Apple reported a 13% drop in its second quarter revenue on Tuesday as sales of iPhones slipped.
The
technology giant reported quarterly sales of $50.56bn (£34.39bn) down
from $58bn last year - the first fall in sales for the company since
2003.
Apple sold 51.2 million iPhones during the quarter, down from 61.2 million in the same quarter of 2015.
China was a particular weak spot - sales there fell 26%. Results were also hit by the impact of a stronger dollar.
Apple shares fell 8% in after hours trading. Its shares have fallen close to 20% over the last twelve months.
Apple's chief executive Tim Cook said the company performed well "in the face of strong macroeconomic headwinds".
Apple's quarterly profit slipped to $10.5bn from $13.5bn.
Nevertheless,
it announced it would return $50bn to shareholders through an increase
in share buybacks and a 10% increase in quarterly dividends.
Sales slowdown
Back
in January the company warned that it was experiencing its slowest-ever
increase in orders for iPhones and that this would cut into second
quarter earnings.
Declining growth in smartphone sales has had an
impact on the entire industry and companies are struggling to find the
next area of innovation.
"The industry is in a lull between the
mobile boom and what comes next in automotive, the connected home,
health and industrial applications of the internet of things," said
Geoff Blaber, from CCS Insight.
One bright spot for Apple was its
services unit, which includes App Store downloads, Apple Pay and Apple
Music. The division experienced a 20% growth compared with the same
quarter in 2015.
However, growth at that unit could be threatened by a new law in
China passed in March. It requires all content shown to Chinese people
to be stored on servers based on the Chinese mainland.
As a result Apple's iBooks and iTunes movies service were shut down in the country.
Apple said it hoped access to the services would be restored soon.
Apple vs. FBI
Apple was recently in a standoff with the US government over whether the company should help the FBI unlock an iPhone.
The FBI wanted Apple to build a program to unlock the iPhone of San Bernardino shooter Syed Rizwan Farook.
Apple
refused, calling the government's order a violation of its rights. The
FBI eventually turned to outside hackers to break into the phone.
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