With a $4.47T market cap and a 37x P/E, Apple is priced for an AI-driven hardware supercycle. Q2 2026 results show accelerating 22% iPhone growth and expanding 49% margins, but regulatory walls are closing in on the $100B+ Services ecosystem. Do on-device AI features justify the steepest multiple in decades? Four analyst lenses, three scenarios, four time horizons.
Gray line = Apple's actual price into today; colored paths = synthesized scenario midpoints forward, probability-weighted (base 50% · bull 25% · bear 25%). Note the Base path's "hump and drift" — earnings climb, but the 37x multiple compresses, resulting in a practically flat 5-year return (dead money). Log-linear, mid-year marks. Wall Street 12-month consensus ≈ $328 (range $239–$400).
Those probabilities are a judgment call — so make them yours. Drag to set how likely the bear and bull cases are (base takes the remainder); the blended target below, the dotted line on the chart, and the prob-weighted row of the scenario cards all update live.
The same fundamentals support wildly different conclusions depending on which framework you trust. Each lens below is a synthesized expert perspective with its own 12-month target.
We are entering the biggest hardware upgrade cycle since 5G. Apple Intelligence and the new Siri AI require 12GB of unified memory, walling off anything older than an iPhone 17 Pro. With 1.5B+ aging iPhones in the wild, the ASP (Average Selling Price) expansion and volume unit sales will drive a multi-year revenue shock that breaks past peak estimates.
Ignore the supercycle noise and look at the cash. The company throws off $108B in free cash flow annually and operates at an astounding 125% ROE. The board just authorized another $100B buyback, continuing to aggressively shrink the float. Even if hardware sales are just "fine," the capital return mechanics put a concrete floor under the stock.
You cannot justify a 37x P/E on a mature hardware business — that's a software multiple. The DOJ antitrust suit and EU Digital Markets Act are actively dismantling the iOS walled garden. Take rates on the App Store will compress, and the ~$20B/year 100% margin TAC payment from Google is in severe legal jeopardy. Hardware doesn't deserve this premium.
Apple is no longer a phone company; it is an impenetrable consumer tax. Services revenue hit an all-time record of $31B (growing 16% YoY) at 76%+ gross margins. With a 2.5B active device installed base, Apple Intelligence just cements the lock-in. They own the richest consumer demographic on Earth, and they will monetize them forever.
What the sell-side expects over the next year. Bars are sorted low to high; the dashed line is today's $302.54 — note the dispersion between the hardware skeptics and the AI supercycle bulls.
Sell-side 12-month targets — a selection of the ~42 firms covering Apple; the full consensus is ≈ $328, about +8% above today. The dashed line marks today's $302.54. Firms, ratings, and targets illustrative.
Synthesized scenario midpoints (mid-year). Returns shown vs. today's $302.54. Notice the base case compresses over time: earnings grow, but the market re-rates the premium multiple downwards, generating flat long-term returns.
Where the money actually goes. The sheer scale of Apple's free cash flow ($108B+) anchors the downside.
Apple's financial profile is peerless: revenue marching toward half a trillion dollars, while capital expenditures stay remarkably low (the clay bars). Because Apple outsources heavy fabrication (TSMC), it generates astronomical free cash flow on minimal capex. Total debt (slate) continues to roll off while cash is funneled into the $100B buyback. Figures illustrative; debt is gross, FCF is trailing.
The base case shows flat stock returns not because earnings stall, but because multiple compression eats the growth. This is the EPS ladder.
Adjusted EPS. Gray = reported, olive = estimates assuming steady upgrades and Services expansion. Notice that EPS doubles from 2024 to 2031. The fact that the base-case stock price is roughly flat over the same period entirely reflects the P/E multiple contracting from a euphoric 37x back toward 25-28x. You are paying for tomorrow's earnings today.
Q2 FY26, year-over-year — read these against a stock sitting at a ~37x multiple.
Apple is still accelerating. Q2 2026 was a blowout, with iPhone up 22% fueled by the iPhone 17 hardware demand, and total earnings tracking identically at +22%. Frontier categories like the India geographic segment and Spatial Computing (off a small base) show where the next decade of top-line expansion will come from.
The entire valuation argument compresses into one disagreement: does Apple Intelligence drive a multi-year iPhone supercycle, or will regulatory pressure break the Services moat?
Where each risk sits, not just how big it is. Notice how antitrust threats occupy the hot upper-right corner; they are highly likely to materialize and strike directly at Apple's most profitable margins.
DOJ and EU rulings force side-loading, alternative billing, or void the $20B Google Search deal, slashing the 76% Services margin.
Users decide cloud-based AI is "good enough" and refuse to upgrade their older iPhones, stalling hardware revenue growth.
Huawei and local players capture premium smartphone market share in mainland China, fueled by nationalist buying.
A blockade or conflict involving Taiwan immediately halts TSMC chip production, severing Apple's entire hardware supply chain.
The product mix shifts away from high-margin Pro iPhones and Services back towards lower-margin baseline hardware.
Spatial computing completely fails to find a mass-market use case, leading to abandoned R&D and a multi-billion dollar write-off.
Component shortages or labor disputes in final assembly sites (India/Vietnam) cause temporary holiday quarter misses.
A persistently strong US dollar continues to drag down reported international revenue.
Hover the dotted terms in the metrics, or scan the desk's working definitions here.