Apple has agreed to pay USD 490 million to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging CEO Tim Cook misled investors about a steep downturn in iPhone's sales in China that culminated in a jarring revision to the company's revenue forecast.
The preliminary settlement filed on Friday in Oakland, California, federal court stems from a shareholder lawsuit focused on the way Apple relayed information about how iPhone models released in September 2018 were performing in China, one of the company's biggest markets.
Cook signalled that the new iPhones were off to a good start during an investor conference call in early November 2018, according to the complaint.
That reassurance dissolved into a huge letdown on January 2, 2019 when the Cook issued a warning that Apple's revenue for the just-completed quarter would fall USD 9 billion below management's forecast for the period. What's more, virtually all of the sales drop was traced to weak demand in China.
It marked the first time Apple had cut its revenue guidance since the iPhone's release in 2007 and triggered its stock price to plunge 10 per cent in the next day of frenetic trading, wiping out more than USD 70 billion in shareholder wealth.
Apple vehemently denied Cook deceived investors about the iPhone's sales in China between early November and early January. The Cupertino, California, company maintained that stance in the settlement documents, but said it decided to make the payment after more than four years of legal wrangling to avoid an overly burdensome, expensive, and distracting hassle.
The settlement was reached through a mediator after US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers rejected Apple's request to dismiss the case and set a September 9 trial date.
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Gonzalez Rogers is now being asked to approve the settlement in a hearing scheduled for April 30.
Thousands of shareholders who bought Apple stock in late 2018 could be eligible for a piece of the settlement, which will be distributed from of a pool that will be less than USD 490 million after lawyers involved in the case are paid. The attorneys plan to seek up to one-fourth, or about USD 122 million, of the settlement.
The USD 490 million payment represents less than 1 per cent of the USD 97 billion profit that Apple pocketed during its last fiscal year ended in September. Apple shareholders who have held on to their shares have become wealthier too. Apple's stock price has more than quadrupled from where it stood after Cook's China warning, creating an additional USD 2 trillion in shareholder wealth.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)