Category Archives: stocks

Apple Suppliers Blame ‘Tepid’ iPhone 7 Demand On Lack Of Innovation

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing ( TSM ) will grow 4% in 2016, missing projections for 5%-10% growth, as Apple ( AAPL ) cuts its iPhone 7 orders June through December, a source told the Nikkei Asian Review on Wednesday. Nikkei’s report comes on the heels of disappointing June-quarter guidance from Apple suppliers Skyworks Solutions ( SWKS ), Cirrus Logic ( CRUS ) and InvenSense ( INVN ). Tuesday, TSM reported Q1 sales that missed by $30 million and dipped 13% year over year. In afternoon trading on the stock market today , Taiwan Semi stock was down a fraction, near 23. June through December, TSM’s chip shipments will shrink to 70%-80% of year-earlier levels, sources told Nikkei. TSM is now projected for “tepid” 4% year-over-year sales growth and flat operating profits in 2016. In 2015, sales rose 7.5% to $25.95 billion. “Suppliers are saying that they are getting fewer orders for the second half of this year compared with the year-ago period,” a source told Nikkei. “The traditional peak season this year will not be able to compare to the past few years.” The report jibes with worries of a slowdown in smartphone sales. Last month, Apple missed its March-quarter Q2 sales for the first time in 13 years and guided its June-quarter sales down 15%-19% sequentially, which is the seasonal norm. The only Chinese smartphone makers showing healthy growth are Huawei and Oppo, the source said. Apple CEO Tim Cook has said his company plans to lower its channel inventories by $2 billion in the June quarter “in light of the macroeconomic environment.” Apple has tapped TSM as the sole source of its A10 processor for the iPhone 7, expected for release in September. Last year, TSM and South Korean rival Samsung both supplied the A9 processor for the iPhone 6S. About 16% of TSM’s sales stem from Apple. Nikkei estimates Apple will ship more than 200 million iPhones this year, down from 230 million in 2015. A source with a major Taiwanese supplier blamed the lack of innovation in the iPhone 7 for the weak demand, Nikkei reported.

John Malone Avoids FCC Conditions With Charter, Unlike Comcast-NBCU

Federal regulators opted to place no conditions related to John Malone’s sprawling media and telecom holdings in approving Charter Communication ’s ( CHTR ) acquisitions of Time Warner Cable ( TWC ) ( IBD ) and Bright House Networks. California regulators are expected to approve Charter’s deals as soon as Thursday, the final hurdle to Charter’s makeover. Charter will leap to No. 2 in the cable TV industry, behind Comcast ( CMCSA ). Comcast owns NBCUniversal and NBCU-related conditions that the FCC imposed on Comcast in 2011, which are set to expire in 2018. NBCU’s assets include the broadcast TV network, cable channels and a movie studio. Consumer group Public Knowledge, the American Cable Association and others asked the FCC to look into Malone’s holdings as part of the Charter review.  Dish Network ( DISH ) waged the biggest fight against the TWC deal, while  Netflix ( NFLX ) stayed on the sidelines. Malone controls Liberty Broadband ( LBDRA ), which will own about 18% of the new Charter and has rights to name three board members. Privately held media firm Advance/Newhouse will own about 13.5% of Charter. Liberty Broadband stock touched a record high for the second straight day on Wednesday. Malone holds a 28.7% voting interest in Discovery ( DISCA ); a 31.8% voting interest in Starz ( STRZA ); a 37.7% voting interest in the QVC Group, and a 3.3% voting interest in Lions Gate Entertainment ( LGF ), which holds a stake in Epix, according to the FCC. While much of Malone’s media holdings will now constitute Charter’s “affiliated programming,”  the FCC says it already has rules in place to govern those companies’ relationships with other pay-TV providers. “Because New Charter will lack the incentive or ability to withhold or raise prices of affiliated programming, we further find it unnecessary to extend or modify our program access rules or impose other conditions on the licensing of New Charter’s affiliated content,” the FCC said in its May 6  order approving Charter’s acquisitions. The FCC’s conditions on Charter’s acquisitions aim to protect competition from Internet video providers such as Netflix, Hulu and Amazon.com ( AMZN ). Charter will not be allowed to charge data usage-based prices or impose data caps on broadband customers for seven years. Those conditions could impact Comcast if it makes more acquisitions. Some analysts have speculated that Malone could consolidate some of his media assets and/or acquire more. Malone also controls Liberty Global, a Europe-based telecom company. “Malone’s ownership of distribution and content assets globally implicitly has a scale larger than even Comcast, but with a much more fragmented ownership structure and working relationships,” said a Barclays report in January.