Apple Hit With Two Downgrades as Tariff and Growth Worries Grow

Apple Inc. received at least two downgrades on Friday, following quarterly results that reinforced concerns over tariffs and its growth potential.

Jefferies cut the stock to underperform, becoming one of the rare bears on the iPhone maker. While the results were in line with expectations, analyst Edison Lee wrote, “tariff impact will expand over time to create more earnings downside.”

Shares fell 3.3% in premarket trading, building on a year-to-date slump of 15%, as of its last close. Still, the stock has rebounded strongly from its April low, rallying about 24%, the second-best performing Magnificent Seven stock over that period.

BB Apple's Volatile Year graph

Apple’s results showed weaker-than-expected sales in China, and that it expects $900 million in higher costs from tariffs. The company also said it expects revenue in the current period to grow in the “low- to mid-single digit” percentage range on a year-over-year basis.

Jefferies called this “the best-case scenario,” as it assumes the tariff on China stays at 20% and no levies on imports from India and Vietnam. “These assumptions are unlikely to hold longer term, especially if there will be sectorial tariff that is non-negotiable.”