Today:
Apple (
AAPL)
drops 5 percent as investors disappointed by lack of a truly low-cost
smartphone, while Facebook completes its comeback and hits $45 for first time
since its 2012 IPO. Also, Fremont's Synnex skyrockets after IBM deal and Pandora
names a new CEO.
The lead: Apple plunges as Facebook surpasses milestone
It was a tale of two stock prices Wednesday, as Facebook
completed a months-long comeback from the depths to reach a new all-time high,
while Apple, the company that once could seemingly do no wrong, tumbled
FILE - In this March 15, 2013
file photo, a Facebook employee walks past a sign at Facebook headquarters in
Menlo Park, Calif. (Jeff Chiu/Associated Press)
another 5.4
percent a day after
its
new iPhone models failed to impress. Combined with Tuesday's decline of more
than 2 percent, Apple has lost
nearly
$35 billion in market value in the past two days.
It took a year and a half, but
Facebook finally topped
its all-time high share price, first set on the day of its much-ballyhooed IPO.
Shares peaked at $45.09 Wednesday, before closing at an all-time-best $45.05, up
3.33 percent on the day.
The Menlo Park social media giant previously hit $45 a share during midday
trading on May 18, 2012. The largest tech IPO in history then went bust, with
shares going on a rapid slide, bottoming out below $18 a share last fall. But
shares have rallied 70 percent since Facebook's earnings report in July, in
which it surprised analysts by reporting huge gains in mobile ad sales. Mobile
accounted for 41 percent of Facebook's total ad sales last quarter, compared to
zero a year before.
"There's growing recognition that, 'Hey, this is not just a fad -- it's not
going away, it's becoming ingrained in people's lives,'" Martin Pyykkonen, an
analyst at Wedge Partners,
told
Bloomberg News. "Their ads are becoming more effective. Advertisers are
finding that's a very attractive place to target."
Now the Facebook bandwagon is growing crowded, as increasingly optimistic
investors are being joined by Wall Street experts;
according
to the Los Angeles Times, 30 of 32 analysts who cover the company now give
it a "buy" rating.
Apple, meanwhile, continued to make
A woman looks at her mobile
phone as she walks past an Apple iPhone 5 poster outside a store in Beijing on
September 11, 2013. (WANG ZHAO/AFP/Getty Images)
analysts shake
their heads. In unveiling two new iPhone models at a media event in Cupertino on
Tuesday, the tech giant delivered neither the new "wow" gadget experts had hoped
for nor the low-cost smartphone that experts had expected to help it compete in
developing markets.
At a puzzling media event in Beijing on Wednesday, Apple announced it had
received a license that would allow its iPhones to work on China Mobile's
network, but there was no mention of a much-rumored partnership with the world's
biggest mobile carrier. That was hardly the only disappointing news for Chinese
consumers. The new iPhone 5C -- touted as a low-cost smartphone in the U.S. --
will start at more than $700 in China, due to the lack of carriers' subsidies.
That's more than the average monthly income in urban China, Reuters reports, and
will make it next to impossible for Apple to compete with mass-market Android
phones, which can sell for as low as $100.
"It's not cheap enough," Tucker Grinnan, an analyst with HSBC Holdings,
told
Bloomberg News. "We are disappointed with the price point. It is a high-end
phone in China."
In the U.S., at least four analysts
downgraded
their rating of Apple on Wednesday morning. Others were vocal in their
disappointment: "We worry that Apple's inability/unwillingness to come out with
a low-priced offering for emerging markets nearly ensures that the company will
continue to be an overall share loser in the smartphone market until it chooses
to address the low end," said Toni Sacconaghi of BernsteinResearch,
according
to the Los Angeles Times.
Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott,
told
Reuters: "This was less than expected from a company that has a reputation
for surprising with a killer product or strategy."
