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Apple Inc. — Through the Warren Buffett Lens

Ticker: AAPL · Lens: Warren Buffett · Created: 2026-05-17

Thesis

Apple is not a phone company. It's a consumer franchise that happens to make phones—and computers, watches, and services. The moat is the ecosystem: once a customer buys an iPhone, they're locked into iOS, the App Store, iCloud, and eventually an Apple Watch or AirPods. Switching costs are enormous. The brand is so strong that Apple can price its products at a premium and still grow unit sales. Over the past decade, Apple has transformed from a cyclical hardware maker into a recurring-revenue machine. Services now generate over $20 billion in quarterly revenue with gross margins above 70%. That's a wonderful business. The capital allocation is also superb: massive share buybacks have reduced the share count by over 40% since 2013, compounding per-share earnings. The question is whether the growth in services can offset maturing iPhone sales. But even if iPhone units plateau, the installed base of over 2 billion active devices provides a growing annuity of service revenue. Apple earns extraordinary returns on tangible capital—often over 100%—and generates enormous free cash flow. The risk is that the ecosystem's dominance could be disrupted by regulation or technological shifts, but that seems unlikely in the next decade. I'd be comfortable owning Apple if the stock market closed for ten years.

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