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Live: Will Apple Blowout Q2 Earnings

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By Thomas Richmond Updated Published

Quick Read

  • Apple (AAPL) posted record Q1 FY26 results with EPS of $2.84 versus $2.67 expected and $143.76B revenue, up 15.7% YoY, driven by $85.27B iPhone sales—its best-ever quarter. Wall Street will be focusing on gross margins when the company reports tonight. Revenue is expected to hit $109.6 billion while EPS estimates stand at $1.94.

  • This live blog is being will be automatically updated. Simply stay on this page and new updates will appear. We expect Apple to report earnings at 4:30 p.m. ET. Once they report we expect to issue up to a dozen updates with the company’s results, key figures investors need to know, and news and analysis why the company’s shares are either rising or falling. 

Live Updates

Apple Shares Rise 3.6% - And Gross Margin Guidance Is a Key Reason Shares are Up After-Hours

Apple just provided guidance for next quarter on their conference call. We’ll provide the full quote and then layer on some context below it:

Kevan Parekh Chief Financial Officer

“Importantly, the color we’re providing assumes that global tariff rates, policies and their application remain in effect as of this call, and the global macroeconomic outlook does not worsen from today. We expect our June quarter total company revenue to grow by 14% to 17% year-over-year, which comprehends our best view of constrained supply. On iPad, keep in mind, we face a difficult compare driven by the launch of the A16 powered iPad in the prior year. We expect services revenue to grow at a year-over-year rate similar to what we reported in the March quarter, after removing the favorable year-over-year impact from foreign exchange tailwinds.

Keep in mind, during the March quarter, FX was a 2.5 percentage point tailwind to the total company growth rate and for services, that impact was slightly more favorable. We expect gross margin to be between 47.5% and 48.5%. We expect operating expenses to be between $18.8 billion and $19.1 billion. We expect OI&E to be around $250 million, excluding any potential impact from the mark-to-market of minority investments and our tax rate to be around 17%.”

I bolded the gross margin expectations because that’s the figure Wall Street will be most closely studying. The Street expected gross margins to be 47.6%, so this guidance is above expectations.

Apple shares are up 3.6% as of 6 p.m., in large part due to the company maintaining pricing power despite rising supply costs.

 

 

Apple CEO Tim Cook Discusses How Sports are Driving Apple TV Subscriptions on the Company's Q2 Conference Call

Apple CEO Tim Cook discussed the company’s Services division passing $31 billion in revenue this quarter. Here’s what he had to say about Apple TV and how the company is using sports to drive subscriptions:

Timothy Cook Chief Executive Officer

“Now let’s turn to services, which set an all-time revenue record with $31 billion. We saw double-digit growth in both developed and emerging markets and set new all-time revenue records across most of the services categories. There’s no better place to find celebrated storytellers than Apple TV. Audiences are plotting the return to shows like your friends and neighbors shrinking and for all mankind while discovering new favorites like Winow’s Bay.

Apple TV has also earned its place among the most decorated names in entertainment with more than 800 wins and more than 3,400 nominations in the 6 years since launch. This is a great time for sports fans on Apple TV, too. Formula One season kicked off in March and Apple TV subscribers in the U.S. have 1 of the best views of the track. The new MLS season is also well underway and subscribers in more than 100 countries and regions can watch every match with no blackouts. And Friday night baseball returned for its fifth year on Apple TV with a full season of marquee matchups.”

Wrapping Up Earnings Coverage. Apple’s Conference Call Is Next

Updates will be slowing down as we wrap up earnings coverage. Stick around for our coverage on Apple’s upcoming Conference Call at 5 PM EST!

Analysts Top Questions on Apple After Q2 Earnings

With the $2.01 EPS and $111.18B revenue double beat in hand, focus shifts to the 5:00 PM ET call with Tim Cook and CFO Kevan Parekh.

Top Analyst Questions

  • Is Greater China’s Q1 reacceleration sustaining into Q3?
  • Can Services hold a double-digit growth rate after $30.98B?
  • Tariff impact on June-quarter gross margin?
  • Apple Intelligence monetization timeline and attach rates?
  • iPhone 17/Air sell-through and iPhone 18 readiness?

Key Topics

  • June-quarter revenue and margin ranges
  • M5 silicon adoption across Mac and iPad Pro
  • Capital returns pace following $24.7B in Q1 buybacks
  • Vision Pro and regulatory updates (DMA, App Store)

Red Flags

  • Vague forward commentary
  • Services guided to single digits
  • Wearables weakness extending past $11.49B base
  • Tariff language signaling margin compression below 47%

With shares at $271.35 and the $297.88 analyst target in view, Cook’s tone on China and tariffs will likely dictate the after-hours move.

Mega-Cap Peers: 5-for-5 on Earnings Beats

With Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL | AAPL Price Prediction) earnings now out, context from peers April 29 sharpens the read. All four mega-cap peers beat EPS estimates: Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) by 94.10%Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN60.69%Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META56.79%, and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT4.90%.

