Tag Archives: aapl

Could $2 Bil Sway NXP Semiconductors To Curb Its Apple Exposure?

NXP Semiconductors ‘ ( NXPI ) rumored $2 billion price tag for its Apple ( AAPL )-facing standard products division is “significantly” undervalued, says Credit Suisse. A $3 billion to $3.2 billion bidding price seems more accurate, Credit Suisse analyst John Pitzer wrote in a research report Tuesday. The standard products division is expected to generate $1.54 billion in 2016 sales, about 12% of NXP’s total revenue. But the division is struggling. In 2015, sales of its standard products — signal discretes, power discretes, protection and signal conditioning — fell 3% to $1.24 billion. Q4 sales fell 18% year over year, to $271 million. For the current quarter, NXP guided $275 million to $285 million in sales, down 13% at the midpoint vs. the year-earlier period and up 3% sequentially. Chinese bidders reportedly are interested in the segment, which supplies components for handsets, computing, consumer and automotive, Pitzer wrote. Smartphone customers include Apple, Huawei and Samsung. Although China consumes roughly half of the world’s $350 billion in chips, the country’s chip companies account for just 2.5% of the sector’s revenue. The country is looking to curb its reliance on foreign chips by building its own thriving industry. But chip technology is closely guarded and a rumored $23 billion Chinese bid for U.S. memory chipmaker Micron Technology ( MU ) had analysts scoffing last year. U.S. regulators likely would have killed that deal, they said. NXP, though, wouldn’t face nearly as stringent regulatory hurdles, Pitzer wrote. NXP is based in the Netherlands and its standard products division is located outside the U.S. Also, he points out, the segment isn’t producing specialty technology. “This portfolio consists of a large variety of catalog products, using widely-known production techniques with characteristics that are largely standardized throughout the industry,” he wrote. On Monday, NXP topped the chip count in an iFixit teardown of the 9.7-inch iPad Pro . The chipmaker supplies a Touch ID sensor, a controller and a charging component. NXP also supplied a controller for the new iPhone SE . Its Freescale acquisition in December opens NXP up to the high-margin automotive industry. NXP said “90% of auto innovation” is in electronics and it plans to lead the industry in terms of infotainment, vehicle networking, body, safety and secure access. NXP stock was flat, near 83, in afternoon trading on the stock market today . Its shares are down 1.5% this year.

Why Apple’s iPhone 7 Could Have A Dual-Camera Version

Smartphone users are driven to upgrade their handsets sooner and to pay more to get better cameras, a survey by InfoTrends shows. InfoTrends surveyed 1,499 U.S. consumers about their use of smartphones and other devices. It found that the recent end of subsidized handset pricing by most wireless carriers would cause more than 40% of smartphone users to wait longer to get a new phone, and about half that number to opt for a less expensive phone. More than 35% of each group, however, said that a significantly better camera would be enough to make them buy sooner or pay more, InfoTrends said in a news release Tuesday . The survey results help explain why Apple ( AAPL ), Samsung and other handset makers promote the photo-taking abilities of their handsets in national television advertisements. Apple is rumored to be making a version of its upcoming iPhone 7 that has a dual-camera design. The benefits of the dual-camera setup include faster speed, better resolution (especially in low light conditions) and the ability to incorporate 2-3x optical zoom. LG Electronics and Huawei already have dual-camera smartphones for sale.

Apple Music, Pandora Stoke Digital Music In Face Of ‘Value Gap’

Buoyed by Apple ( AAPL ) Music, Spotify and other subscription streaming services, sales of digital music vaulted past physical music sales for the first time in 2015 to become the main revenue stream for recorded music, according to a new industry report released Tuesday. But there’s also a widening “value gap,” as music listening on Alphabet ( GOOGL )-owned video wing YouTube and other free, legal sites don’t bring as much revenue for the industry, the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry trade group said. Digital music sales worldwide contributed 45% of industry revenue in 2015, overtaking the 39% share from sales of CDs and other physical formats, the IFPI’s report said. “After two decades of almost uninterrupted decline, 2015 witnessed key milestones for recorded music: measurable revenue growth globally; consumption of music exploding everywhere; and digital revenues overtaking income from physical formats for the first time,” the IFPI said. The group added that “revenues, vital in funding future investment, are not being fairly returned to rights holders. The value gap is the biggest constraint to revenue growth for artists, record labels and all music rights holders.” Revenue growth came from subscription music streaming services such as Apple Music, Pandora Media ( P ) and Spotify. Others in the subscription sector include Amazon.com ‘s ( AMZN ) Prime Music and Google Play Music. Besides its free YouTube site, Alphabet subsidiary Google in December launched YouTube Red, a video-subscription service that offers ad-free and offline viewing. Music download sales dropped 10.5% in 2015, the report said, while sales of CDs and other physical formats fell 4.5%. The so-called “value gap” arose because some major digital services “are able to circumvent the normal rules that apply to music licensing,” the report said. “User upload services claim they do not need to negotiate licenses for the music available on their platforms, or conclude licenses at artificially low rates, claiming protection from so-called ‘safe harbor’ rules that were introduced in the early days of the Internet and established in both U.S. and European legislation.” IFPI CEO Frances Moore said in a statement that safe harbor rules were designed for the Internet of the past and “should no longer be used to exempt user upload services that distribute music online from the normal conditions of music licensing.” Apple, Alphabet and Amazon stocks were all up a fraction in afternoon trading in the stock market today . Pandora stock was up 2%, near 8. Image provided by Shutterstock .