Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
International

'Very Bullish' On India, Rupee Weakness Part Of Apple's Challenge: CEO Tim Cook

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Nov, 2018 07:49 PM
    Apple CEO Tim Cook voiced optimism that the Indian government will at some point agree to allow the technology giant to bring in its stores as he lauded the country's bold reforms, saying he is a "big believer" and "very bullish" on India. Cook was responding to a question on whether Apple is at a disadvantage in India, as compared to other markets, in terms of ability to own stores and manufacture its products.
     
     
    “We've had really great productive discussions with the Indian government and I fully expect that at some point, they will agree to allow us to bring our stores into the country. We've been in discussions with them and the discussions are going quite well," Cook said during the fourth quarter 2018 earnings call Thursday.    
     
     
    Cook said that in India there are import duties in some or most of the product categories that Apple is in and in some cases they compound. "This is an area that we're giving lots of feedback on. We do manufacture some of the entry iPhones in India and that project has gone well. I am a big believer in India. I am very bullish on the country and the people and our ability to do well there," he said.    
     
     
    Cook said that despite the challenges, including currency weakness, he was very optimistic about his company's future growth in the Indian market. With the rupee touching 74 to a dollar, Cook said the currency weakness has been part of Apple's challenge in India, "as you can tell from just looking at the currency trends, but I sort of view these as speed bumps along a very long journey though, and the long term is, I think is very, very strong there (India).   
     
     
    "There's a huge number of people that will move into the middle class. The government has really focused on reform in a major way and made some very bold moves and I applaud them for doing that, and sort of can't wait for the future there," he said.    
     
     
    On some deceleration in key emerging markets, Cook said the emerging markets that Apple is seeing pressure in are Turkey, India, Brazil, Russia.    
     
     
    "These are markets where currencies have weakened over the recent period. In some cases, that resulted in us raising prices and those markets are not growing the way we would like to see," he said.    
     
     
    Cook said Apple's business in India in Q4 was flat. "Obviously, we would like to see that be a huge growth. Brazil was down somewhat compared to the previous year. And so I think, or at least the way that I see these, is each one of the emerging markets has a bit of a different story, and I don't see it as some sort of issue that is common between those for the most part," he said.    
     
     
    The company said it saw great response to the new MacBook Pro models launched in July, with strong double digit revenue growth driving an all time quarterly record for Mac revenue. 
     
     
    “We were especially pleased with Mac momentum in emerging markets with strong growth in Latin America, in India, the Middle East and Africa, and Central and Eastern Europe,” Apple's Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri said. 
     
     
    Apple sold 9.7 million iPads during the quarter, gaining share in nearly every market it tracked. However, on a year-to-year basis, there was a six per cent decrease in the number of iPads sold, from 10.3 million in Q4, 2017. 
     
     
    "We generated iPad growth in a number of key regions around the world, including Latin America, Europe, Japan, India and South Asia. Among customers around the world purchasing iPads during the quarter, nearly half were new to iPad, and our active installed base of iPads reached a new all-time high," Maestri said. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Second Hateful Incident In A Week: 71-Yr-Old Sikh Man Attacked, Spat On In California

    Second Hateful Incident In A Week: 71-Yr-Old Sikh Man Attacked, Spat On In California
    The incident, which was caught on a security camera, is the second such attack on a Sikh man in California's Central Valley in the last week.

    Second Hateful Incident In A Week: 71-Yr-Old Sikh Man Attacked, Spat On In California

    Family Of Indian Chess Prodigy Appeals To Let Him Stay In UK

    Family Of Indian Chess Prodigy Appeals To Let Him Stay In UK
    British MPs have called on the Home Office to intervene and stop Shreyas Royal from leaving the UK when his father's work visa expires in September. Royal's father is not eligible to stay in the UK because he does not earn more than £120,000 a year.

    Family Of Indian Chess Prodigy Appeals To Let Him Stay In UK

    Indian-American Anita Kumar Elected To Board Of White House Correspondents Association

    Indian-American Anita Kumar Elected To Board Of White House Correspondents Association
    Anita Kumar has become the first Indian-American to be elected to the board of the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA), more than a century-old apex body of journalists covering the US president.

    Indian-American Anita Kumar Elected To Board Of White House Correspondents Association

    US Navy Veteran Adam Purinton Gets 3 Life Sentences For Killing Srinivas Kuchibhotla

    US Navy Veteran Adam Purinton Gets 3 Life Sentences For Killing Srinivas Kuchibhotla
    A US Navy veteran, who shot and killed Indian engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla and injured two others at a suburban Kansas City bar in 2017, was on Tuesday sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.

    US Navy Veteran Adam Purinton Gets 3 Life Sentences For Killing Srinivas Kuchibhotla

    ‘Turban Saved Me’: Sikh Man Surjit Singh Malhi Attacked In The US

    ‘Turban Saved Me’: Sikh Man Surjit Singh Malhi Attacked In The US
    Surjit Singh Malhi said he was putting out political signs for US Representative Jeff Denham, a Republican running for re-election, near his home in California when he was attacked by the two men who yelled racial slurs

    ‘Turban Saved Me’: Sikh Man Surjit Singh Malhi Attacked In The US

    Indian-American Sri Preston Kulkarni Quit Job Over Trump's Policies. He's Running For Congress

    Indian-American Sri Preston Kulkarni Quit Job Over Trump's Policies. He's Running For Congress
    Sri Preston Kulkarni, whose family traces its roots to Maharashtra and Karnataka, says on his website that he spent his career trying to reduce conflict in other countries..."but right now hostility and conflict are being inflamed in our own country through the politics of anger and demagoguery".

    Indian-American Sri Preston Kulkarni Quit Job Over Trump's Policies. He's Running For Congress