The market rewarded AI capacity over headline beats. Alphabet rallied 9.96% on Google Cloud’s 63% growth and a $460 billion backlog. Meta fell 8.55% after lifting 2026 capex guidance to $125 to $145 billion. Microsoft slipped 3.93% despite Azure growth of 40%.

Apple differs from these peers. With minimal AI capex and a Services-led beat at $30.98B, today’s 0.5% slip reflects a sector tired of premium multiples for in-line execution. Margin commentary on tonight’s earnings call remains the key swing factor.

Why Apple's Guidance Outweighs the Beat

Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) cleared the bar with $111.18B revenue and $2.01 EPS, yet shares slipped 0.5%. The June quarter call commentary now matters more than tonight’s earnings report.

Apple does not issue formal numerical guidance, so investors parse CFO Kevan Parekh’s qualitative ranges on revenue growth, gross margin, opex, and tax rate. Management historically guides conservatively.

Bullish setup: revenue growth framed in high-single to low-double digits, Services sustaining 13%+, gross margin at the 46-47% high end, and constructive China color after Q1’s $25.53B surge.

Bearish setup: deceleration commentary, tariff-driven margin pressure, Services slowing toward high single digits, or cautious iPhone normalization tone. With shares at $271.35 and a 34 P/E, the call sets the tone into Friday.

Prediction Markets Nailed Apple's Earnings Beat

Prediction Markets Nailed the Beat

With results in hand, Polymarket’s pre-earnings call looks vindicated. The headline market priced a 99.9% probability of an EPS beat above the $1.94 consensus, and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) delivered $2.01. The “Yes” contract was trading at 0.9995 into the close on $18,008 in volume.

Price-level markets were equally calibrated. Traders assigned probability 1.0 to a close above $270 and only 0.001 above $275. Apple sits at $271.35, threading that range exactly.

Context matters: across 73 resolved AAPL markets, the crowd correct rate is 71.2%, with an average Brier score of 0.1. Watch the week-of-April-27 market, where $276 leads at 74.2%.

Apple Authorizes Another $100B in Buybacks and Boosts Dividend

Apple announced a new share repurchase authorization of up to $100 billion, reinforcing its commitment to returning capital to shareholders. The move extends one of the largest and most consistent buyback programs in the market and signals continued confidence in the company’s long-term cash flow generation.

Apple also increased its quarterly dividend from $0.26 to $0.27 per share, marking another steady step higher in its capital return strategy as the company continues to generate significant free cash flow.

Tim Cook Set to Step Down in September

This quarter carries added significance as it marks one of the final earnings calls for Tim Cook as CEO of Apple. Cook is expected to step down in September 2026, with longtime executive John Ternus set to take over, signaling the start of a major leadership transition.

Cook’s tenure reshaped Apple into one of the most valuable companies in the world, with its market value rising from roughly $350 billion to over $4 trillion. Investors will be paying close attention not just to the quarter’s results, but also to any commentary on the transition, Apple’s long-term strategy, and how the next phase of leadership will build on that foundation.

Apple Beats Q2 Earnings Across the Board with Services Leading the Way

Apple reported a solid beat across the board, with strength driven by Services and steady iPhone demand.

  • EPS: $2.01 vs. $1.96 expected
  • Revenue: $111.18B vs. $109.66B expected

Segment Performance:

  • iPhone: $56.99B vs. $56.98B expected
  • Services: $30.98B vs. $30.37B expected
  • Products: $80.21B vs. $79.26B expected
  • Mac: $8.40B vs. $8.13B expected
  • iPad: $6.91B vs. $6.65B expected

Services continues to lead on upside, while hardware came in steady across the board with modest beats in most categories.

Apple Reports Q2 Double Beat

Apple’s Q2 Earnings are out now:

  • Revenue: $111.18B vs Est. $109.58B
  • EPS: $2.01 vs Est. $1.94

The stock is trading down o.5% on the news.

Apple Earnings Expected in 8 Minutes

Apple earnings are expected in 8 minutes. Once they drop, we’ll provide the key figures you need to know and analysis on their earnings.

If you haven’t followed a 24/7 Wall St. live blog before, there’s no need to refresh this page. New updates will post automatically at the top of this feed. 

4 Wildcards That Could Move Apple's Stock After Tonight's Q2 Earnings

Four Wildcards Not in Consensus

Apple’s earnings are about 10 minutes away. As we wait, here are four “under the radar” storylines that could shape where the company trades tomorrow.

Greater China swing factor. The region whipsawed from $14.49B in Q4 FY2025 to $25.53B in Q1 FY2026. Polymarket traders cite a 20% surge in iPhone shipments across China with share rising to 22%, a setup that could blow past the $109.5 billion revenue bar.

Tariff overhang. Reddit’s highest-engagement thread, “Trump says ‘I’ll remember’ companies that don’t seek tariff refunds”, drew over 4,000 upvotes, signaling margin guidance risk.

Services regulatory pressure. Services hit $30.01B, exposing high-margin growth to EU DMA enforcement.

FX tailwind. With international revenue near 60%, a softer dollar could amplify a beat above the $1.94 GAAP EPS bar Polymarket prices at 97.5%.

