Apple CEO Tim Cook Commits To Yearly Dividend Increase
Apple CEO Tim Cook Commits To
Yearly Dividend Increase
Chief
Executive Tim Cook supposed on Friday Apple Inc is committed to increasing its dividend per annum, a move designed to
please stockholders but also a sign the world's most famous technology company
may no longer be a growth stock.
As
concerns mount that growth in sales of iPhones may have peaked, major US growth
mutual funds have been among the largest sellers of Apple shares over the past
six months or so, fueling speculation that the company's days of supercharged
growth have come to an end.
In
January, Apple forecast its first revenue drop in 13 years and reported the
slowest-ever increase in iPhone shipments as the critical Chinese market showed
signs of weakening.Its shares were flat in afternoon trading on Friday. They
are down about 25 per cent from highs 10 months ago.
Apple
reintroduced a regular cash dividend in 2012 after not paying one since 1995.
Last year it paid out $1.98 per share in
cash dividends, or $11.4 billion overall.
Speaking
at the company's annual meeting in Cupertino, California, Cook also said Apple
was "a staunch advocate for our customers' privacy and personal
safety," as it fights a public battle with the U.S. government over access
to the iPhone of one of the San Bernardino shooters.
Apple
filed a legal brief on Thursday asking a federal court in California to throw
out an order it issued last week that the company unlock an encrypted iPhone
used by Rizwan Farook, arguing such a move would violate its free speech
rights, override the will of Congress and jeopardize the security of other
Apple devices.
"These are the
right things to do," assumed Cook. "Being hard doesn't scare
us."
Shareholders asked
no queries about the company's stance.
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