May 18, 2013

Save Email Print Bookmark and Share
A A
Reporter: Staff Email

Apple Stock Drops After New Release

NEW YORK (AP) - Investors are sending Apple's stock below $600 for the first time in three months, after the consumer electronics behemoth reported earnings for its latest quarter that missed expectations and warned that profits in the holiday quarter would fall from last year.
Apple shares are down 2 percent at $597.64 in midday trading Friday.
Late Thursday, Apple said profits for the rest of the year would be lower than what Wall Street has been expecting because it's launching so many new products. It's expecting mammoth sales, but new products are more expensive to make than older ones.

Apple shares have now lost more than $100 from their all-time peak of $705.07, hit on Sept. 21, the day the iPhone went on sale in the U.S. and eight other countries.


Comments are posted from viewers like you and do not always reflect the views of this station.
powered by Disqus

US Business News

  • U.S. Opens Door to More Gas Exports
    The Obama administration cleared the way for broader natural-gas exports by approving a $10 billion facility in Texas, a milestone in the U.S. transition into a major supplier of energy for world markets.
  • J.P. Morgan's Dimon Makes His Case
    J.P. Morgan Chief Executive and Chairman James Dimon is making the case for continuity in the final days before a potentially defining vote on his future.
  • GM Shares Roar Back to Old Levels
    General Motors shares eclipsed their $33 IPO price, fueled in part by enthusiasm over the company's new vehicles.
  • Priming the Pump for Natural-Gas Cars
    A natural-gas trade group is planning a campaign to show compressed natural gas can be an effective fuel for passenger cars to encourage wider use of the fuel in transportation.
  • Penney Plans Bangladesh Audits
    J.C. Penney plans to beef up its audits of factories in Bangladesh by requiring them for the first time to undergo structural and engineering inspections.
  • DirecTV Considers Hulu Bid
    DirecTV, the second largest U.S. pay-TV provider, is weighing a potential bid for Hulu, the latest company to show interest in the six-year-old video site.
  • Bloomberg Taps Palmisano for Review
    Bloomberg appointed former IBM chief Samuel Palmisano to review the company's compliance measures, in response to concerns about subscriber information that had been available to Bloomberg journalists.
  • Mixed Transocean Results for Icahn
    Transocean shareholders rebuffed many of Icahn's efforts to bring about changes. But they awarded the activist investor one victory, dethroning the company's longtime chairman.
  • Judge Deals Setback to PokerStars
    The online poker giant PokerStars was dealt a setback in its quest to enter the U.S.'s burgeoning regulated online gambling markets, when a New Jersey state judge said the Atlantic City casino that PokerStars planned to buy could be put back on the market.
  • FTC Clears Tesoro Purchase of BP Refinery
    The Federal Trade Commission will allow Tesoro to go through with its plans to buy a BP refinery in Southern California, bringing the two companies one step closer to sealing the deal sometime this quarter.