Friday, January 25, 2008

The case of the 1.4 million missing iPhones


The talk among Apple (AAPL) watchers today is Toni Sacconaghi’s dogged pursuit of the 4 million iPhones Steve Jobs claimed to have sold as of Jan. 15, the date of his Macworld keynote speech. AT&T (T), the iPhone’s exclusive U.S. carrier, reported yesterday that it had activated “just at or just slightly under 2 million” iPhones. That’s quite a discrepancy. Sacconaghi, Sanford Bernstein’s Apple specialist, did the math and concluded in a report to clients that there are roughly 1.4 million iPhones “missing in action,” either unlocked or sitting in inventory. Assuming that 20% of those iPhones were purchased to be unlocked (a generous assumption given that a jailbreak for the latest iPhone firmware was only released yesterday), he believes that there are at least 670,000 gathering dust somewhere — in warehouses, perhaps, or in closets, as unwanted Christmas presents waiting to be returned. Here’s how he gets that number:


  • 3.75 million iPhones sold as of Dec. 29 (per Apple’s Q1 report)

  • minus less than 2 million iPhones activated through AT&T as of Dec. 31 (per AT&T)

  • minus 350,000 iPhones sold in Europe via O2, T-Mobile and Orange

  • minus 750,000 iPhones purchased to be unlocked

  • equals 670,000 unaccounted for

Sacconaghi concludes:This is negative in two ways: (1) it indicates end-user demand for iPhone is lower than many investors may think based on Apple’s sales figure; and (2) it points to slower iPhone sales in the current quarter, since much of this inventory is likely to be drawn down.


The geeks have all bought one and many have got theirs unlocked. The Nike wearing Soho crowd have splurged the cash. The wannabes and the I-must-have-that crowd have weighed in, swapped networks and got their devices. But that’s it. There’s a ton of people all sitting staring at the iPhone and — SADLY — (this is the bit that’s winding me up), turning their backs and walking away.


UPDATE: In a report to clients today, Piper Jaffray’s Gene Munster weighs in on the mystery. He notes that although Apple declined to provide inventory levels for the iPhone, even when questioned directly during the Q1 conference call, it did offer inventory numbers for the Mac (4-5 weeks) and the iPod (6 weeks). Splitting the difference, Munster estimates that normal inventory for the iPhone is 5 weeks. By his math, that puts 512,000 iPhones in European and American warehouses, 350,000 sold through internationally, and 838,000 — or 25% — sold to be unlocked.

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