Apple Watch – Empty tables.

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Apple Watch is an experiment that isn’t really working.

  • For the first time in many years, a new Apple device is available on the second market and many sellers are not aiming to make money.
  • Typically huge demand and limited supply means that Apple devices are sold on the second market at a significant premium.
  • With the Apple Watch, things seem to be very different.
  • Firstly, the devices are not selling at a premium.
  • Secondly, many of the devices offered have been used for a week or two and the user and have ended up not appealing to the user.
  • This fits with my observations at a number of Apple Stores in the UK and US, where the Watch tables are pretty quiet while the iPhone and Mac tables are as busy as ever.
  • Furthermore, the most commonly asked question seems to be “why should I buy it?” rather than “how much is it?”
  • This is not necessarily bad news as my expectations for the Apple Watch have been way below consensus for some time.
  • This is because the Apple Watch fails to fulfil the single most important criteria for it to really take off.
  • This criteria is the same for Apple as it is for everyone else in that a wearable needs to solve a problem and make the user’s life better.
  • Apple has an excellent track record in this department but I think it has fallen far short with the Apple Watch.
  • Furthermore, it’s positioning as a watch replacement means that the user has to replace his wrist watch with this device or risk feeling very foolish (see here).
  • This creates a much higher barrier to adoption compared to products like FitBit, Misfit Shine and Microsoft Band which can be worn on the other wrist without embarrassment.
  • The Apple Watch is a first generation product but until Apple comes up with a use case that changes the product from an oddity into a must have, volumes of every generation are very likely to disappoint.
  • This is proving to be a sticky problem and even the old fall back of health monitoring does not really work because none of the sensors are sufficiently accurate or reliable to provide reliable data.
  • I continue to believe that inaccurate health data is bad at best and dangerous at worst.
  • Consequently, the medical equipment industry will not be losing any sleep yet.
  • I continue to think that the Apple Watch will not provide the scale required to drive Apple on another leg of revenue growth.
  • Hence, Apple will need to explore another product category to take over once the current iPhone 6 replacement cycle begins to ebb.
  • I continue to prefer Microsoft and Google for the ecosystem as I think that market is already pricing in all of the benefits being derived from the iPhone 6.

 

 

 

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.