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CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Please ensure you fully understand the risks involved. CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Please ensure you fully understand the risks involved.

How to buy and sell apple shares

Apple – the first company to reach a market cap of $1 trillion – has an interesting history. Its shares have captured the public’s attention for decades. We discuss the basics of buying, selling and trading Apple shares.

Apple Source: Bloomberg

Understanding Apple: a brief history

Apple Computer Inc. was formed in 1976 by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. Its stock first went public on 12 December 1980 at $22 a share – at which time Apple’s market cap was already $1.2 billion. Less than a decade later, both Jobs and Wozniak left Apple, resulting in the share price dropping to only $2.

It wasn’t until 1997, when Jobs finally returned, that Apple products really started taking off. First came the iMac Power, then the Mac G4 Cube and Mac OS X operating system, followed by the iPod and finally the iPhone.

The stock posted big gains in 1998 and 1999 with the rise of the dot-com boom but crashed again when the tech bubble burst in 2000. By 2003, company earnings skyrocketed, and the share price began a rapid climb to reach $199.83. However, in 2008, a poor forecast caused the price to drop drastically. The price rebounded only to crash again due to the 2008 market meltdown; this was until impressive sales and profit in 2009 put some major force behind the stock.

In 2011, as Apple was still enjoying its flourishing earnings, Steve Jobs resigned due to illness and died a few months later. Tim Cook was appointed as the new chief executive officer (CEO) when the company’s market cap was around $360 billion, and shares were selling for $380. Apple’s biggest feat came in August 2018 when it was the first publicly traded company to ever reach a $1 trillion market cap.

Apple shares: the basics

Apple shares are listed on the US Tech 100 (.NDX) under the ticker AAPL. If you want to buy, sell or trade Apple shares, you need to understand the details of the business, as well as the factors that impact its share price.

Sales of the popular iPhone are said to be one of the main drivers of the Apple share price, but investors are concerned that these sales are dwindling. The smartphone market is saturated, and products are becoming harder to distinguish from each other, meaning users are considering other options. When Apple launched its latest iPhones in September 2018, share prices started to fall. To make matters worse, the company stopped reporting quarterly iPhone and iPad sales, which did not exactly win the public’s trust.

One of the most important factors to keep an eye on in the coming months is Apple’s services. The business has identified services as the biggest growth driver for the next few years as it aims to generate $50 billion in revenue by 2020. Examples of this are its streaming channel and gaming service launches, which could happen as soon as September 2019. The failure or success of these ventures should be an indicator of share price movement.

Apple stock has generally paid shareholders a quarterly dividend since mid-2012. Some investors choose to increase their stake in the company by pushing the dividend back into Apple shares. Furthermore, Apple often buys back its own stock, thereby reducing shares in the market and increasing their value.

Apple’s key personnel: who manages the company?

There are 13 members on Apple’s executive team:

Tim Cook Chief executive officer
Jeff Williams Chief operating officer
Jonathan Ive Chief design officer
Luca Maestri Chief financial officer
Katherine Adams Senior vice president (General counsel)
Angela Ahrendts Senior vice president (Retail)
Eddy Cue Senior vice president (Internet software and services)
Craig Federighi Senior vice president (Software engineering)
John Giannandrea Senior vice president (Machine learning and AI strategy)
Dan Riccio Senior vice president (Hardware engineering)
Deirdre O’Brien Senior vice president (Retail and people)
Phil W. Schiller Senior vice president (Worldwide marketing)
Johny Srouji Senior vice president (Hardware technologies)

Apple also has a board of directors that oversees the executive team to ensure the interests of all stakeholders and shareholders are being served.

What is Apple’s strategy?

Apple is notoriously secretive, so it’s not clear what new products and services it might have in the works. Up until recently, its strategy was primarily to develop existing products. The last major product release was in 2015 with the launch of the Apple Watch. It now focuses on design and functionality differentiation, and hardware-software integration, rather than new product development. In March 2019, Apple announced that its business model is shifting, and it will now put most of its energy into becoming a digital services provider – with the launch of an Apple streaming channel expected in the near future.

Retail and online store expansion is also important to the corporation, because it seeks a high-quality relationship with the customer.

