Apple Shares Fall, Time To Buy?

 | Jan 29, 2014 08:40AM ET

After the bell on Monday, tech icon, Apple (AAPL), reported results.

On the one hand, the company delivered record profits of $14.50 per share, when analysts were expecting $14.05.

But when it came to iPhone sales during the all-important holiday quarter, Apple whiffed hard enough that the fans in the bleacher seats could feel it.

The company only sold 51 million iPhones – a full four million shy of analysts’ estimates. At an average selling price of $637, that works out to $2.5 billion in missed sales. Like I said, big whiff!

As a result, the market has taken Apple hostage.

Following the report, shares fell as much as 9%, vaporizing roughly $40 billion in market value.

Now, by no means is Apple in danger of going out of business. Not with over $13 billion in quarterly profit and a cash stockpile closing in on $160 billion.

However, an ominous trend is developing, pointing to an imminent day of reckoning between CEO Tim Cook and shareholders.

Or as Forbes’ Robert Hof put it, “Investors are getting even more restless.”

Indeed! Here’s why it’s absolutely justified – and, most importantly, how you can safely leverage the situation for your ultimate profit…

How Do You Like Them (Rotten) Apples?

Apple’s unfathomable smartphone shortfall comes at a time when the rest of the industry is firing on all cylinders.

In the last 24 hours, in fact, technology research group, IDC, confirmed that global smartphone sales zoomed 38% last year. They topped one billion units for the first time ever.

Analysts are calling for similarly heady growth of 26% in 2014.

Now, you’d think that trend would be Apple’s friend. Think again!

The bulk of the expected smartphone sales will be “low-quality growth,” according to BNP Paribas analyst, Peter Yu.

Translation: Cheap smartphones, selling for less than $150, will account for the majority of smartphone sales this year.

Pardon the Captain Obvious statement here, but that’s a price point Apple can’t touch.

Consumers’ preference for lower-priced smartphones, and Apple’s inability to compete, is already materializing in the data, too.

Over the last three quarters, Apple’s iPhone sales growth rate plummeted from around 20% to less than 7%, on a year-over-year basis.