Apple's ride to $1 trillion: the magic number that gets it there

With the company founded by Steve Jobs involved in a major share buy back the magic number for it to become the first trillion-dollar company has risen slightly.

Customers walk past an Apple logo inside of an Apple store at Grand Central Station in New York. The company is set to become the first trillion-dollar company.
Reuters

Customers walk past an Apple logo inside of an Apple store at Grand Central Station in New York. The company is set to become the first trillion-dollar company.

Apple Inc updated its latest share count on Wednesday, putting the magic stock price at $207.04 that would make the iPhone maker the first publicly listed US company valued at $1 trillion.

Apple said in a quarterly filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, that its share count was 4,829,926,000 on July 20, less than the 4,842,917,000 it reported on Tuesday for the end of the June quarter.

Apple's stock rose 5.89 percent to a record-high close of $201.50 on Wednesday following the company's better-than-expected quarterly results.

That would put Apple's stock market value at $973 billion, based on its newly disclosed number of shares.

With a mountain of overseas cash freed up by last year's sweeping US corporate tax cuts, Apple bought back a record $43 billion of its own shares in the first six months of 2018, and its report to the SEC suggested it has continued that programme in recent weeks.

A lower share count means Apple's stock must reach a higher price to reach a $1 trillion market capitalisation.

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