KEY POINTS
  • Apple uses its second-quarter earnings reports to tell investors how much money its board has authorized the company to spend on share repurchases and dividends.
  • Analysts expect that number to come in at $90 billion.
  • From 2012 through the end of 2022, Apple spent over $572 billion on share repurchases.

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Tim Cook, Apple's Chief Executive Officer (CEO) reacts as a man shows him Apple's Macintosh outside the Apple store at Jio World Drive mall, Mumbai, India on April 18, 2023.

When Apple reports quarterly earnings on Thursday, the results are expected to be somewhat muted — the company already guided investors to a 5% revenue decline due largely to decreases in Mac and iPad sales.

But Apple will still remind investors of its mammoth size and market power, as the company uses its fiscal second-quarter report to tell investors how much the board has authorized it to spend on share buybacks and dividends. It's another way of telling the world how profitable its business is and how much cash it throws off every quarter.

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