Wedbush Hikes Apple Price Target to $400: AI Inflection Point Could Reach 20% of the World
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Wedbush raised its price target on Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL | AAPL Price Prediction) to $400 from $350, with analyst Daniel Ives keeping an Outperform rating and calling the company “the sleeping tech giant about to see a major inflection point.” Ives estimates that roughly 20% of the world’s population will access AI through an Apple device over the coming years, a distribution thesis that anchors the upgrade.
The price target raise to $400 stands well above the $303.38 consensus analyst target and signals a thesis shift rather than a routine model tweak. For long-term investors weighing Apple stock, the call reframes the AI debate around installed base scale instead of model leadership.
| Ticker | Company | Firm | Action | Old Rating | New Rating | Old Target | New Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAPL | Apple | Wedbush | Price target raised | Outperform | Outperform | $350 | $400 |
The Analyst’s Case
Wedbush’s argument centers on distribution. With an all-time high iPhone installed base and a tightly integrated ecosystem of iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, AirPods, and Vision Pro, Apple sits atop the largest premium consumer hardware platform ever built. That gives Apple Intelligence a privileged on-ramp to mass-market AI adoption.
The firm treats Apple’s privacy-first, on-device approach as a competitive feature. Paired with third-party model tie-ins through the OpenAI partnership and rumored expansions to Alphabet‘s (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google Gemini, Apple’s role becomes the default interface for consumer AI, regardless of who builds the underlying models. Apple’s Q2 earnings beat reinforced the durability of that platform.
Company Snapshot
Apple’s Q2 FY2026 revenue rose 17% year over year to $111.18 billion, with diluted EPS of $2.01 beating the $1.94 consensus, the eighth consecutive quarterly beat. iPhone revenue hit $56.99 billion, while Services set an all-time record at $30.98 billion.
Apple’s market capitalization stands at $4.305 trillion, with a trailing P/E ratio of 38x. The board authorized a fresh $100 billion buyback and lifted the dividend 4% to $0.27 per share.
Why the Move Matters Now
AAPL stock trades at $293 as of May 8, with shares up 48% over the past year and about 13% over the past month. Wedbush’s $400 target on Apple sits well above the current share price.
Apple’s Services gross margin of 77% and accelerating R&D spend support the case that the AI build-out can be funded without compressing earnings. Greater China revenue rose 28% in the March quarter, easing a long-standing bear-case worry on Apple stock.
What It Means for Your Portfolio
For prudent investors, this analyst upgrade reframes Apple stock as an AI distribution play. The bull case rests on installed base economics, Services compounding, and Vision Pro as a longer-dated spatial computing vector.
The bear case is real, however. Regulatory pressure on the App Store, slowing iPhone upgrade cycles in select markets, and the risk that a careful, privacy-first rollout cedes share to faster competitors all warrant attention. Management also flagged significantly higher memory costs ahead.
With 32 buy or strong buy ratings against two on the sell side across 48 analysts, Wall Street consensus on Apple stock leans clearly bullish. Investors may want to weigh position sizing against the gap between Wedbush’s $400 call and the $303.38 consensus before adding exposure.