KEY POINTS
  • Apple reported Tuesday that iPhone sales were down 12% for its fiscal third quarter.
  • But it showed promising growth in other important categories like services and wearables.
  • As iPhone sales stall, Apple has proved it no longer depends solely on the device for growth.
  • Apple still delivered a strong quarter, even as iPhone sales made up less than half of the company's quarterly revenue for the first time since 2012.
A girl reacts as she tries an iPhone X at the Apple Omotesando store on November 3, 2017 in Tokyo, Japan.

If you had told any serious Apple observer two years ago that the company's stock would jump after reporting a sales decline for the iPhone, they would've called you nuts.

But that's where we were Wednesday morning after Apple reported in its fiscal third-quarter earnings that iPhone sales fell 12% versus the year-ago quarter. In fact, iPhone sales made up less than half of the company's revenue for the quarter for the first time since 2012. (In the past, iPhone revenue made up as much has two-thirds of Apple's sales.)