Apple Inc. (AAPL) shares edged higher Wednesday, extending a rally that has pushed the Cupertino-based tech giant up 5% this month and 25% over the last three months.
The surge comes as the company briefly hit a $4 trillion market valuation for the first time on Tuesday, before closing just shy of that record milestone.
The latest rally is fueled largely by strong demand for the iPhone 17 series, which launched in September and has seen robust global sales despite limited rollout of Apple’s new AI features.
Apple Inc. (AAPL)
Apple’s newest flagship, the iPhone 17, has revitalized investor sentiment after a quieter first half of 2025. The device’s sleek design, improved battery life, and enhanced camera AI have been well received in major markets including the U.S., Europe, and India.
According to analysts, the iPhone 17’s strong sales performance has contributed significantly to Apple’s 25% stock rise over the past three months. Despite its AI platform still being in beta, consumers are responding positively to Apple’s incremental upgrades.
Apple’s current revenue base still leans heavily on the iPhone, which contributes about 47% of total sales. Market share figures show Apple holding 19% of the global smartphone market, just behind Samsung at 20%.
While Apple’s financial and market performance remains solid, the company’s AI strategy appears to lag behind competitors. Its new “Apple Intelligence” suite, on-device AI tools designed to enhance personalization and performance, remains in testing and unavailable in mainland China, limiting potential revenue growth.
In contrast, Microsoft’s AI division has reached a $13 billion annualized revenue run rate, giving the Windows-maker an edge in enterprise adoption. Apple’s Siri upgrades, meanwhile, have not triggered a significant iPhone upgrade cycle, a factor that could restrain near-term growth if AI integration continues to trail expectations.
Nonetheless, Apple’s strong brand loyalty, vast ecosystem, and increasing emphasis on privacy-first AI may help the company bridge the gap once Apple Intelligence exits beta testing.
In recent years, Apple has strategically diversified its manufacturing footprint away from China, shifting large portions of its U.S.-bound supply chain to India and Vietnam. This move has reduced exposure to trade tariffs, which were projected to cost the company roughly $1.1 billion in September alone, and strengthened relationships with emerging markets.
The company’s expansion into India has also boosted regional employment and positioned Apple to better compete with Samsung and local smartphone makers in one of the world’s fastest-growing mobile markets.
Analysts expect Apple’s revenue to grow at a mid-single-digit pace to about $435 billion in 2026, supported by sustained iPhone demand and expanding service revenues. The company’s trailing price-to-earnings ratio hovers around 36, reflecting continued investor optimism.
Despite AI growing pains, Apple’s fundamentals remain strong. Its steady product sales, proactive supply chain realignment, and resilient brand equity continue to underpin its trillion-dollar valuation.
Nvidia may hold the crown as the world’s most valuable company at $4.6 trillion, but Apple’s resurgence signals it’s still a dominant force in global technology and consumer electronics.
With continued momentum from the iPhone 17 lineup and potential upside from its future AI rollout, Apple’s march toward a sustainable $4 trillion market cap may be only a matter of time.
The post Apple Inc. (AAPL) Stock: iPhone 17 Surge Pushes Apple Near $4 Trillion Market Cap appeared first on CoinCentral.


