Apple CEO Tim Cook.
Apple CEO Tim Cook.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Good morning. This is my last morning writing to you for a while, as Dan DeFrancesco returns from leave on Monday! But I’ll still be around: After a brief staycation (the lawn needs tending to), I’ll be back behind the scenes editing each edition from London.

In today’s big story, we’re looking at the key details from Apple’s earnings report — and why the company’s huge stream of App Store revenue could be at risk.

Newsletter alert: BI Tech Memo is a weekly newsletter where Silicon Valley secrets go public. Launching soon — sign up here now!

What’s on deck

Markets: One market strategist thinks the US stock market’s best times are behind it.

Tech: CEO Andy Jassy said Amazon is focusing on keeping prices low ahead of tariffs.

Business: Spotify was great at helping users discover new music. Then it laid off staff.

But first, Apple has been through the wringer.


If this was forwarded to you, sign up here.


An Apple store front door, with the white Apple logo set into glass.
Sean Gallup/ Getty Images

A federal judge slapped Apple around.

Referring to Apple’s court case with Epic Games, the judge said on Wednesday that Apple “outright lied under oath” and that she would refer the company for possible criminal prosecution.

In 2020, Epic accused Apple of anticompetitive practices tied to the App Store and in-app payments.

The judge ruled against Epic in 2021 on almost all counts. But Epic did salvage one win: Apple had to let developers tell customers that they could leave the app and head to another website — where, theoretically, they could get more for their money if Apple isn’t taking a cut.

This week, the judge ruled that Apple was in “willful violation” of that ruling.

Apple said it will comply with the court order — and they’ll appeal it. BI’s Peter Kafka has broken down why this could be an enormous issue for Apple.

Then came the earnings report.

It was a mixed bag. Apple beat revenue and EPS estimates, but also said it expects the cost of Donald Trump’s tariffs to be $900 million in the current quarter. Sales in China were worse than expected. The stock is down 3% in premarket trading.

CEO Tim Cook opened the earnings call by touting a recently announced $500 billion investment to boost US manufacturing over the next four years.

In the more immediate term, Cook said he expects the majority of iPhones sold in the US during the June quarter to have “India as their country of origin.” Nearly all of the company’s other products entering the US will come from Vietnam, he said.