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Apple Computer, Inc. Company Report

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Company Profile

With its Market Capitalization at 10.8 billion, Apple Computer, Inc. (AAPL), or “The Company”, is a computer giant that markets personal computers, software, peripherals, and computing and communications solutions. It produces a line of desktop and notebook computers, the Mac OS X operating system, the iPod digital music player, and peripherals and software targeting various consumers in the education, arts, and business industries. The Company sells its products through its online store, retailers, resellers, and its own retail stores. As of 5/25/04, Apple operates 80 retail stores. In addition, the Company also sells third-party hardware and software at its retail stores.

With revenues of from the last year totaling at $7.18 billion, revenues rose 33% to $3.92 billion for the six-month period ending 03/04. Net Income before accounting changes was up from $8 million to $109 million. The change in revenues reflects the increase in sales of the iPod and computer accessories, whereas the increase in net income reflects a decrease in restructuring costs. 66% of Company shares are held my Institutions, whereas Insiders hold only 1.06% of them. The largest holder is Lord Abbett & Co at 9.95%.

Stock Price History

3-Year Stock Price Chart

10- Day Stock Price Chart

Over the last year (5/23/03-5/25/04), AAPL stock has appreciated 55% from$18.32/share to $28.41/share, which is about 62.5x that of earnings. The 52-Week change is at 49.24%, with the high trading at $29.58/share on 4/14/04 and the low trading at $16.63/share on 6/9/03. The average trading volume over the last three months is 7,045,272. The Price to Earnings ratio is at a high 62.58, not only indicating that it is fairly priced, but also that it will also give you a higher percentage of the earnings relative to its competitors.

Company Organization

The Company is divided into different sectors: Applications, Finance, Hardware Engineering, Retail, Software Engineering, Software Technology, Worldwide Product Marketing, and Worldwide Sales. Through these various sectors, the Company produces, markets, and sells hardware products, peripheral products, and software products and computer technologies.

Hardware Products

Hardware products offered by Apple include Power Mac, Xserve and Xserve RAID Storage System, Powerbook, iMac, eMac, and iBook. The Power Mac and Powerbook provide high-end power and options for the professional users who demand power and performance, while the iMac, eMac, and iBook provide power, performance, but most importantly, value.

Peripheral Products

The Company sells Apple-branded computer hardware peripherals such as the successful iPod digital music player, iSight digital video cameras, and a wide variety of TFT digital color displays. In addition, the Company also sells a variety of third-party products such as printers, digital video cameras, Personal Digital Assistants (PDA), and other various computing products and supplies through their retail and online stores.

Software Products and Computer Technologies

The Mac OS X version 10.3 is the Company’s current operating system (codename Panther) offers a unique UNIX-based operating system. The server version of Panther allows for cross-platform usage, remote control usage, and heavy wireless networking.

The Company’s line of professional application software include video editing programs such as Final Cut Pro 4, Shake 3, Logic Platinum, and DVD Studio Pro 2. They are widely used by professionals in the movie and animation industry. Consumer, education, and business-oriented applications include iLife, iChat AV, Final Cut Express, Keynote, and Appleworks 6.2.

The Company’s Internet products include the iTunes Music Store, Safari, QuickTime, and .Mac. The iTunes Music Store has had a revolutionary impact on the music industry, while QuickTime has become a standard as a digital media player.

The Company also offers various networking options through Airport Extreme, Bluetooth technology, Rendezvous networking technology, and FireWire technology. The Airport Extreme provides Wi-Fi networking, while Bluetooth provides wireless sharing of files between Macintosh systems. Rendezvous allows users on the same network to access each other’s computers, while FireWire allows high-speed serial input/out transfers from digital camcorders/cameras to computers.

Competitors

The Company ranks

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