Jefferies Financial Group downgraded shares of Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL – Free Report) from a hold rating to an underperform rating in a research note issued to investors on Tuesday, MarketBeat reports. Jefferies Financial Group currently has $200.
Today, analysts at Jefferies and Loop Capital each downgraded their ratings on Apple.
According to estimates by IDC and Canalys, overall iPhone market share fell 1% year over year in Q4 to 23% despite the broader market for smartphone shipments increasing by 3%. Apple kicked off its big AI push in October, releasing the first raft of its Apple Intelligence updates.
Jefferies analyst Edison Lee maintained a Sell rating on Apple (AAPL – Research Report) today and set a price target of $202.33. The company’s
Update: The story was updated with Loop Capital's rating action on Apple and stock price movement. Jefferies downgraded Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) rating to Underperform from Hold noting that it expects results and guidance to miss estimates. In addition ...
Apple Inc. was downgraded to perform from outperform at Oppenheimer, in the latest sign of caution building ahead of the company’s results.
Costfoto / NurPhoto via Getty Images Apple shares fell Tuesday after Jefferies downgraded the stock to an “underperform” from “hold” on Monday. Jefferies noted that flagging iPhone sales ...
In a rare move, analysts at Jefferies downgraded one of the largest companies in the world, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), to underperform. Wall Street analysts are known for being bullish, so underperform and sell ratings tend to make up only a small percentage of overall analyst ratings.
EST Apple (AAPL) falls 2% to $225.04 after Jefferies cuts to sell, Loop to holdInvest with Confidence: Follow TipRanks' Top Wall Street
See the 10 stocks » Jefferies and Loop take Apple down a notch Today, analysts at Jefferies and Loop Capital each downgraded their ratings on Apple. Jefferies analyst Edison Lee downgraded Apple ...
Apple was downgraded by not one but two Wall Street sell-side analysts, as preliminary figures for the December quarter suggest disappointing iPhone sales. Jefferies and Loop take Apple down a ...
The bosses of the magnificent seven tech companies, which drove the S&P 500′s more than 50 per cent surge over the past years on Wall Street, turned out in force for US president Donald Trump ’s swearing-in ceremony in Washington on Monday.