Apple's Q1 results highlight need for new products
San Francisco: It's going to take more than brisk sales of the iPhone and iPad to convince investors that Apple still has the magic touch.Wall Street's nagging doubts about Apple's further growth prospects were magnified
Apple's management amplified those concerns with a revenue forecast of $43 billion for the current quarter ending in late March, falling about $3 billion below analysts' predictions.
The company's projection also raised the unsettling specter of Apple's quarter revenue declining from the prior year for the first time in more than a decade. It last happened during the opening three months of 2003.
Apple's stock shed $44.50, or 8 percent, to $506 in extended trading following the release of the earnings report.