Here’s What It Means for the Stock

Here’s What It Means for the Stock


  • The United States court system decided that Google could keep paying Apple to make it the default search engine on Apple devices.

  • Apple is going to keep this lucrative deal but is still falling behind in artificial intelligence.

  • Shares of Apple stock look expensive right now.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Apple ›

The future for Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) just got a lot less murky thanks to the United States court system. In the monopoly case against Google Search, a judge ruled last year that the business was indeed violating anticompetitive laws in the United States. Since then, there has been deliberation on what the remedies would be to keep fair business practices.

Even though the case was not against Apple, the lawsuit posed a major threat to its cash cow licensing deal for Google Search, which the case mentioned as monopolistic behavior that could be deemed illegal. In what some saw as a surprise ruling, the judge decided on Sept. 2 that it was permissible for Apple to receive these payments from Google Search as long as they are not exclusive deals.

At more than $20 billion in licensing fees a year, this is a huge profit driver for Apple, which is why the stock shot up 4% on the announcement. Here’s what the ruling means for Apple and the stock going forward into the age of artificial intelligence (AI).

A person looking at their phone while lying on their bed.
Image source: Getty Images.

Apple’s customer base is a highly lucrative demographic. It has more than 2 billion active computing devices — ranging from the iPhone to Air Pods — that skew usage toward the top earners in countries, especially in the West. This is a huge revenue opportunity for mobile application and software developers.

In order to retain its dominance in the search engine market, Google and its now parent company Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) began paying Apple a licensing fee to make Google Search the default search provider on the Apple Safari browser. Including its cut of search revenue that happens on Safari, Apple’s payment from Google has grown along with the business and is now reported at $20 billion a year or higher.

Apple’s consolidated operating earnings are $130 billion. Even though the company still makes the majority of its profit from selling iPhones, this single fee from Google makes up more than 15% of its annual operating earnings. Along with potentially other licensing deals, it has now been solidified as legal for Apple to receive these payments.

Keeping the Google payment likely led to a sigh of relief from Apple shareholders. A ruling in the other direction would have wiped out hundreds of billions in value from Apple’s market capitalization and led to a fall in the stock price.


finance.yahoo.com
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