Investment bank Morgan Stanley has raised its Apple price target to $200, driven by what is expected from the company relatively soon, as well as short-term drivers like the App Store and iPhone supply.
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In a note to investors seen by AppleInsider, lead analyst Katy Huberty said that the bank is cautious on IT hardware heading into 2022 but noted that Apple should benefit from "a light to quality," driven by new products being priced-in, as well as the iPhone and App StoreHuberty points out that Apple shares don't appear to bake-in the impact of new products. She points out that Apple is developing products aimed at both the AR/VR and self-driving car markets, and the new price target reflects that.
"Today, we know that Apple is working on products to address two significantly large markets - AR/VR and Autonomous Vehicles - and as we get closer to these products becoming a reality, we believe valuation would need to reflect the optionality of these future opportunities," she wrote.
Huberty believes that Apple's new upcoming products, if they contributed 6% of 2026 revenue, could equate to about $330 billion of enterprise value. As such, she has added that upside to her base case valuation. When combined with her current valuation, that drives her Apple price target to $200.
The analyst's calculations don't include the "Apple Car," given the longer launch time horizon.
AR/VR opportunities
Huberty says that Morgan Stanley is excited about Apple's future growth prospects mostly because of the AR/VR opportunity.
She points out that Apple has been developing AR/VR technology for years, and that the company's patent quality ranks among the top among technology vendors. Apple also brings a wide network of distribution points, in-house chipmaking, and other advantages to the market.
She notes that her base case appears conservative compared to past new product launches, especially with the potential for Apple's AR or VR solution to further monetize the company's Services.
iPhone and App Store
In addition to new product launches, Huberty says that there are near-term signs that bode well for Apple.
For one, iPhone production appears "surprising" since the company doesn't appear to be experiencing the same level of manufacturing disruptions as it did in the September quarter.
She increases her December quarter iPhone shipments estimates by 3 million units for a total of 83 million units, which would mark a 4% year-over-year increase. Higher iPhone shipment increases drive the bank's 2022 earnings-per-share to $5.78.
App Store net revenue also grew 14% year-over-year in November, according to Sensor Tower estimates. Huberty believes that the App Store will likely outperform year-over-year declines in December and meet her quarterly forecasts.
Because of the new products and other factors, Huberty has raised her 12-month Apple price target to $200, up from $164. The new target is based on a 5.7x enterprise value-to-sales (EV/Sales) multiple on Apple's product business and a 10.9x EV/Sales on Services. It's also based on $301 billion of enterprise value placed on Apple's future products, driven by $22 billion of revenue and a 15x EV/Sales multiple. This implies a 32.8x target price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple.