Apple's stock price is down over 1 percent in Tuesday trading in the wake of a Citigroup investor memo, calling for the company's sales to slide below Wall Street predictions when it announces third-quarter results on July 26.
The company is suffering not just from people choosing to upgrade their iPhones less often, but from the aftermath of June 23's "Brexit" referendum in the U.K., Citi analyst Jim Suva wrote in a memo seen by AppleInsider. The threat of the U.K. leaving the European Union has led to enough economic trouble and currency fluctuations that demand for Apple's products has supposedly dropped even further.
As of this writing, Apple shares were down to just under $94.80 in Tuesday trading, from an opening of $95.39.
Suva noted that between 2013 and 2016, typical iPhone replacement cycles have stretched from 24 months to 28, and could eventually hit 36. The analyst blamed the sitaution on a lack of high-profile features in recent models -- while the 6 and 6 Plus updated the iPhone to modern screen sizes, the 6s and 6s Plus were only modest improvements, their one significant departure being the addition of 3D Touch.
The situation could potentially be exacerbated by this fall's "iPhone 7" and "7 Plus," since reports have suggested the devices won't have many major feature upgrades, and could in fact lose the industry-standard 3.5-millimeter headphone jack. Apple is thought to be devoting work to 2017 models instead, which could feature OLED screens with integrated Touch ID and camera components.