Apple reports fiscal Q1 (October–December) results after the bell today, and expectations are punchy: analysts look for a record holiday quarter powered by the iPhone 17 cycle, accelerating Services, and a tentative rebound in Greater China. Options pricing implies a brisk move in the stock once the numbers hit.
Consensus snapshot (into the print)
- Revenue: ~$138.1–$138.4B, up ~11% YoY, a new all-time high.
- EPS: ~$2.67–$2.68, ~11% YoY.
- Implied move: ~4% either way, based on near-dated options.
The four swing factors
1) iPhone 17 cycle
Street checks point to Apple’s strongest iPhone growth in more than four years, with double-digit unit/revenue gains through the holidays. Expect commentary on Pro mix, average selling prices, and how fast buyers are adopting new on-device AI features—even if their fuller rollout skews to later in the fiscal year.
2) Services momentum
Services is the margin engine. Consensus bakes in mid-teens growth, helped by App Store, iCloud, AppleCare, and advertising. Watch for any color on gross margin elasticity here versus higher memory/component costs on the hardware side.
3) Greater China
Investors will parse whether holiday promotions and channel resets translated into a rebound. The bar is set for a mid-teens YoY uptick; anything materially above that would soothe share-loss fears, anything soft will revive competitive and macro questions.
4) Margins and AI spend
Gross margin is expected to hold roughly high-40s, with component cost headwinds (notably memory) partly offset by mix, scale and procurement. The Street will also probe the opex and COGS implications of Apple’s AI strategy—including the recently expanded tie-up to leverage external foundation models—plus the cadence of feature rollouts tied to “Apple Intelligence.”
Guidance and the March quarter
The stock reaction may hinge less on today’s beats/misses and more on FQ2 (March) color: iPhone follow-through post-holiday, Services sustaining mid-teens growth, China trajectory, and any read-through on AI-feature timing. A guide that implies mid-single-digit revenue growth with stable margins likely keeps bulls engaged; anything pointing to memory-cost pressure, softer China, or slower AI monetization could cap the upside.
Capital returns & balance sheet
Expect the usual: substantial buybacks, steady dividend cadence, and minimal net debt. Any acceleration in repurchases post-pullback would be read as a vote of confidence from management.
Setup: how the print could move the stock
- Bull case: Revenue ≥ $140B, EPS ≥ $2.70; iPhone + mid-teens with strong Pro mix; Services ≥ +15%; China comfortably double-digit; gross margin resilient. March guide implies steady growth.
- Base case: In-line headline numbers; balanced commentary on China and AI; March guide roughly consistent with seasonal patterns.
- Bear case: iPhone shy of expectations; China flat/soft; Services growth cools; margin clipped by memory; cautious March guide.
Bottom line
Consensus is leaning bullish into tonight’s release: the iPhone 17 cycle and Services growth put a new revenue record in sight, and options imply a sizable move either way. For the stock, the key isn’t just how big the holiday was—but whether Apple convinces investors that AI-driven upgrades and Services mix can compound through 2026, even as costs and China remain swing variables.
FAQ
When does Apple report?
After U.S. market close today (Thursday, January 29, 2026, Europe/Berlin time).
What are the headline estimates?
Around $138B revenue and $2.67–$2.68 EPS for fiscal Q1.
What will traders watch first?
iPhone revenue/mix, Services growth, gross margin, China, and March-quarter guidance.
How big a move is priced in?
Roughly ±4% based on near-term options.
What could surprise positively?
A clean beat on iPhone and Services with resilient margins, plus confident March guidance and concrete AI deployment milestones.
Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, an offer, or a solicitation to buy or sell any security. Investing involves risk, including loss of principal. Do your own research and consider consulting a qualified financial adviser.





