Why Apple TV Could be Bigger Than You Think
By Chris
Ciaccia | TheStreet.com
From NEW YORK (TheStreet) - An Apple AAPL -branded
television set has been rumored seemingly forever, and now analysts are starting to
incorporate it into their earnings estimates.
Jefferies analyst Peter Misek raised his Apple price target
to $800 per share on Thursday, noting that the tech giant's likely to introduce
an Apple TV set in the fourth quarter of this year.Foxconn's recent investment
in Sharp is
an integral part of getting components for an Apple TV, according to Misek,
echoingTheStreet's take on the deal.
"We
believe the Hon Hai/Sharp deal is due to Sharp's increasing importance to Apple
and iTV," explained Misek, in his research report. "Our recent checks
in Asia indicate that specialty components have begun to ship to Apple's Asia
panel suppliers with polarized films, filters, and IGZO (Indium Gallium Zinc
Oxide) components starting to move in small quantities."
Misek
assumes the iPanel, as he's calling the device, will sell for $1,250 and have
30% gross margins, and would allow Apple to sell an additional iPad or iPhone
due to the halo effect. He believes as many as 2 million Apple television sets
could be sold in the fourth quarter of 2012, and 10 million in calender year
2013. The analyst raised his fiscal year earnings per share estimate to $53.98,
well above the $49.20 that Wall Street
is expecting.
Other analysts have raised
their Apple price targets in recent days,
with Topeka Capital's Brian White giving Apple
a $1,001 price target, the highest on Wall
Street.
Apple
CEO Tim Cook has dropped hints about a potential television set, saying
"Apple doesn't do hobbies as a general rule," when speaking about
Apple's existing set-top box, the Apple TV. He followed that up by saying that
the company "always thought there was something there, and that if we kept
following our intuition and kept pulling that string, we might find something
larger."
An Apple
television set could "disrupt the status quo" according to Barclays
Capital analyst Ben Reitzes.
Reitzes
believes that an Apple-branded television set could make headwinds in the $180
billion LCD TV hardware market. The Barclays analyst believes that Apple could
take 5% of the market with a set costing $1,500. He assumes 40% gross margins
on the device, which means an Apple-branded TV could add $5.40 in earnings in
fiscal 2013.
"Apple's
eventual television could be so much more than a TV - including gaming, video
communication, content delivery, apps, computing and all the capabilities of
the current Apple TV - that it is really not fair to compare it to products
already on the market," Reitzes wrote. He rates Apple
"overweight" with a $730 price target.
Since
Steve Jobs first spoke about a television set in his biography, speculation has
run rampant about the technology. "It will have the simplest user
interface you could imagine," Jobs told biographer Walter Isaacson.
"I finally cracked it."
While Apple TV remains shrouded
in secrecy, there's little doubt that consumer
excitement about the rumored device will continue to escalate.
Apple
declined to comment for this story.
Interested
in more on Apple? See TheStreet Ratings' report card for this stock.
--Written by Chris Ciaccia in New York
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