Apple fundamental analysis: how to analyse Apple

Before choosing to buy, sell or trade Apple shares, it’s important to conduct a thorough fundamental analysis. Fundamental analysis is an in-depth method of studying a company’s financials and external factors to gauge the value of its shares. This method often uses various ratios to determine the value of stock and estimate price movements, such as the price-earnings ratio (P/E), relative dividend yield and return on equity (ROE).

Apple’s price-to-earnings ratio

Apple’s P/E ratio is one way to measure its stock value. Essentially, it explains how much you’d have to spend to make $1 in profit. A high P/E ratio – compared to competitors – could mean the stocks are overvalued.

The P/E ratio is calculated by dividing the market value per share by the earnings per share. The earnings per share are calculated by dividing the total company profit by the number of shares it has issued.

Apple’s relative dividend yield

Dividend yield is a company’s annual dividends – the portion of profit paid out to shareholders – compared to its share price. The relative dividend yield is the dividend yield of a single stock compared to that of the entire index – in this case the US Tech 100. To calculate Apple’s relative dividend yield, first calculate its dividend yield by dividing its annual dividend by the current share price. Next, divide the dividend yield by the average dividend yield for the US Tech 100. A low relative dividend yield could suggest that the shares are overvalued when measured against competitor shares.

Apple’s return on equity

Apple’s ROE measures return on assets – it is expressed as a percentage. ROE is calculated by dividing net income by stakeholder equity. A low ROE could be a possible indicator of overvalued shares. That’s because it would show that Apple is not generating a lot of income relative to the amount of shareholder investment.

Join IG Academy to learn more about fundamental analysis.

How to buy Apple shares

You can purchase Apple shares with IG’s share trading service within minutes via our desktop platform or mobile trading app. Share trading is a non-leveraged investment, which means you will own the shares outright and need to pay their full value upfront. Equity owners hope for two types of return from investments: share price growth and dividend payments.

There are four easy steps to follow if you want to buy Apple shares:

  1. Open a share trading account: you can open an account with IG quickly and easily
  2. Log in: log in to your IG account and go to your ‘My IG dashboard’
  3. Find Apple shares: once you’ve opened and funded a share trading account, you’ll be able to buy your first Apple shares. Open the platform for your share trading account, go to the 'finder' panel on the platform, type in and select ‘Apple’
  4. Choose how to buy: on the deal ticket, you’ll see two tabs: ‘at quote’ and ‘on exchange’. At quote is our best price from a range of market makers. On exchange means interacting directly with the order book of the relevant exchange.

When you receive confirmation of your transaction, you will see those shares in your account. If the price moves, you will see the change in your account. IG will deposit any dividends into your account as soon as we receive the relevant payment from Apple.

How to sell Apple shares

Once you have bought your Apple shares, there may be a time you want to sell them – either to take profit or possibly to avoid a loss if you believe the share price could be about to enter a downward trend. To sell your shares via the IG share trading service:

  1. Click on ‘Apple’ in open positions
  2. Select ‘sell’
  3. Enter the amount of shares you’d like to sell
  4. Confirm the deal

How to trade Apple shares

The first step to trade Apple is deciding how you’d like to take advantage of its share price movements. Trading is different to share trading – you don’t own the underlying asset, so you can go long or short on the stock. When you decide to trade Apple shares, you can trade using leverage, which means you put down a small deposit – known as margin – to gain full market exposure. However, leverage magnifies your exposure because your profit or loss will be based on the full size of your position. If you want to open a leveraged position, you can do so via a CFD trading account.

  • Apple shares CFD trading

A CFD is a contract in which you agree to exchange the difference in the price of Apple shares from when you open your position to when you close it. You can buy CFDs to go long or sell them to go short.

Find out more about CFD trading

This information has been prepared by IG, a trading name of IG Australia Pty Ltd. In addition to the disclaimer below, the material on this page does not contain a record of our trading prices, or an offer of, or solicitation for, a transaction in any financial instrument. IG accepts no responsibility for any use that may be made of these comments and for any consequences that result. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of this information. Consequently any person acting on it does so entirely at their own risk. Any research provided does not have regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any specific person who may receive it. It has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and as such is considered to be a marketing communication. Although we are not specifically constrained from dealing ahead of our recommendations we do not seek to take advantage of them before they are provided to our clients.

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