Apple quickly buys back $US14b in shares

Apple boss Tim Cook says he was surprised by a drop in share price triggered by the quarter results and wanted to be "opportunistic" by buying back stock.

Apple gobbled up $US14 billion ($A15.67 billion) worth of its shares in the two weeks after earnings figures disappointed the market, chief executive Tim Cook says.

Cook told The Wall Street Journal that the maker of iPads, iPhones, iPods and Macintosh computers was "surprised" by a drop in share price triggered by the quarter results and wanted to be "opportunistic."

Including the shares bought after the release of earnings results on January 27, California-based Apple has bought back more than $US40 billion worth of its stock, according to the Journal.

Record iPhone and iPad sales pushed Apple quarterly revenue to a new high but shares tumbled over concerns of weaker profits ahead in fierce mobile gadget markets.

The tech giant reported net income of $US13.1 billion on revenue of $US57.6 billion in the quarter that ended December 28, helped by selling 51 million iPhones.

The profit was the same as Apple reported in the same quarter a year earlier when its revenue was $US54.5 billion.

The stock buyback was said to be part of a previously announced plan by Apple to return $US100 billion to investors, with $US60 billion of that involving repurchase of shares.

Apple shares were up to $US512.51 at the close of the trading day on Thursday.

Cook said the move indicated that Apple was betting on itself.

Activist investor Carl Icahn is also apparently betting on Apple.

He fired off word a day after the company's latest earnings release saying that he beefed up his Apple stock holdings by a half-billion US dollars as the share price dipped.

Apple shares were down about eight per cent the day after release of the quarterly earnings report.

Icahn has put out word that he has invested some $US3 billion or more in Apple, and claimed the tech giant is "doing a disservice to shareholders" by not increasing its share buyback.


2 min read

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Source: AAP


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