NEW YORK, February 3, 2026, 09:24 (EST) — Premarket
- Apple slipped roughly 0.6% ahead of the open, following Monday’s 4.1% surge
- U.S. index futures edged up ahead of a busy earnings week that spotlights the “AI payback” narrative
- India’s latest tax break might lower Apple’s costs for iPhone manufacturing gear in the country
Apple shares dipped 0.6% to $268.25 in Tuesday’s premarket, following a 4.06% jump that pushed the stock to $270.01 at Monday’s close. On Monday, the stock swung between $259.20 and $270.49, with over 73 million shares traded. (Yahoo Finance)
Apple’s shift carries weight as it’s a major market bellwether, with Monday’s rally pushing Wall Street near record highs. That’s despite ongoing debate over how much “AI optimism” is already baked into valuations. “The fundamentals are good and earnings are strong,” noted Tim Ghriskey, senior portfolio strategist at Ingalls & Snyder. (Reuters)
Risk appetite stayed firm early Tuesday, with stock-index futures edging up ahead of a busy earnings slate. John Campbell, senior portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments, noted Palantir Technologies’s strong results gave a boost to the AI trade. Traders were also focused on a planned U.S. House vote to end the shutdown that’s disrupted key economic data releases. (Reuters)
Apple has found a new boost in India. A recent weekend rule change in New Delhi allows foreign companies to supply machinery to contract manufacturers in designated zones for five years without facing tax risks — a major concern Apple had pressed for as it ramps up production beyond China. “This exemption removes a key deal-breaking risk for electronics manufacturing in India,” said Shankey Agrawal, partner at BMR Legal. India’s revenue secretary Arvind Shrivastava added the move offers investors “certainty.” (Reuters)
That premarket slip signals the stock’s next move hinges on consumer demand and how margins shape up after suppliers, wages, and input costs shake out. Apple often feels the impact fast whenever tech valuations falter or macro volatility spikes again.
Apple’s board announced a regular cash dividend of $0.26 per share, set to be paid on February 12 to shareholders on record by February 9. (Apple Investor Relations)
Apple’s annual shareholder meeting is set for February 24 at 8:00 a.m. PT and will be held virtually. (Apple Investor Relations)
Traders are focused on earnings from other megacap tech giants this week for clues on advertising, cloud spend, and AI budgets. Alphabet is set to report after the close on February 4, followed by Amazon on February 5. (Nasdaq)