Wall Street analysts are buzzing that the timing of Tim Cook’s departure from Apple could bode well for the company’s second-quarter earnings report, scheduled for April 30. Apple announced Monday that Cook will step down as executive chairman and that John Tarnas, senior vice president of hardware engineering, will become CEO effective September 1. Announcements about management changes are always a sensitive issue for companies, so the fact that Apple’s torch goes out about a week after announcing its earnings suggests to analysts that the company may have some good news soon. “Our gut feeling was that the announcement was made pre-earnings to allow us to focus on a great quarter with strong fundamentals in Apple’s report next week,” Ben Reitzes, head of technology research at Melius, said in a note to investors on Monday. “Mr. Cook has been CEO for a long time and probably wants to leave the company amicably.” Analysts at Bank of America had much the same intuition Monday about the company’s near-term performance. “Near-term results are very resilient given that Apple is likely planning these changes from a position of strong business momentum,” Bank of America analyst Wamusi Mohan and colleagues wrote in a note to investors on Monday. According to FactSet, the consensus estimate for second-quarter earnings per share is $1.94 on revenue of $109.35 billion. The average rating of 54 analysts on the stock is Overweight, with a target price of $301.62. Apple shares fell slightly on Tuesday following the announcement, and the stock has remained close to flat since the start of the year. Gil Luria, director of technical research in DA Davidson’s office, made similar claims about the timing of Cook’s resignation. “Tim Cook will not retire in a time of crisis,” he said. “He has an opportunity to simultaneously deliver record iPhone sales and strong growth, a good year of upgrades, and a great roadmap going forward.”Longer term, Street analysts wonder if Ternas’ appointment signals Apple’s renewed focus on hardware and products rather than services. “Apple’s product-oriented leadership with years of deep experience in hardware design signals the potential for us to enter a new era of devices: AI-enabled, wearable form factors such as AR glasses and smart home devices,” Bank of America’s Mohan said. “2027 could be a big product year (iPhone 20th anniversary).”
