Apple’s carefully choreographed handoff from Tim Cook, 65, to hardware chief John Ternus, 51, signals continuity in product-first execution but raises immediate questions about strategy. Ternus inherits a company that has dominated premium devices yet stumbled with its pricey Vision Pro headset and moved cautiously on generative AI, opting to integrate partners like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini rather than lead with proprietary offerings. Investors will watch whether the new chief can clarify Apple’s AI roadmap, balance capital discipline with innovation, and translate software advances into must-have hardware experiences. Geopolitical exposure remains a risk: Apple has trimmed but not escaped its China-centric supply chain, leaving it vulnerable to tariffs and policy whiplash in Washington. Another test will be executive stagecraft—Cook favored polished, prerecorded keynotes, while Ternus, a self-described “product guy,” must decide how much personality to project in an authenticity-driven era. The stakes are high: sustaining iPhone economics, reviving mixed-reality ambitions, and steering Apple’s ecosystem toward on-device intelligence without diluting margins—or its brand.
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