idea Growth Network (GGN). The agency has witnessed at least five different waves of consumer trends in its 14-year history, founder Stephy Liu, said in Mandarin, translated by CNBC. “The gameplay keeps on changing.” But GGN has succeeded even after rejecting an acquisition offer from British advertising giant WPP, Liu said, noting that about half of her clients are foreign brands. While Kraft Heinz isn’t done with its China ketchup campaign yet, the company reported second-quarter net sales in emerging markets climbed by 4.2% from a year ago, helping offset declines in North America. WPP explored a potential acquisition of GGN but did not end up going far in the process, according to a person familiar with the discussions. Kraft Heinz did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Localized social media From Starbucks’ struggles to Lululemon’s successes in China, it’s become clear that the right mix of localization is essential. “Among international brands in China, the winners are often dedicating more than 40% of revenue to marketing, especially content and platform-first…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/10/04 09:22