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Apple Has 20% Downside Ahead? Analyst Says Sell the Stock
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Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) shares are in the crosshairs after KeyBanc Capital Markets downgraded the iPhone maker to Underweight from Sector Weight, slapping a $250 price target on a stock that closed at $317.31 on Monday. 

The call implies roughly 21% downside and marks a notable shift from a firm that has been tracking Apple’s U.S. demand trends through its proprietary Key First Look Data (KFLD) series.

KeyBanc’s June KFLD shows indexed hardware spending down 2% month-over-month, a sharp miss versus the three-year average of +9%, and another data point suggesting Apple’s U.S. hardware growth is normalizing after last year’s tariff‑driven demand pull‑forward. 

Year-over-year indexed spending did improve to +4% from -6% in May, but for the June quarter (C2Q), KFLD was still -2.7% sequentially and -3% year-over-year, versus +6% a year ago. That backdrop is at odds with consensus expectations for Apple to deliver above‑trend hardware growth in the current fiscal third quarter.

Historically, Apple’s fiscal third-quarter hardware revenue falls about 9.7% quarter-over-quarter. Today, Street models are looking for just a 4.3% decline, while KeyBanc’s own forecast is a more modest 1.8% drop, implying Apple is outperforming outside the U.S. and potentially building inventory domestically ahead of a changed iPhone 18 release cadence. 

With management guiding to 14% to 17% total revenue growth year-over-year in Q3, KeyBanc models hardware revenue growth of roughly 18% year-over-year, above consensus at 15% but driven by higher average selling prices rather than sustainably stronger units.

That’s where the downgrade bites. KeyBanc argues that price hikes across iPad and Mac — $100 to $200 on iPad, $100 to $300 on MacBook and $500 to $1,300 on Mac Studio — push demand into a zone where elasticity is greater than one, meaning each incremental price dollar risks more than one unit lost. 

KeyBanc sees iPhone revenue up 23.2% in FY26, ahead of consensus at 19.7%, but growth slowing sharply to 4.9% in FY27 versus Street at 8.3%. 

As hardware unit growth cools, the firm also cuts back its Services view, modeling FY27 Services growth decelerating to 7% versus consensus near 12%. 

With Apple trading at about 24.5x FY27 EV/EBITDA and roughly 35x forward earnings — more than two standard deviations above the S&P 500 and Nasdaq — KeyBanc argues the multiple no longer fits a maturing, slower‑growth hardware and services story.

AAPL Stock Price Activity: Apple stock was down 1.12% at $313.77 at the time of publication Tuesday, according to data from Benzinga Pro.

Over the past month, AAPL has gained about 6.7% versus a 0.1% decline in the S&P 500 and is up roughly 15% year-to-date compared to the index’s 9.6% gain.

Photo: Shutterstock

Disclaimer:This article represents the opinion of the author only. It does not represent the opinion of Webull, nor should it be viewed as an indication that Webull either agrees with or confirms the truthfulness or accuracy of the information. It should not be considered as investment advice from Webull or anyone else, nor should it be used as the basis of any investment decision.
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