Apple faces massive risk, and it’s not about iPhone demand or tariffs

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The App store is at the center of an antitrust case in the Supreme Court.
The App store is at the center of an antitrust case in the Supreme Court.

As Apple (AAPL) shares slide on news of hardware woes like supplier cutbacks and threats of added U.S. tariffs on Chinese-manufactured goods, the viability of the company’s multibillion-dollar services division could pose a more existential threat depending on the outcome of a forthcoming decision from the Supreme Court.

Apple’s lucrative App Store, part of its services arm that generated $37.2 billion in fiscal year 2018, is the subject of a would-be antitrust class action that, if permitted to go forward, threatens profits for the division that’s increasingly relied upon to counter sluggish demand for mobile phones.

At issue is a group of iPhone consumers who say App Store revenues are, at least in part, the ill-gotten gains of an illegal monopoly. The consumers allege the App Store is controlling retail prices by charging developers a 30% commission passed on to app purchasers who have no alternative market in which to purchase iPhone apps.

A loss that could cost Apple billions

If the Supreme Court allows the case to move forward, and Apple loses at trial, it could be a punishing blow. App Store sales are estimated to account for about 37% of the company’s projected total annual services revenue of $46 billion in fiscal year 2019, according to a November 26 analyst’s report from Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Under a scenario where App Store commissions drop just 5% from the current rate of 30%, the analysts predict a 17% drop in App Store revenue, or a loss of $2.8 billion.

Regardless of whether the app store is or is not an illegal monopoly, the justices are faced with a more preliminary question: Whether iPhone users have a right, or “standing,” to bring the antitrust claim against Apple, in the first place.

In 1977, the Supreme Court ruled in Illinois Brick v. Illinois that only direct purchasers, or those who suffer immediate harm from allegedly monopolistic conduct, can bring a claim for damages under anti-competitive laws.

Apple and app developers argue App Store buyers are indirect purchasers with no right to sue, but if the Supreme Court allows the claim to go forward, Apple will have to defend its services empire within a new antitrust landscape.

The key question the Supreme Court must decide

The Supreme Court’s key question is whether Apple is setting or controlling the retail price, according to George Hay, professor of law at Cornell Law School, and a leading authority on antitrust law.

“Antitrust places no restrictions on the ability of a single firm to charge whatever it wants,” Hay said. “Of course a commission drives the price up.”