Apple Knows Cash is King Which is Why I Keep Loading Up

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • Apple returned $106B to shareholders in FY25, authorized a new $100B buyback, and grew Q2 FY26 Services revenue to a record $31B.

  • Amazon and Alphabet burn hundreds of billions on AI infrastructure while Apple runs capex at $12.7B and routes nearly all cash to owners.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Apple didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Apple Knows Cash is King Which is Why I Keep Loading Up

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I keep hitting the buy button on Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL | AAPL Price Prediction) because the company treats shareholders like partners, and the receipts stack up quarter after quarter.

The pull is simple. Apple monetizes a sticky global footprint and routes almost every dollar of the resulting cash back to owners. In fiscal 2025, the company generated $111.5B in operating cash flow and returned $106.1B to shareholders through buybacks and dividends. That is a promise being kept in real dollars, every ninety days.

The Cash Return Case

Three numbers keep me adding. The board authorized a fresh $100 billion buyback program alongside a 4% dividend increase to $0.27 per quarter. FY25 buybacks alone hit $90.7B, on top of a $15.4B dividend payout, and Q1 FY26 operating cash flow ran $53.9B. Q2 FY26 revenue reached $111.18 billion, up 16.6% year over year, with diluted EPS of $2.01, an eighth consecutive quarter beating expectations. Add in the $24.7B repurchased in Q1 FY26 alone and the buyback pace is accelerating.

The Services engine is why the cash keeps compounding. While bears constantly fret over incremental iPhone upgrade metrics, Apple has quietly shifted its core profit engine and turned an installed base of over 2.5 billion active devices into a high-margin subscription business through the App Store, iCloud, Apple Music, and Apple TV+. Services hit an all-time record of $30.98 billion in Q2 FY26. Recurring revenue at that scale is why Apple posts a 46.9% gross margin, a 32.0% operating margin, and a 171.4% return on equity. iPhone still delivered a March-quarter record $56.99 billion, Greater China reached $20.50 billion, and double-digit growth appeared across every geographic segment.

Why Apple, Not the Obvious Alternatives

I own other mega-cap tech, but Apple is where I keep adding. Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) are locked in a hyper-aggressive, speculative arms race, collectively incinerating hundreds of billions of dollars on data centers and advanced GPU hardware. Apple is playing a different, disciplined game. FY25 capex ran $12.7B against $111.5B of operating cash flow, which lets management push the bulk of the cash back to owners rather than sink it into build-outs whose payoffs are still unproven. Tim Cook framed the quarter this way: “Today Apple is proud to report our best March quarter ever, with revenue of $111.2 billion and double-digit growth across every geographic segment.”

The Risk I Carry

Valuation is the argument I have to answer. Shares trade at a P/E of 43, a P/B of 65, and a P/FCF of 49. The dividend yield sits at just 0.32%, and Greater China exposure plus reliance on third-party manufacturing are real risks I carry. My response: earnings growth is doing the compounding work. Net income rose 19.36% in Q2 FY26 to $29.58 billion, and Q1 FY26 net income of $42.10 billion was up 15.87%. When a business converts earnings to cash near dollar-for-dollar and shrinks its share count every quarter, a rich multiple gets absorbed by the compounding.

Forward Conviction

The buy button stays active because Apple keeps doing the boring, powerful thing: printing cash, returning it to owners, and letting a 2.5-billion-device installed base compound on top. The stock is up 129.49% over five years and 1,356.46% over ten, which is what happens when a cash machine is allowed to run undisturbed. That is the discipline I want anchoring a retirement account, and it is why my next paycheck goes to the same ticker.

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

Photo of Alex Sirois
About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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