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Deep Dive: What Is Earnings Per Share (EPS)

Of all the metrics Wall Street obsesses over, none moves stock prices quite like earnings per share. When Apple reported $2.84 diluted EPS for its fiscal Q1 2026 — beating analyst estimates — the stock rallied. When a company misses its EPS target by even a penny, shares can plunge in after-hours trading. EPS is the single number that distills a company's entire profitability story into a figure every investor can compare. Earnings per share measures how much profit a company generates for each outstanding share of its common stock. It is the foundation of the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, the most widely used valuation metric in equity analysis. Understanding EPS — how it is calculated, what affects it, and where it can mislead — is essential for anyone evaluating stocks. Whether you are screening companies, reading an earnings report, or trying to understand why a stock just dropped 8% after hours, EPS is almost always at the center of the story. This guide breaks down the EPS formula, explains the critical difference between basic and diluted EPS, walks through real examples from Apple, Microsoft, and NVIDIA, and shows how investors use EPS alongside other metrics to make informed decisions.

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Apple (AAPL): iPhone 17 Momentum Meets Premium Valuation

Apple Inc. (AAPL) remains the gravitational center of the global equity market. At $255.78, the stock trades at a $3.76 trillion market capitalization — the world's most valuable publicly traded company — after slipping 2.3% in today's session and roughly 11.4% from its 52-week high of $288.62. The pullback comes amid a confluence of factors: delayed Siri AI upgrades, fresh FTC scrutiny over Apple News content curation, and broader market anxiety over tariff policy. Yet the company just delivered a blockbuster fiscal Q1 2026 (ended December 27, 2025), with revenue surging 15.7% year over year to $143.8 billion and iPhone sales climbing 23.4%. The central tension in the AAPL thesis today is straightforward: this is an exceptional business generating over $110 billion in annual free cash flow, but it trades at a valuation — 32.3x trailing earnings — that demands sustained execution and a credible AI narrative. With Apple Intelligence still in its early innings and Siri upgrades reportedly pushed back several months, investors must decide whether the iPhone 17 super-cycle provides enough runway to justify current prices, or whether the stock's premium multiple leaves inadequate margin of safety. This analysis examines the numbers behind that decision.

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