Apple is about to look a lot more like the company Steve Jobs left behind.
On Monday, Apple announced that Tim Cook will step down as CEO on September 1, 2026. He’ll move into an Executive Chairman role. Taking the top job is John Ternus, currently SVP of Hardware Engineering and a 25-year company veteran. AAPL fell 2.52% on the news.
Ternus is a product man through and through. His most prominent achievement was leading the Mac’s transition from Intel chips to Apple’s own Apple Silicon — a shift that gave Apple a real edge in the PC market.
Apple Inc., AAPL
He’s also the kind of executive who checks screws with a magnifying glass at midnight. During a 2024 commencement address at the University of Pennsylvania, Ternus recalled counting concentric circles machined into screw heads on the original Cinema Display — the first Apple product he worked on. The supplier had put in 35 grooves. The spec called for 25.
That’s the kind of detail obsession Apple was built on.
For the past several years, the big story at Apple was services and AI. The services business — App Store, AppleCare, Apple Music — has performed well. The AI story has been bumpier.
Ternus’s appointment signals a pivot back to hardware as Apple’s core identity. Without iPhones, Macs, iPads, and Watches, the services built on top of them don’t matter. That’s the implicit message in this hire.
Cook’s own succession mirrors how he got the job. Jobs chose Cook — a supply chain operator, not a visionary — because Apple needed a different kind of leader at that moment. Now, Cook and the board are handing the keys to someone who thinks in millimeters and material tolerances.
The MacBook Neo, which starts at $500 for students, is seen as an early example of what Ternus-era Apple could look like: accessible price points without sacrificing the quality the brand is known for.
The leadership news lands just days before Apple reports Q2 FY26 results on April 30. Wall Street is expecting EPS of $1.94 and revenue of $109.32 billion.
On the ownership side, public companies and individual investors hold 60.61% of AAPL, according to TipRanks. ETFs account for 21.61%, with mutual funds at 17.70%. Vanguard is the largest single holder at 8.45%, followed by Vanguard Index Funds at 6.87%.
Analysts currently rate AAPL a Moderate Buy, based on 16 Buys, 8 Holds, and 1 Sell over the past three months. The average price target sits at $305.81 — roughly 12% above current levels.
Apple’s Q2 earnings report on April 30 will be the first major test of investor sentiment under the incoming leadership structure.
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