Apple (AAPL) is set to post its results for the second fiscal quarter on April 23rd and a new report suggests increased competition may have hurt Apple more than usual. Credit Suisse analyst Kulbinder Garcha said in a recent note to clients that competition is hurting Apple more than it has in the past, and he sees iPhone sales in the March quarter falling to 38 million units — though that figure is still up from 35.1 million iPhones in the same quarter last year.
Moving forward, Garcha thinks competition will become an even bigger factor in Apple’s fiscal third quarter following the launch of Samsung’s (005930) Galaxy S4, shipments of which are expected to top 10 million in the phone’s first month of availability. For the June quarter, the analyst estimates that Apple will sell 31 million smartphones, up from 26 million in the year-ago quarter.
In line with a number of earlier reports, Garcha expects Apple to debut new iPhone models this summer and anticipation leading up to that announcement will put additional pressure on June-quarter sales. Following the next-generation launches, however, the analyst sees new carrier deals helping Apple in the coming years.
“Beyond the near term, we believe carrier expansion could add a further 65mn units to iPhone volumes, the timing of which is hard to predict but likelihood remains high,” Garcha wrote. “Apple may have a narrower lead on the hardware than in the past; however, it still retains an ecosystem advantage.”
Credit Suisse reiterated its Outperform rating on Apple shares with a $600 price target.