Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Apple just strongly hinted that one rumored product isn’t launching soon

read original get Apple Rumored Product Poster → more articles
Why This Matters

Apple's recent earnings call suggests that the highly anticipated A18-powered iPad will likely not launch until later this year, possibly delaying the product's release beyond initial expectations. This indicates a cautious approach from Apple amidst supply constraints and strategic timing, impacting consumers eager for new hardware and the broader tech industry's product planning. The delay highlights ongoing supply chain challenges and Apple's careful product rollout strategy.

Key Takeaways

Apple reported a hugely successful quarter yesterday, and while giving guidance for the next quarter, the company strongly implied that one specific new product is unlikely to launch very soon.

Every quarter, Apple holds an investor call where it takes questions related to its earnings and future outlook.

Analysts often try asking questions about future products. And Apple leadership consistently shuts those queries down, almost never revealing anything about its future roadmap.

But on yesterday’s earnings call, there was one future product-related hint that Apple volunteered, completely unprompted.

During his opening comments, Apple CFO Kevan Parekh shared the following:

We expect our June quarter total company revenue to grow by 14 to 17% year-over-year, which comprehends our best view of constrained supply. On iPad, keep in mind, we face a difficult compare driven by the launch of the A16-powered iPad in the prior year.

Apple was rumored to launch a successor to the A16 iPad earlier this year, but it never materialized.

After a new iPad Air arrived in March but no base iPad (despite both releasing last March), reporting indicated that it was still coming soon. Mark Gurman wrote at Bloomberg, “it’s still coming this year, and the hardware is ready to go.”

However, Parekh’s comments imply that the A18 iPad won’t launch until July at the earliest—and likely later, since Apple tends not to launch new products during the latter part of the summer.

It’s always possible Apple could launch the new iPad sooner, and Parekh called out the “difficult compare” because the product would still arrive later than last year’s A16 model.

... continue reading