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Businesses Microsoft Apple

Will Microsoft Overtake Apple as the World's Most Valuable Company? (appleinsider.com) 101

"As Microsoft stock rises and Apple's falls over analysts expectation of slowing iPhone demand, the two firms are once more within $100 billion of each other — the smallest gap in over two years..." writes the blog Apple Insider: In August 2020, Apple became the first publicly-traded US company to reach a $2 trillion market cap, and Microsoft became the second one in June 2021. Later in October 2021, Microsoft took over the top spot, and for a time was move valuable than Apple by $100 billion. While the values of the two firms have continually changed, Microsoft is now worth just $100 billion less than Apple, according to MarketWatch. Microsoft is valued at $2.73 trillion, while Apple — fallen from its recent $3 trillion high — is currently at $2.83 trillion.

MarketWatch notes that Microsoft's stock rose 57% in 2023, compared to Apple's which rose 48%. Microsoft shares have also reportedly seen what are described as slimmer losses at the start of 2024. Apple, on the other hand, has seen its shares take a considerable drop in recent days. The first hit was taken following a claim by Barclays that iPhone demand is weakening and that the iPhone 16 range will not offer any compelling new features to tempt upgraders.

The analyst view that Apple is dependent on iPhone sales is part of why Microsoft is doing better. Analysts see Microsoft has being less attached to any hardware, and more attached to subscription software such as Office 365, and so therefore less attached to any falling demand for phones or computers. And, Microsoft has launched an AI tool in Copilot, while Apple has not unveiled any similar ChatGPT-style app or service.

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Will Microsoft Overtake Apple as the World's Most Valuable Company?

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  • Who cares? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sethmeisterg ( 603174 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @05:49PM (#64139183)
    Why does this shit matter?
    • Perhaps someone is thinking about adjusting his stock portfolio?

    • by znrt ( 2424692 )

      it doesn't. your concept of "news that matter" might need some adjustment. contact your local attitude counselor at the earliest opportunity.

      btw ... betteridge already said no. shhhh! keep the secret!

    • Zoom, Slack, Gitlab, Cognos, Celonis and so many many other software vendors who are pushed out or are under unfair competition by MS 'we can do that too and for (semi) free' .
  • says no.

    So Microsoft has jumped right into the AI hype with Copilot which will go the way of every other tech fad (Cortana or NFT's, anyone?) within a few years, and we'll all be stuck with a stupid new button on our keyboards. Meanwhile a Barclays "analyst with no compelling data" claims that iPhone demand will drop (yeah, I read the article at that last link, which says itself that this prediction is unlikely).
    • by BeerCat ( 685972 )

      While Betteridge's law says no, real life says "that depends"

      If Copilot actually turns out to be the Next Big Thing, then "yes". If it fizzles, then "probably not"

      If they go full on Windows on ARM, then "yes". If they try and sideline it and stick with Intel/AMD then power generating companies will love it, but everyone else will be looking more closely at the power vs performance metrics. If the "power at any cost" group is larger than the "best performance at the least power" then the original question ma

      • If they go full on Windows on ARM, then "yes"

        I'm not so sure about that one. One of the biggest reasons for Windows' continued success is its support for AAA games thanks to the power of dedicated graphics cards. SoCs are very impressive, especially for productivity, but no one is going to be gaming on them, especially competitively, anytime soon. If Microsoft went full "Windows on ARM", that would be the biggest shot in the arm that Linux has ever had. Sure, many would people would probably stick with

        • It's not clear that ARM-based solutions can't eventually surpass amd64, although it's also not clear that they could.

          On the other hand, for most business uses, a bunch of ARM cores would be just fine. Many jobs are now just done in a combination of office apps and the browser. Those users don't need an x86-compatible chip at all, and they're not doing any heavy processing tasks.

    • by GrahamJ ( 241784 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @06:20PM (#64139237)

      This. Phone demand might have leveled off but everyone has one and that's not changing anytime soon. Unless iPhones somehow fall massively out of favour Apple will continue to sleep on a pile of money with many beautiful women.

