Billionaire investor Carl Icahn sells entire stake in Apple
Icahn has sold his shares in the company over concerns at Chinas influence on its stock price
Billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn says he had sold his entire stake in Apple Inc, citing the risk of Chinas influence on the stock.
In an interview with US cable television network CNBC on Thursday, Icahn also said he was still very cautious on the US stock market and there would be a day of reckoning unless there was some sort of fiscal stimulus.
Icahn had been a huge cheerleader of Apple, acquiring a stake in the company almost three years ago, repeatedly calling the investment a no brainer.
In an open letter to Apple chief executive Tim Cook in May 2015, Icahn had argued that shares of the iPhone maker were worth $240 (164), about 90% more than they had been trading. At $240 a share, Apples market cap would be $1.4tn, Icahn asserted.
But Icahn, who owned 45.8m Apple shares at the end of last year, said Chinas economic slowdown and worries about how China could become more prohibitive in doing business triggered his decision to exit his position entirely.
We no longer have a position in Apple, he said. Tim Cook did a great job. I called him this morning to tell him that and he was a little sorry, obviously. But I told him its a great company.
In Apple today as opposed to six months or a year ago, in this one, theres no need for activism because I think they have a great management. But you worry a little bit, maybe more than a little, about Chinas attitude.
The Chinese government could come in and make it very difficult for Apple to sell there … you can do pretty much what you want there, Icahn said. Earlier this month, China shut down Apples iTunes movies and iBooks stores within the country, following Beijings introduction of regulations in March imposing strict curbs on online publishing, particularly for foreign firms.
Asked when he might get back in, Icahn replied: I dont think its the price point. I think its my opinion about what is happening with China. I think the stock is very cheap on a multiple basis. China could be a shadow for it, and we have to look at that.
Icahn, who suggested that he made roughly $2bn on his shares in the company, said he was in Apple for about three years and if you bought the stock then, you got a 48% to 50% total return. We obviously made a great deal of money, but it was no surprise that we got out of some in February.
Apple shares came under further selling pressure during Icahns television interview, as did the Dow Jones industrials with Apple closing down more than 3% at $94.83. The Dow ended down by 210 points.
Apple on Tuesday posted its first decline in iPhone sales as well as its first revenue drop in 13 years. The companys sales fell by more than a quarter in China, its most important market after the US, and it forecast another disappointing quarter for global revenues.
Apple shares have now declined more than 10% this week.