--Apple shares fall 12% on fears of slowing growth

--Apple loses about $60 billion of market value

--Keeps slim market cap lead over Exxon Mobil

(Adds closing numbers for Apple in paragraphs four and five, and for Apple's suppliers in the fourth paragraph from the bottom.)

 
   By Thomas Gryta and George Stahl 
 

Apple Inc. (AAPL) shares fell 12% Thursday, erasing nearly $60 billion of market value, as slowing revenue and profit growth further fanned investor concerns about the company's momentum and consumer demand for its devices.

In its highly anticipated December quarter report, Apple reported its slowest sales growth in more than three years, despite introducing a new smartphone and a smaller tablet. Meanwhile, Apple's flat earnings reflected the higher costs the Cupertino, Calif., company is facing as it tries to keep up with growing competition, which may be cutting into the iPhone's market share.

"We suspect Apple's results will do little to assuage investors' concerns about share and profitability," Citigroup analyst Glen Yeung said.

Mr. Yeung noted that while Apple shipped a record 47.8 million iPhones in the December quarter, the company's footing in the smartphone market likely slipped. According to the analyst, iPhone sales grew 39% year-over-year, after adjusting for the extra week in the year-ago quarter.

"While good, the results were not great: The global handset market grew 49% [year-over-year], implying Apple has lost market share since adding the iPhone 5," Mr. Yeung said.

On a conference call late Tuesday, Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook fought the idea that the iPhone is struggling. He stressed the growth potential of China, where iPhone sales doubled in the quarter, and its launch in other countries where it is making its debut on high-speed LTE wireless networks.

The CEO also stressed that the phone faced supply constraints in the December quarter for both the iPhone 5 and the iPhone 4, although the popularity of the older device may suggest that consumers are seeking Apple products at a reduced price, highlighting the need for Apple to launch a lower-priced iPhone.

"We believe that the high-end market is likely to grow in the mid-to-low teens [year-over-year] over the next few years and that the majority of growth will happen in the lower-end market," said Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster, who expects the lower-priced iPhone to come in the September quarter.

Jefferies analyst Peter Misek also sees Apple losing the screen-size war in smartphones as demand is moving more toward screens of about five inches.

"Slowdown in iPhone sales is real and material," Mr. Misek said.

Mr. Cook insisted that Apple won't chase "revenue for revenue's sake," insisting that the company can focus on quality while maintaining market share for the iPhone. He used the iPod media player as an example of "doing different products at different price points and getting a reasonable share from doing that."

He declined to discuss Apple's pricing strategy, but noted an "opportunity of getting products to customers and a percentage of those buying other Apple products."

In the case of the iPad, the popularity of the smaller, lower-priced version known as the Mini is hurting revenue growth, Mr. Yeung said. According to his calculations, the success of the Mini contributed to a $101 decline in the average iPad selling price, leading to a bigger percentage increase in tablets sold, 48%, than in tablet revenue, 17%.

Mr. Yeung sees "the cannibalization effect of the Mini" continuing to stifle revenue growth. The analyst sees Mini sales rising between 20% and 40% in the March quarter, with sales of the larger iPad declining 30% to 40%. The mix will result in a 19% drop in the tablet's average selling price.

Apple's results for the December quarter also hurt the company's semiconductor suppliers. Shares of Cirrus Logic Inc. (CRUS) fell 11%, while Skyworks Solutions Inc. (SWKS) slid 1.8%. Bigger companies like Broadcom Corp. (BRCM), down 1.5%, and Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM), off 0.8%, saw more modest declines.

In raw numbers, analysts generally concede that Apple is a well-performing business, but overwhelming expectations from consumers and Wall Street will shift focus on the company's struggles as financial projection shift downward.

Nomura analyst Stuart Jeffrey said Apple must launch new products to re-accelerate growth, but there are few announcements expected before the summer. He notes that the next iterations of the iPhone and iPad will likely be incremental, something that won't help the already present competitive pressures.

"In absolute terms, Apple's financial performance is still exceptional, but the scope for material earnings upside appears to have gone," he said.

Write to Thomas Gryta at thomas.gryta@dowjones.com and George Stahl at george.stahl@dowjones.com

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