(Bloomberg) — Apple Inc. (AAPL) is facing pressure to shake up its corporate playbook to invigorate its struggling artificial intelligence efforts.
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Alarmed by a share slump that’s erased more than $630 billion in market value this year and frustrated with delays in rolling out AI features, investors are calling for Apple to break with long-standing traditions to make a big acquisition and more aggressively pursue talent.
“Historically Apple does not do big mergers and acquisitions,” said Citigroup Inc. analyst Atif Malik, noting that the last major deal was its takeover of Beats in 2014. But, he argues, “investors would turn more positive if Apple could acquire or invest a meaningful stake in an established AI provider.”
Apple shares have fallen 16% this year while traders bid up the shares of peers like Meta Platforms Inc., which is spending lavishly on AI. While Apple faces other problems, including its exposure to tariffs and regulatory issues, disappointment in bringing compelling AI features to its vast ecosystem of devices has become top of mind for investors.
Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The company has long shunned acquisitions in favor of building its own products. The largest acquisition in Apple’s history was a $3 billion deal for headphone maker Beats more than a decade ago.
There are signs that Apple may be warming up to such a move. Bloomberg News reported last month that executives have held internal talks about making an offer for AI startup Perplexity AI, which would add talent and help Apple develop an AI-based search engine. The startup recently completed an investment round that valued it at $14 billion.
Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush who is a long-time Apple bull, called buying Perplexity a “no brainer,” and said even if Apple paid $30 billion, that sum would be “a drop in the bucket relative to the monetization opportunity Apple can achieve on AI.”
Since unveiling its AI vision more than a year ago, Apple’s roll outs of new features have underwhelmed, such as those unveiled at its Worldwide Developers Conference last month. The company has reportedly considered using AI tech from outside companies, rather than in-house models, to power a new version of its Siri digital assistant.
Kevin Cook, a senior stock strategist at Zacks Investment Research, wants Apple to be more like Meta when it comes to hiring AI experts but stops short of calling for more dramatic changes, saying that concerns about its AI shortfalls are overblown.
(Bloomberg) — Apple Inc. (AAPL) is facing pressure to shake up its corporate playbook to invigorate its struggling artificial intelligence efforts.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Alarmed by a share slump that’s erased more than $630 billion in market value this year and frustrated with delays in rolling out AI features, investors are calling for Apple to break with long-standing traditions to make a big acquisition and more aggressively pursue talent.
“Historically Apple does not do big mergers and acquisitions,” said Citigroup Inc. analyst Atif Malik, noting that the last major deal was its takeover of Beats in 2014. But, he argues, “investors would turn more positive if Apple could acquire or invest a meaningful stake in an established AI provider.”
Apple shares have fallen 16% this year while traders bid up the shares of peers like Meta Platforms Inc., which is spending lavishly on AI. While Apple faces other problems, including its exposure to tariffs and regulatory issues, disappointment in bringing compelling AI features to its vast ecosystem of devices has become top of mind for investors.
Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The company has long shunned acquisitions in favor of building its own products. The largest acquisition in Apple’s history was a $3 billion deal for headphone maker Beats more than a decade ago.
There are signs that Apple may be warming up to such a move. Bloomberg News reported last month that executives have held internal talks about making an offer for AI startup Perplexity AI, which would add talent and help Apple develop an AI-based search engine. The startup recently completed an investment round that valued it at $14 billion.
Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush who is a long-time Apple bull, called buying Perplexity a “no brainer,” and said even if Apple paid $30 billion, that sum would be “a drop in the bucket relative to the monetization opportunity Apple can achieve on AI.”
Since unveiling its AI vision more than a year ago, Apple’s roll outs of new features have underwhelmed, such as those unveiled at its Worldwide Developers Conference last month. The company has reportedly considered using AI tech from outside companies, rather than in-house models, to power a new version of its Siri digital assistant.
Kevin Cook, a senior stock strategist at Zacks Investment Research, wants Apple to be more like Meta when it comes to hiring AI experts but stops short of calling for more dramatic changes, saying that concerns about its AI shortfalls are overblown.
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