HI All,
I just came  across this as I was reading the news.  So, I thought I would 
share, as some might be interested in this.
Janet

We might finally know why Apple cut iPhone XR orders, and it has nothing to do 
with slow sales
Yoni Heisler
@edibleapple
November 7th, 2018 at 2:20 PM

Earlier this week, a somewhat sketchy report surfaced claiming that Apple told 
its manufacturing partners to reduce iPhone XR production due to lower than
anticipated demand. Even more alarming, the report claimed that overall 
production might drop by as much as 25%. Naturally, many took the report as 
further
proof that the iPhone has hit its peak, even though the report seemed to raise 
far more questions than answers.
For starters, the claim that iPhone XR demand is exceedingly below expectations 
runs somewhat counter to a previous report from reputed analyst Ming-Chi
Kuo who just recently raised his iPhone XR sales estimate for the December 
quarter. Further, it seems odd that Apple would drastically cut production ahead
of the busy holiday shopping season. So just what, exactly, is going on?
Well as it turns out, Apple may have indeed ordered a rollback in production, 
but not for reasons pertaining to demand. According to a research note from
analyst Jun Zhang (originally brought to light by Philip Elmer-DeWitt's
Apple 3.0),
there may have been some quality control issues involving the iPhone XR's 
printed circuit boards that led to a reduction in production output.
Zhang's note reads in part:

We also believe component pull-ins are slowing down this week. We believe some 
Printed Circuit Board (PCB) supplier shipments of HDI boards were quickly
dropped this week. This may be attributable to quality issues from Skyworks 
PAs. We believe this potential round of iPhone XR production cuts by Apple
may be attributable to the recently found PA quality issues.
In short, the sky isn't falling and iPhone sales aren't about to drop 
drastically. Far from it, it stands to reason that Apple during the current 
holiday
quarter will see a huge boost in iPhone sales due to a wide selection of 3 
brand new iPhone models. Of course, with Apple no longer keen on releasing 
quarterly
iPhone sales, we really won't be able to know how iPhone sales fared relative 
to previous quarters.
Broadly speaking, the original report regarding a drop in iPhone production 
illustrates why Apple understandably wants to keep iPhone sales close to its
chest. As we saw here, a report regarding a drop in iPhone production can 
easily be interpreted in a completely misleading manner and not accurately 
portray
the vibrancy of Apple's business. Similarly, with iPhones no longer launching 
on a set schedule these days (with last year's iPhone X launching in November
and the iPhone XR launching in late October of this year), a random 12 week 
snapshot of iPhone sales is not nearly as instructive as it was years ago.

https://bgr.com/2018/11/07/iphone-xr-production-may-have-nothing-to-do-with-lower-demand/



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