Credit Suisse analyst Kulbinder Garcha expects Apple's smartphone market
share to fall to 13.1 percent next year, down from 18.1 percent in 2012,
according
to Reuters. The premium smartphone market "is not forecast to see meaningful
growth long term," he said. "This decision, at the margin, is good for
profitability but not growth."
Whether Apple is
out
of new ideas and content to spin its wheels, or if it is simply
the victim of
its own track record of innovation and high expectations, it's looking
likely that Apple's recent stock funk is far from over. Apple has plummeted from
its all-time high of $705.07 last October, falling as far as $385.10 earlier
this year. Until it presents a clear vision or a new must-have gadget (like it
did in the past decade with the iPhone, iPod and iPad), expect its doldrums to
continue.
Apple shares fell $26.81 on Wednesday, down 5.42 percent, to close at
$467.83.
SV150 market roundup: Synnex shares skyrocket, Pandora names
new CEO
The Dow Jones industrial average and Standard & Poor's 500
gained slightly Wednesday, but Apple's drop hurt tech stocks. The tech-heavy
Nasdaq dipped 0.11 percent, and the SV150 index of Silicon Valley's biggest
companies dropped by 0.84 percent.
The big mover in Silicon Valley was Fremont-based
Synnex,
which Tuesday acquired IBM's customer-care outsourcing unit for $505
million. Synnex shares surged more than 20 percent Wednesday, or $9.62, closing
at $57.59. The purchase is expected to add about $120 million to Synnex earnings
in its first year, according to
a statement from
the company.
Also, Mountain View Internet giant
Google (
GOOG)
and Santa Clara chipmaker
Intel (
INTC)
announced a partnership Wednesday for new Chromebooks,
which
will run Intel's powerful new Haswell processor. The new laptops will be
built by Palo Alto-based
Hewlett-Packard
(
HPQ),
Acer, Toshiba and Asus and should hit store shelves by the Christmas shopping
season. Google shares rose 0.85 percent, while Intel slipped 0.67 percent. HP
was unchanged.
Pandora, the Oakland-based Internet radio service,
named
Brian McAndrews its president and CEO on Wednesday. McAndrews, a former vice
president at Microsoft and partner at Madrona Venture Group who has extensive
experience in digital advertising, succeeds Joe Kennedy, who announced his
retirement in March.
"We had very specific criteria for our new CEO, and we were very strategic
about finding the right person -- Brian is that person," Tim Westergren,
Pandora's founder and chief strategy officer,
said
in a statement. "No one better understands the intersection of technology
and advertising."
"It is a great privilege to be asked to lead Pandora at this important moment
in the company's history," McAndrews said in a statement. "I look forward to
joining this great team to build on Pandora's success for years to come."
Pandora is
the
seventh SV150 company to get a new CEO this quarter, joining Twitter,
Polycom, Juniper, IDT, Solta Medical and Applied Materials.
Investors seemed to welcome McAndews' addition; Pandora shares rose 5 percent
during trading Wednesday, closing up $1.03 to $21.38, and were rallying even
more after hours. As of 3:30 p.m. PDT, Pandora was up another $1.63, or $7.62
percent.
Up: Google,
Oracle
(
ORCL),
Cisco
(
CSCO),
eBay (
EBAY),
Gilead, VMware,
Yahoo
(
YHOO),
Juniper, Facebook, LinkedIn
Down: Apple, Intel, VMware, Yahoo,
Zynga, Tesla
The SV150 index of Silicon Valley's largest tech companies: Down 11.19, or
0.84 percent, to 1,322.79
The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index: Down 4.01 , or 0.11 percent, to
3,725.01.
The blue chip Dow Jones industrial average: Up 135.54 or 0.89 percent, to
15,326.60.
And the widely watched Standard & Poor's 500 index: Up 5.14, or 0.31
percent, to 1,689.13.
Check in weekday afternoons for the 60-Second Business Break, a summary of
news from Mercury News staff writers, The Associated Press, Bloomberg News and
other wire services. Follow Mike Murphy on
Twitter at
@mmmmurf.
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