4 Reasons to Buy Apple Stock Like There’s No Tomorrow


Investors may be a bit hesitant to take a swing on Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) at this time. Not only have the company’s revenue and earnings been relatively stagnant since 2022, but the stock’s continued gains during this stretch have also bolstered the risk of a pullback.

If you’re on the fence about stepping into a new stake in the iPhone maker, you might just want to hold your nose and dive in anyway. Although the stock is expensive and growth in some of its business segments has been nonexistent lately, there’s still plenty working in this consumer-technology titan’s favor. Four factors stand out among the rest.

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As of early this year, the last time the company disclosed the number, more than 2.2 billion Apple-made devices were in use around the planet. The vast majority of them are presumably iPhones, although it stands to reason that fans of the popular smartphone also opt for other iOS devices that allow for a fairly seamless user experience.

That doesn’t make the iPhone the world’s most popular mobile device — not by a long shot. Data from GlobalStats indicates there are more than twice as many Android-powered devices in use worldwide today than there are of Apple’s operating system.

Don’t let this lesser reach fool you, though. While Apple’s user headcount may be smaller, these users are far more active users of their devices. They’re also bigger spenders. Recent numbers from Sensor Tower suggest iOS users collectively spend more than twice what Android’s users do, meaning on a per-person basis iOS users shell out four times as much in an effort to make the most of their mobile devices. Moreover, the second quarter’s iOS app spending was up 13% year over year, easily outpacing spending growth via Android, and extending a well-established trend.

This continued progress is ultimately an indication of how “sticky” Apple’s digital ecosystem is, of course. Once people begin to use it, they want to use it more and more.

And this stickiness has value beyond the ongoing growth of Apple’s services revenue. Although actual sales growth — as measured by unit as well as revenue — is nil right now, the company’s flagship product boasts a big number of repeat buyers. Bloomberg Intelligence reports Apple’s consumer loyalty rate is above 90%, versus Android’s at only 80%. This jibes with similar data from Consumer Intelligence Research Partners that says more people are likely to switch from an Android device to an Apple-made one versus the other way around.


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