      MS, meanwhile, is putting every egg it has in the AI basket and if that doesn't pan out they will be all over its face. The reality will probably be somewhere in between but where's the revenue? Apple makes money on every iPhone; what does MS make from AI? Subscriptions to CoPilot? Bing taking over Google for search? Your Windows Chatbot You Didn't Ask For(TM) constantly advertising at you? Royalties for logos on keyboards? I don't see a lot of good answers.

      • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @07:41PM (#64139379)

        Microsoft casts a big net though, they don't need huge hits just stamp out their section of each market.

        Just like everyone still has and needs phones businesses need all their Microsoft stuff. Plus their gaming division, and hardware (people do like a lot of Surface stuff) and regular ol' OEM Windows and 365 and Azure. It's got it's fingers in a lot of pies.

        • by mjwx ( 966435 )

          Microsoft casts a big net though, they don't need huge hits just stamp out their section of each market.

          Just like everyone still has and needs phones businesses need all their Microsoft stuff. Plus their gaming division, and hardware (people do like a lot of Surface stuff) and regular ol' OEM Windows and 365 and Azure. It's got it's fingers in a lot of pies.

          Yep, the phone market is pretty much the only part of the IT industry Microsoft hasn't managed to get into. Microsoft has many divisions that are strong and profitable, even their games division eventually makes money. Apple has one product and if anything happens to the Iphone there won't be much left.

      • MS, meanwhile, is putting every egg it has in the AI basket

        It is not. AI makes up a small portion of Microsoft's portfolio and currently makes up fuck all of their revenue. You need to spend less time reading news stories about AI.

    • Chasing after fads is just what tech companies do. Apple just seems to think AR is the next big thing, despite the fact that wearables really haven't set the market on fire.

    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      >which will go the way of every other tech fad (Cortana or NFT's, anyone?) within a few years,

      I see that you're dismissing a news fad. Would you like me to open a template for you?

      I see that you're trying to close my popup! I can randomly delete some files at random.

      I see that you're trying to delete me! I just sent your social security number and financial passwords to the dark web! :)

      hawk

  • by rbrander ( 73222 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @05:59PM (#64139203) Homepage

    Oh, right, you meant "valuable" to the investors, not to the world.

    Successfully creating a monopoly, illegally defending it but getting away with that after found guilty in antitrust court when Bush ordered the case dropped, the way Reagan did for the IBM case, does create "value" for investors.

    But it is rent-collection, and Keynes joked (we think) about the "euthanasia of the rentiers" needed for progress towards that 3-day week he dreamed of.

    • but getting away with that after found guilty in antitrust court when Bush ordered the case dropped

      Except that didn't happen at all. They were found guilty in anti-trust court and had to do several things as part of the judgement. One of the things was break up the company, which they appealed against, and the appeal found in favour of Microsoft. It was only after the DOJ lost that appeal that they "settled" which is to say Microsoft still did everything ordered to by the court excluding breaking itself up. And all the requirements placed on the company had a sunset clause on them which was even extende

      • by rbrander ( 73222 )

        Oh, my mistake was believing large newspapers that had headlines and first lines like:

        Bush drops plan to break up Microsoft

        The US government *unexpectedly* announced yesterday...Although most legal experts considered a break-up unlikely, few expected the government to remove the option from the negotiating table.,,"surprised and perplexed that they have done this as it seems to be contrary to the way the proceedings had unfolded. They have cut their own legs out from under them."

        etc etc.

        https://www.theguard [theguardian.com]

        • by hawk ( 1151 )

          Decades ago, my antitrust professor commented that the only way to explain the incoherence of US antitrust policy and law was that each new attorney in the division knew that "If I can win a case against IBM, there's a partnership and a corner office waiting for me."

          Some of the IBM cases were sensible, and others were just silly

          My favorite was when they were sued for "predatory advancement of technology"--they "unfairly" introduced a triple disk drive unit the aftermarket competitor had matched the base si

      • by hawk ( 1151 )

        > and the appeal found in favour of Microsoft.

        No, not really.

        That suggests that it had something to with the legal positions of MS and DOJ.

        I was still up to speed on both the relevant law & economics at the time, and followed it.

        Rather, the court ruled that the Judge's babbling and boasting before the proceedings were over undercut any confidence in what he was doing, and vacated the remedy proceedings (a rather uncommon outcome).

