October was a punishing month for technology stocks, but as Apple prepares to report fiscal fourth-quarter results Thursday afternoon, it's managed the downturn better than any of its peers. Facebook closed down 7.7 percent for the month. Amazon was down 20 percent, its worst month since November 2008. Netflix slid 19.3 percent. Alphabet ended the month down 9.7 percent. And the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index was down 9.2 percent, its steepest drop since November 2008. Apple largely bucked the trend, finishing October down just 3.1 percent. If Apple can deliver a strong earnings report, investors will be justified in viewing it as one of the most reliable big tech stocks to own. Netflix may dominate the world of digital entertainment and Amazon is positioned to own cloud computing and retail, but Apple has the most consistent profit engine, thanks to the millions of devices it sells every quarter.

Wall Street analysts are expecting Apple to report revenue of $61.57 billion and earnings per share of $2.78, according to a Refinitiv survey. Analysts are predicting sales of 47.5 million iPhones, 10.53 million iPads and 4.87 million Macs, according to StreetAccount and FactSet. A big theme will be the rising average selling price (ASP) of the iPhone. If Apple can hit the Street's estimate for earnings per share, that would mark a 34 percent increase from a year earlier. The days of massive iPhone unit sales growth appear to be over, but Apple has figured out a new formula to squeeze even more profit out of its most important product.

Last year, the company started selling the iPhone X at $999. It was Apple's most expensive iPhone ever. It also sold the iPhone 8 for $699, or $50 more than its predecessor, the iPhone 7. That helped boost the iPhone's ASP throughout 2018. This year, the iPhone lineup got even more expensive. The iPhone XR starts at $749, or $100 more than the iPhone started at just two years ago. And the iPhone XS and XS Max start at $999 and $1,099, respectively. Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi wrote last week that Apple's bet to charge more for the iPhone will pay off in a big way. He predicted an $800 ASP for iPhones in the fourth quarter, up 29 percent from the year-ago quarter. That figure doesn't even account for the iPhone XR, which went on sale at the beginning of the current period. Many predict the XR will be the most appealing model and could increase ASP quite a bit more during the holiday quarter. Apple's guidance on Thursday should provide even more clues as to how well the more expensive iPhones will sell.

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