- HSBC analyst Nicolas Cote-Colisson upgraded Apple to buy from hold on Friday and lifted his price target to $366 from $260 — implying approximately 10% upside from Apple’s last close of $333.26 — arguing the company is at “an operational turning point” where it can both avoid the high-capital-expenditure debate consuming AI infrastructure stocks and simultaneously leverage its 2.5 billion installed device base with forthcoming revamped Apple Intelligence; the upgrade comes as Apple trades at a record valuation with a market cap of $4.89 trillion, approaching Nvidia’s $5.02 trillion and making it the top-performing Magnificent Seven stock year-to-date with gains exceeding 20% since late June.
- The bull case rests on two near-term catalysts converging simultaneously: Apple’s agentic AI Siri, which is expected to deploy this year and represents Apple’s most substantive AI product upgrade since Siri’s original launch, and a foldable iPhone expected in September that could be the most significant hardware form-factor launch in years; Apple has reportedly told suppliers to prepare to produce approximately 10 million foldable units this year, up from a prior 7-8 million forecast, and the device is expected to carry a premium price point that could help offset the impact of elevated memory chip costs on gross margins; Cote-Colisson calls the combination a potential trigger for “a strong renewal cycle” across Apple’s 2.5 billion device installed base.
- Apple’s low-capex positioning is as important to the upgrade thesis as its product pipeline: while Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta are each committing hundreds of billions to AI data center infrastructure — investments that generate operating leverage questions and earnings per share dilution risk — Apple is not competing in the AI model training or cloud infrastructure arms race; instead, it is deploying AI at the inference and device level using its own silicon and others’ models (including through its Anthropic and OpenAI integrations), allowing it to benefit from the AI era without the capital intensity that is now weighing on sector sentiment as the AI capex cycle matures and investors begin demanding returns.
- The broader market context amplifies Apple’s relative appeal: the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has fallen 19% from its June peak as AI chip enthusiasm has cooled and concerns about the durability of the AI capex cycle have grown; IBM’s 25% single-day collapse on earnings served as a sector warning signal; and a new powerful AI model from Chinese startup Moonshot released Friday triggered a broader tech selloff that Apple’s shares navigated with little change — exactly the pattern that has made Apple the preferred defensive holding in a Magnificent Seven cohort where AI infrastructure exposure is increasingly seen as a risk rather than purely a reward.
What Happened?
HSBC upgraded Apple to buy from hold on Friday, raising its price target to $366 from $260 — about 10% above Apple’s last close of $333.26. Analyst Nicolas Cote-Colisson called Apple at “an operational turning point,” citing its agentic AI Siri deployment this year, an expected foldable iPhone launch in September, and its advantaged position as an AI beneficiary without the heavy capital expenditure burden of cloud and infrastructure peers. Apple is the top Magnificent Seven performer this year, up 20%+ since late June, with a market cap of $4.89 trillion approaching Nvidia’s $5.02 trillion.
Why It Matters?
The HSBC upgrade crystallizes a thesis that has been building in the market: Apple is the AI trade for investors who want exposure to the AI era without betting on continued AI infrastructure capex intensity. As IBM’s collapse and the semiconductor index’s 19% drawdown signal that the market is beginning to discriminate between AI winners and losers, Apple’s combination of massive installed base, strong device upgrade catalysts, and inference-layer AI strategy positions it as the Magnificent Seven member with the best risk-adjusted exposure to AI monetization. The fact that Apple shares held firm during Friday’s tech selloff triggered by Moonshot’s new model reinforces that narrative in real time.
What’s Next?
Watch the September foldable iPhone launch — the device’s initial sales data and pricing reception will be the most important near-term data point for whether the renewal cycle thesis plays out; 10 million units at a premium price would be a significant revenue catalyst if demand holds. Also watch the agentic Siri rollout: Apple’s AI offerings have frustrated investors for two years, and any sign that agentic Siri genuinely improves device utility could be the catalyst that unlocks a broader upgrade cycle across the 2.5 billion device installed base. The average analyst price target remains about $322 — below Apple’s current price — suggesting the Street as a whole is not yet as bullish as HSBC, which creates a potential re-rating catalyst if the product cycle delivers.
Source: Bloomberg















