Apple warning delivers fresh blow for markets\, global growth

Apple warning delivers fresh blow for markets, global growth

AFP  |  London 

Stock markets retreated once more Thursday as China's slowing forced to slash its revenue forecast, wiping as much as $55 billion from its value and dragging down share prices in the wider sector.

The rare revenue warning from suggested weaker-than-anticipated sales of iPhones and other gadgetry, in part because of trade frictions between and

Apple shares tumbled more than 7.5 percent in pre-market trading, valuing the group at about $700 billion -- far off the landmark $1.0 trillion level reached in August.

"For a while now there's been an adage in the markets that as long as Apple was doing fine, everyone else would be OK. Therefore, Apple's rare profits warning is a red flag for market watchers," noted Neil Wilson, at

"A lot of this is Apple specific (...) But the warning also tells a lot about what is happening on in the broader global economy, specifically It tells us that is experiencing a period of softness," he added.

Apple's announcement hit the tech sector, in particular its suppliers.

In late morning deals, shares in Franco-Italian group dived 9.7 percent to just below 11 euros.

German giant was down five percent. Asian tech firms earlier took their own hit, with Hong Kong-listed and down 6.8 and 5.4 percent, while Apple supplier shed 1.8 percent in

"A flagging Chinese and fewer (iPhone) upgrades are the headline reasons for Apple's stumble, but read between the lines and the is just a whisker away from suggesting it may have pushed customers too hard on price," said Nicholas Hyett, at

Apple's warning sent the yen soaring, with the Japanese currency viewed as a haven investment in times of turmoil.

The yen surged nearly four percent to 104.87 against the dollar before the greenback recovered.

The Japanese unit reached also to a 10-year high against the Australian dollar, which is seen as a bellwether for China.

The Aussie has been battered by slowing growth in China, a key export destination for the country's commodities sector.

"The moves were very violent," said Stephen Miller, an at

Apple's "would have caught some by... surprise".

The yen also reached multi-month highs versus the dollar and euro.

"Stock markets have been wildly volatile over the last few weeks with almost daily large swings on Wall Street," said James Hughes, at

"Worries about global growth continue to lead investors to seek out safe havens, with focus seemingly switching to the yen.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, January 03 2019. 18:20 IST