Category Archives: oud

Smartphone Shipments Decline; Apple, Samsung Lead Retreat

Global smartphone shipments declined for the first time ever on a year-over-year basis in the first quarter, two research firms reported Thursday. Juniper Research said that smartphone shipments fell nearly 6% on an annual basis to 320 million units in Q1. Strategy Analytics estimated that smartphone shipments declined 3% to 335 million units last quarter. “It is the first time ever, since the modern smartphone market began in 1996, that global shipments have shrunk on an annualized basis,” Strategy Analytics analyst Linda Sui said in a blog post . “Smartphone growth is slowing due to increasing penetration maturity in major markets like China and consumer caution about the future of the world economy.” Samsung and Apple ( AAPL ), the two largest smartphone vendors, both posted declines in the quarter. Samsung’s smartphone shipments fell 4% to 79 million units in Q1. Apple’s iPhone shipments dipped 16% to 51.2 million units in Q1, Strategy Analytics said. Samsung was the No. 1 vendor, with 23.6% market share, followed by Apple, with 15.3%. Both lost ground to fast-growing Chinese smartphone makers including Huawei, Oppo and Vivo. On Tuesday, Apple reported its first-ever drop in iPhone sales . It said that its iPhone sales fell 16% to 51.19 million units in its fiscal second quarter, which ended March 26. For the current quarter, Apple signaled another decline in iPhone sales. Apple’s smartphone decline is attributed to difficult comparisons with the outsized success of the iPhone 6. The current-generation handsets, the iPhone 6S series, offer only incremental improvements in features. On Wednesday, research firm IDC said that smartphone makers managed to eke out a tiny gain in Q1. IDC estimates that smartphone shipments rose 0.2% to 334.9 million units. IDC said that shipments declined 0.6% for No. 1 vendor Samsung and 16.3% for No. 2 vendor Apple. But the Chinese vendors ranked third, fourth and fifth (Huawei, Oppo and Vivo, respectively) posted big gains in shipments, IDC said. Huawei increased its smartphone shipments by 58.4% year over year in Q1. Oppo and Vivo posted increases of 153.2% and 123.8%, respectively.

First Solar Q1 Torched On ITC Extension; SunPower, Sunrun Burned

First Solar ( FSLR ) stock tumbled Thursday on its $100-million-plus Q1 sales miss late Wednesday and the “understandable” but likely-to-raise-questions resignation of CEO Jim Hughes, Credit Suisse analyst Patrick Jobin says. CFO Mark Widmar will succeed Hughes, effective July 1. Alexander Bradley, vice president of global project finance and treasurer, will step in for Widmar. Hughes led First Solar out of its rocky May 2012 “crisis,” Jobin wrote in a research report. “Polysilicon costs were plummeting and First Solar’s technology was becoming cost disadvantaged,” Jobin wrote. “He successfully regained First Solar’s position of strength, the company’s panel is close to multi-crystalline,” he wrote. The management shift was inevitable, but “changes always tend to raise questions,” Jobin noted. He kept his neutral rating and 72 price target on First Solar stock. In afternoon trading on the stock market today , First Solar stock was down 6.5%, leading a broad 3% tumble in IBD’s 20-company Energy-Solar industry group. Shares of No. 2 rival SunPower ( SPWR ) were down nearly 2%. Residential installers Vivint Solar ( VSLR ) and Sunrun ( RUN ) stocks were down 3.5% and 2.5%, respectively, but shares of No. 1 rival SolarCity ( SCTY ) were up a fraction. For Q1, First Solar reported 3% year-over-year sales growth to $848 million and $1.66 earnings per share, swinging from a 62-cent per-share loss in the year-earlier period. EPS topped views after First Solar sold a 15% stake in its Desert Stateline project to Southern Co. ( SO ) and gained a one-time $38 million cash boost from its module recycling program, Mizuho analyst James von Riesemann wrote in a report. But analysts called for $958.3 million in sales, up 106% year over year. Adjusting for the Stateline and one-time asset sale, First Solar’s EPS would have come in around $1.06, Jobin wrote, still beating the consensus of 21 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for 93 cents. First Solar blamed shifting to lower-priced, module-only sales for the disappointing Q1 sales, von Riesemann reported. He reiterated his neutral rating and 67 price target on First Solar stock. “The key issue appears to be how First Solar’s customers re-sort the timing of projects, given the ITC (investment tax credit) extension and how those customers’ procurement projects will be built up,” he wrote. Hughes noted as much in his remarks on the the company’s late Wednesday earnings conference call. Congress extended the key solar subsidy in December, pushing its expiration date out five years from the initial Dec. 31, 2016, end date. Analysts had predicted a sharp drop-off in installations following the ITC expiration. “In the U.S., the ITC extension has led to an increase in overall opportunity, but customers continue to work through revisions to project timing,” he said. That “has led to some temporary delays in new contracted bookings.”

Google’s Pichai Sees ‘Move From Mobile-First To An AI-First World’

Apple ( AAPL ), Microsoft ( MSFT ) and other rivals of Alphabet ( GOOGL )-owned Google had better raise their game in artificial intelligence. While Apple, Facebook ( FB ) and Amazon.com ( AMZN ) have AI research projects underway, the field is one where Google aims to set itself apart from rivals. So said Sundar Pichai, Google’s chief executive, Thursday in an open letter. Google founders  Larry Page and Sergey Brin normally write the founder’s letter , in the tradition of Berkshire Hathaway ’s ( BRKA ) Warren Buffett. But Pichai wrote this year’s note. Pichai says that AI is key not only to its core search business and mobile computing, but also to Google’s push into the enterprise (corporate) market and cloud computing. “A key driver behind all of this work has been our long-term investment in machine learning and AI,” Pichai wrote. Google has pushed Android software-based mobile phones into a global power vs. Apple’s iPhone. (The Oracle ( ORCL ) vs. Google copyright battle over the Android OS is slated to resume with a second trial on May 9.) Pichai says that Google’s AI will be a difference maker. “Looking to the future, the next big step will be for the very concept of the ‘device’ to fade away. Over time, the computer itself — whatever its form factor — will be an intelligent assistant helping you through your day. We will move from mobile-first to an AI-first world,” he said. While Apple and Google have dominated in the world of mobile apps, there could be competition down the road. Facebook recently introduced “chatbots,” while Microsoft ( MSFT ) launched its “Bot Framework” software tools for developers. Both rely on AI. Google also aims to capitalize on AI in the enterprise market vs. Microsoft and others. “Google started in the cloud and has been investing in infrastructure, data management, analytics and AI from the very beginning. We now have a broad and growing set of enterprise offerings: Google Cloud Platform (GCP), Google Apps, Chromebooks, Android, image recognition, speech translation, maps, machine learning for customers’ proprietary data sets and more,” Pichai said. “As we look to our long-term investments in our productivity tools supported by our machine learning and artificial intelligence efforts, we see huge opportunities to dramatically improve how people work. Your phone should proactively bring up the right documents, schedule and map your meetings, let people know if you are late, suggest responses to messages, handle your payments and expenses, etc.”