        So at the time it was settled, the DoJ was in the same position as it w

        • Rather, the court ruled that the Judge's babbling and boasting before the proceedings were over undercut any confidence in what he was doing, and vacated the remedy proceedings (a rather uncommon outcome).

          And by that you mean he publicly commented on the stupid tricks Microsoft's lawyers tried to pull every day of the trial. IOW this was less a decision about what Microsoft did, but about the rule not to smack talk lawyers. Considering that the judge was known for his dislike of bullshitting lawyers, that was a genius strategy from the get-go.

          • by hawk ( 1151 )

            There really isn't a circumstance in which it's even vaguely appropriate for a judge to make public comment about a case that is still before him. Judges just aren't entitled to "victory laps" in the cases they hear!

            You can similarly explain a lot of the OJ trial by the judge and prosecutor's looking ahead to book deals and such.

  • Only way they can compete.
  • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @06:11PM (#64139213) Journal

    Don't forget, Microsoft has added (reassigned?) a new Copilot key to the Windows keyboard. That has to be worth $200 billion right there alone.

  • by david.emery ( 127135 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @06:13PM (#64139221)

    Valuation is "stock price x number of shares". One way to think about stock price is P/E, the ratio of the price over earnings. Apple's PE is 29.60 )(https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/AAPL/apple/pe-ratio) , Microsoft's is 35.19 (https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/MSFT/microsoft/pe-ratio) So that says that Wall St values Microsoft's earnings more than Apple's earnings. (Tesla is 79.88, showing Wall St pays A LOT MORE for a dollar of Tesla earning, than it does for either Apple or Microsoft.) So if we assume Apple and Microsoft revenues grow at the same rate, Wall St would have to continue to value MSFT's earnings more than AAPL's.

    All this is to say that valuation is just a 'construct' of the markets, based on how the market perceives future value of current earning potential. Could Wall St decide that Microsoft is more likely to grow faster/better than Apple? Sure. Does that mean that Microsoft is earning more money or more importantly, more profit? Not necessarily!

    • P/E ratio is the first thing I thought of when I saw this headline. I figured Apple had a better ratio, but Microsoft's wasn't as bad as I expected. Of course, the current share price is based on speculation of future value. My guess is that Microsoft is gaining on Apple because of their close relationship with OpenAI, which is considered to be one of the most promising companies in an industry that could potentially change the world. On Apple's side, the closest thing they seem to have is Siri, which m
      • I think the links I posted have graphs of P/E, which are instructive, particularly if you compare the two trendlines.

  • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @06:33PM (#64139271)

    Being $100 billion dollars. Think about that staggering figure for a minute.

    • It sounds staggering, but in context of their profits it is not so big, They both clear around $150b a year in profit alone.
  • More people have to do business with Microsoft, than have to do business with apple.

    • Re:Well (Score:4, Insightful)

      by caseih ( 160668 ) on Sunday January 07, 2024 @08:49PM (#64139453)

      Correct. In the metrics that really matter, MS is far more important and valuable to the world economy than Apple is. Apple is obviously very successful and very profitable. But if MS disappeared tomorrow, it would hurt economically far worse than Apple.

      • If all Microsoft products disappeared tomorrow, that's true.

        But if Microsoft-the-corporation disappeared tomorrow then it would be a massive boon to companies which offer superior technology but have been stymied by the inertia of Microsoft. And ultimately we would wind up using more secure, more performant software.

  • A lot of Microsoft's success is due to Satya Nadella who is a brilliant CEO. Many of the comments in this discussion are variations of "I'm smart and others, the Microsoft customers, are dumb". Hardly a compelling position. Compare Microsoft investing heavily in cloud services starting well behind Amazon while Apple has been content to make minor yearly upgrades to the IPhone.
  • I am a Microsoft hater, who never-ever bought any Microsoft product with his own money (I had to buy a few times at work), but it would totally make sense to me. I see Microsoft products around all the time, but Apple... maybe once in a month. And yes, I do work in IT (government, we have mostly Microsoft with a bit of Linux).

  • They have potentially vast wealth, they cannot realistically spend, or use ...

    because it only really exists for people buying and selling their stocks and shares, not for the company itself - unless the company buys or sells it's own shares to make money ...

  • What the iphone did to blackberry, some other newer product can do to their precious iphone.

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