Apple Reports Earnings in 15 Minutes - Here are the Bull and Bear Scenarios When They Report

Tonight’s reaction will hinge on management commentary around guidance, margins, and segment trends. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) doesn’t issue formal numerical guidance, so investors will parse CFO Kevan Parekh’s qualitative ranges on revenue growth, gross margin, and segment color.

Wall Street consensus sits at $1.94 EPS and $109.5 billion revenue, with Polymarket pricing a 97.5% implied probability of a beat. Last quarter set a high bar at $143.756 billion.

Bullish scenario: Tim Cook signals sustained double-digit growth, Services tracking ≥14%, gross margin above 47%, and continued China strength after Q1’s $25.526 billion surge.

Bearish scenario: iPhone deceleration after the blowout, China softening, tariff-driven margin pressure, and muted Apple Intelligence commentary. History favors guidance: the average day-of reaction is -0.19% despite eight straight beats.

The Biggest Concern Heading Into Apple's Earnings is Margins - and One Memory Company Just Blew Out Earnings

As we’ve noted throughout this live blog, one of the biggest metrics Wall Street will be watching tonight is Apple’s margins. Components like memory continue soaring in price, which has pressured companies across the smartphone supply chain.

NAND producer SanDisk just reported earnings and they were an epic blowout. The company’s EPS came in at $23.41, ahead of Wall Street’s expectations of $14.42.

The bad news for SanDisk stockholders? Even with the blowout, shares are down 7%.

SanDisk’s results have limited visibility into Apple’s earnings. The company has long-term supply agreements. However, with SanDisk forecasting EPS of $30 to $33 per share next quarter, the momentum behind rising memory prices continues to build.

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Apple Shares Up 1.45% Before Q2 Earnings - Here's Why Wall Street Will be Watching Margins Tonight

Apple (AAPL) shares are up 1.45% in late trading while the Nasdaq is up 1%. 

It’s been a day of diverging performances for the largest technology stocks. Meta Platforms, Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet all reported last night. 

Alphabet shares are soaring 9% after the company issued blowout cloud and search revenues last night. On the other end, Meta shares are down afte the company raised its capex forecast up to $145 billion on the high end for the year. 

Apple won’t have to worry about rising capex (the company is famously holding back on the arm’s race its rivals have embarked on). However, investors will be concerned that rising margins could crimp the company’s profitability. Any commentary from Tim Cook on supply costs will be carefully studied.

Investors are watching Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) ahead of Q2 fiscal 2026 results due after the bell tonight, April 30, 2026. Apple issued blowout earnings in its December quarter, but Wall Street remains worried about the impacts of rising component prices like memory. We’ll detail why some metrics like gross margins will be in focus tonight.

Let’s dive into the key storylines tonight and what Apple reported in its latest quarter.

Following a Record-Breaking December Quarter

Last quarter, Apple posted EPS of $2.84 versus $2.67 expected on revenue of $143.76 billion, up 15.7% year over year. iPhone delivered $85.27 billion, its best-ever quarter with all-time records across every geographic segment, while Services hit a record $30.01 billion, up 14% YoY. Greater China rebounded sharply to $25.53 billion. Tim Cook called it “a remarkable, record-breaking quarter”. Shares are up 9.54% over the past month and 28.46% over the past year, trading near $273.84.

Consensus and the Comparison

Metric Q2 FY26 Est. Q2 FY25 Actual
EPS $1.94 $1.65
Revenue $109.6B $95.36B

What I’m Watching Tonight

Four things matter most. First, whether iPhone momentum carried into the March quarter after that unprecedented holiday demand. Second, Services durability after another record quarter. Third, Greater China, which swung from $14.49 billion in Q4 FY25 back to growth in Q1. Fourth, gross margin trajectory and any Apple Intelligence commentary.

Capital return is also in focus. Apple historically refreshes its buyback authorization with the March quarter. Last year, management authorized an additional $100 billion in buybacks and raised the dividend 4% to $0.26. Tariff and trade policy color from Cook will matter too.

Why Tonight Matters

Apple has beaten EPS estimates eight quarters running, and Polymarket pegs another beat at 94.2% probability. But beats alone haven’t guaranteed lift. After the year-ago Q2 earnings report, shares fell 3.74% the next day despite topping expectations. Tonight’s tone on China, margins, and AI will decide whether the rally extends.

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Photo of Thomas Richmond
About the Author Thomas Richmond →

Thomas Richmond is a financial writer and content strategist with 5+ years of experience covering stocks and financial markets. He has published over 250 articles focused on individual stock analysis, helping investors better understand business fundamentals, stock valuations, and long-term opportunities.

Thomas previously served as a Content Lead at TIKR, a stock research platform, where he helped scale the company’s blog to hundreds of articles per month and contributed to a weekly newsletter reaching more than 100,000 investors.

He specializes in breaking down complex companies into clear, actionable insights for everyday investors, with a focus on fundamentals-driven research.

His work has also been featured on platforms including Seeking Alpha and Sure Dividend.

Outside of work, Thomas enjoys weight lifting and soccer.

Live: Will Apple Blowout Q2 Earnings

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