![]()
- Greece Still to Convince Skeptical Euro Zone
- A Secretive Hedge Fund Legend Prepares to Surface
- Greece's Debt Drama Is Downside Risk to $100 Oil
- Greece Needs to Be the Sacrificial Lamb: Pro

- The World's Best Beers
- We 'Screwed Up' on A380 Wing Cracks: Airbus CEO
- Mortgage Problems? Turn Your House Into a Billboard
- Positive Signs for US, Japan Economies: OECD
- Venezuela's Capriles Seeks to Beat Chavez in Vote
- Option Bulls Bet on Riverbed’s Rising Tide
- Barbie: Where Fashion Week and Toy Fair Collide
- US Stocks Avoid Closing Down Over 1%, Again
- In Search of America's ‘Hottest Forecasters’
- Dow vs. S&P 500: Which is a Better Investment?
- Mick Fleetwood on the MP3 ‘Dumbing Down’ of Music
- Avis Is on the Road to Strong Growth: Analyst
- Private Homebuilders: Dead Men Walking
- LinkedIn’s Growth Is Already Priced In: Analyst
MOST SHARED
- S&P’s Moritz Kraemer Is Euro Zone’s ‘Mr. Scissorhands’
- Positive Signs for US, Japan Economies: OECD
- Italy One-Year Debt Costs Fall at Auction
- Global Markets Update: European Stocks Follow Asia Higher at the Open
- US Stocks Seen Higher on Greece Vote
- Obama's Election-Year Budget to Target Rich
- Mortgage Problems? Turn Your House Into a Billboard
- New York Fashion Week Fall 2012
- Option Bulls Bet on Riverbed’s Rising Tide
- European Shares Rise After Greek Vote
MOST POPULAR
HOT ON FACEBOOK
Apple Expected to Get a Boost from iPhone
Producer, CNBC.com
Apple earnings, which are scheduled to come out after the bell Monday, are expected to fall within a range of 99 cents and $1.17 a share, according to analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial.
On average, those analysts are projecting earnings of $1.08 a share.
Meanwhile, revenue is expected to be between about $7.19 billion and $7.65 billion, according to Thomson, with a mean estimate of $7.37 billion.
Helping to drive Apple [AAPL
Loading...
()
] sales is the "halo" created by the release of the new iPhone, according to some analysts.
"Global is a key part because the company is too U.S.-centric right now," said Brian Cooley an analyst for CNET.com. "The iPhone is going to be a big part of their global incursion to build the halo and sell more Macs as well as iPhones in many countries."
Although the iPhone is generating a lot of the buzz around Apple, iPhones are not the company's main source of revenue.
"Mac’s are the real engine of the company," said Mike Abramsky an analyst for RBC Capital Markets. "So we want to hear, obviously, a Mac number in the 2.4-2.5 million range."
The hype that surrounds Apple products also helps create revenue and gives it a one-up on it's competitors, said Marc Einstein, senior industry analyst of ICT Practice at Frost & Sullivan Asia Pacific.
"What really puts Apple apart is the marketing it received, and the publicity is really unprecedented. So I think that is going to give them an edge for the rest of the year," Einstein said.
Despite the expected increase in earnings, there is still a lingering fear among investors because of concerns regarding Apple's CEO Steve Jobs' health, according to a report in the New York Post.
Jobs, a cancer survivor, was reported as looking thinner at the last developer's conference which sparked a temporary lull in Apple's trading partly because there is no set plan for CEO succession.
Andy Hargreaves, a senior research analyst for Pacific Crest Securities, said he does not expect Apple to give that much insight regarding Jobs health.
"He is as important to that company as any CEO in America or in the world, so it’s a huge, huge issue, but I’m not expecting the company to make any major comments on it other than to say he recovered from the flu and is continuing to operate very, very healthily right now," Hargreaves said.
- With the Michigan primary coming up, Mitt Romney will have to explain to voters why he strongly opposed the auto industry bailout.
- The roles of CEOs are changing, says a top exec at Infosys— and here’s what must be done.
- Along with being the star of TV’s “NCIS,” Pauley Perrette found time to launch a southern bakery in Manhattan.
- What if aging was something that could be prevented? That’s what some biotech start-ups and investors are after.
- There’s a feeling among rockers like Mick Fleetwood and Neil Young that MP3 compression is ruining music.
- A month after the buzz about the baby name Blue Ivy, parents Jay-Z and Beyonce are applying to get the moniker trademarked.












