Early this month Apple CEO Tim Cook gave us the awful news in general terms. On Tuesday, we'll discover exactly how terrible it was.

In a letter imparted to speculators on January 2, Cook uncovered income in the organization's monetary first quarter, finished on Dec. 29, would miss Apple's very own figures by around 15 percent. He laid the greater part of the fault on a financial log jam in China. "Actually, the vast majority of our income deficit to our direction, and more than 100 percent of our year-over-year overall income decay, happened in Greater China crosswise over iPhone, Mac and iPad," he composed.




Cook likewise faulted a decline in transporter telephone sponsorships and more expensive rates abroad brought about by a solid US dollar. Clients moreover exploited Apple's $29 battery substitution offer, which gives purchasers a chance to press more life out of their more established iPhones. The organization currently observes offers of $84 billion, well underneath the scope of $89 billion to $94 billion that it had gauge in November.

The profit cautioning was Apple's first in over 15 years.

The more fragile Christmas season - a period when the greater part of Apple's iPhones are sold - fanned a developing conviction that the business all in all, and Apple specifically, is pondering buyer cell phone weariness. Numerous individuals additionally indicated the high sticker prices on Apple's most up to date telephones. The iPhone XS ranges from $999 to $1,349, contingent upon capacity limit, and the XS Max with 512 GB of capacity costs as much as $1,499. By examination, the MacBook Air begin at $999.

The organization had brought a warning up in November, when it said it would quit revealing what number of units it moves each quarter.

On Tuesday, financial specialists will get an increasingly itemized picture of what missed and why. Progressively imperative, said examiners, will be what Apple says amid its telephone call about the condition of the second quarter, which finishes in March.

"The unavoidable issue is the amount iPhone direct stock Apple worked in Q1," Toni Sacconaghi, an investigator at Bernstein, wrote in a note to financial specialists a week ago. Sacconaghi urged financial specialists to tune in for critique on swap cycles for the iPhone, explanations behind the downturn in China and request in different districts for the iPhone. "Our dispute [is] that China just seems to represent half of the iPhone's shortage in Q1," he composed.

UBS investigator Timothy Arcuri brought comparable worries up in his financial specialists note, composing that he'll be focusing on what Apple says about iPhone stock dimensions, to what extent the organization hopes to be influenced by interest in China, potential value decreases and iPhone redesign cycles.