Apple (AAPL) Stock at $260: Buy, Sell or Hold?

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • Apple (AAPL) is a Hold at around $260; excellent fundamentals face valuation headwinds.

  • Apple’s exceptional Q1 results, record iPhone revenue, and Services growth strongly support the business quality.

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Apple (AAPL) Stock at $260: Buy, Sell or Hold?

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Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL | AAPL Price Prediction) is a Hold at around $260 per share. The stock sits in a frustrating middle ground: fundamentals are excellent, but valuation leaves limited margin for error and near-term headwinds are real.

Apple designs and sells consumer electronics, software and digital services across a global installed base of more than 2.5 billion active devices. The third-largest company in the world by market capitalization, Apple’s most recent quarter was, in CEO Tim Cook’s words, “a remarkable, record-breaking quarter.” Yet the stock is down nearly 5% year to date, trading well below its 52-week high of $288.61.

The iPhone Supercycle and Services Engine Make a Compelling Bull Case

Q1 FY2026 results were exceptional. iPhone revenue hit a record $85.27 billion, up 23% year over year, while Services reached an all-time high of $30.01 billion, growing 14%. Operating cash flow surged 80% year over year to $53.93 billion. Greater China rebounded sharply to $25.53 billion from $18.51 billion a year earlier.

The product pipeline adds fuel. Prediction markets assign a 80% probability to a foldable iPhone launching before 2027, and a 92% probability to an iPhone 18 release this year. Apple’s capital return program remains aggressive: $24.70 billion in buybacks in Q1 alone, with a $100 billion repurchase authorization still active.

A 33x Earnings Multiple Prices in Perfection

The bear case centers on valuation and macro exposure. Apple trades at a trailing P/E of 33x and a forward P/E of 30x, with a price-to-sales ratio of 9x on a $3.83 trillion market cap. That pricing demands flawless execution with no macro disruption. Tariff risk tied to Chinese manufacturing is a live threat, and Greater China revenue remains volatile quarter to quarter.

Insider activity adds caution. CEO Tim Cook disposed of tens of thousands of shares in early April at prices ranging from $251.25 to $256.00. While many were RSU vestings, the timing of discretionary common stock sales near current levels warrants attention. The DOJ antitrust case against Google threatens Apple’s lucrative default search revenue arrangement, a risk not fully reflected in consensus estimates.

Strong Business, Stretched Price

The hold argument is straightforward. Apple is one of the most consistently profitable companies ever built. But at current prices, investors are paying a premium that assumes continued double-digit Services growth, stable China revenue, no tariff escalation, and smooth AI monetization.

The next earnings report is confirmed for April 30, just 17 days away. That event will clarify tariff impact on margins, China trajectory, and whether Apple Intelligence is driving upgrade cycles. Waiting for that data costs very little.

What the Numbers Say

Apple currently trades around $260 per share. The consensus analyst target sits at $296.33, implying meaningful upside, though analyst targets are directional signals rather than guarantees. Of 48 analysts covering the stock, the ratings break down as follows:

  • Strong Buy: 6
  • Buy: 25
  • Hold: 15
  • Sell: 1
  • Strong Sell: 1

The stock trades just below its 50-day moving average of $260.88 and above its 200-day moving average of $250.63. Prediction markets assign only a 49% probability to Apple closing above $260 by end of April.

Hold Here, Buy the Clarity

At around $260, Apple is a Hold. The business is exceptional, but the valuation is not cheap. The April 30 earnings report will answer what matters most: tariff impact on margins, China stability, and whether Apple Intelligence is translating into measurable upgrade demand. Acting before that data means paying full price for an unclear picture.

If earnings confirm margin resilience and China stability, the stock has a credible path toward the analyst consensus target. If tariff headwinds or China softness disappoint, the 30x forward multiple offers limited cushion. Waiting for earnings is discipline, not indecision.

Photo of Joel South
About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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