Apple remains ahead of its rivals in the ability to innovate and "create
magic" despite tougher competition in key sectors like smartphones and
tablets, chief executive Tim Cook said Tuesday.
Cook said Apple still
has strong growth opportunities because of its ability to work
simultaneously on hardware, software and services, brushing aside
suggestions that Apple has passed its peak.
"Apple has the ability
to innovate in all three of these spheres and create magic," Cook said
during a question-and-answer session at the Goldman Sachs Technology and
Internet Conference.
"This isn't something you can just write a check for. This is something you build over decades."
Cook
declined to talk about any new products, but said he remains upbeat on
Apple's ability to boost sales of its popular iPhones and iPads in
markets around the world.
"I'm incredibly bullish about the future and what Apple can do," he said.
"Apple has skills in hardware, in software and in services. There is no better place for innovation."
He
said Apple was not planning to make a "cheap" product that failed to
live up to its standards, but that he was aware that some consumers
could not afford some Apple devices.
"Our North Star is always great products, not how to hit a price point," he said.
He maintained that Apple's iPhone has "tremendous momentum" in a market which is expected to triple in the coming years.
"The
iPhone is available only to around 50 percent of the subscribers in the
world," he said when asked if Apple had reached a plateau. "I see a
wide open field. I don't think about that word called limit."
When
asked if Apple was being overtaken by rivals, he maintained that the
appeal is not based on a single details such as screen size or processor
speed.
"Customers want a great experience, and they want quality, and they want that 'aha' moment," he said.
"What Apple does is sweat every detail. The customer experience is always broader than what can be defined by a simple number."
He
said Apple's iPads have outsold the entire line of computer maker
Hewlett-Packard and that this market is still growing, even though
Apple's market share has slipped.
He argued that in terms of
usage, the iPad has been measured to be used "twice as much as the total
of every Android device... It's because it's an incredible experience."
Asked
about a recently filed shareholder lawsuit, Cook said the company was
examining ways to distribute more cash to shareholders but claimed the
litigation was "a silly sideshow."
"This is a waste of shareholder
money," he said of the suit filed by Greenlight Capital which seeks to
block a shareholder vote that includes a management-backed proposal to
make it impossible for the Apple board to issue preferred stock without
shareholder approval.
Cook said it was "an incredible privilege"
to be in the position of deciding what to do with the company's $137
billion cash stockpile, and maintained that "we will do so deliberately
and thoughtfully."
But he maintained that the lawsuit was not
about returning cash, but about "the right of shareholders" to authorize
any special stock issue.
"Frankly, I find it bizarre that we
would find ourselves being sued for doing something that's good for
shareholders," he said, adding that the company would likely seek
shareholder approval even if not required.
"My preference would be
for everyone on both sides of this would take the money they are
spending and donate it to a worthy cause," Cook said.