Mike Ng: Wonderful. Thank you, Tim.
Tim Cook: Yes.
Suhasini Chandramouli: Thank you, Mike. Operator, can we have the next question please?
Operator: Our next question is from Wamsi Mohan with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Wamsi Mohan: Yes, thank you so much. I have two questions as well. First on iPhone. There have been concerns around replacement cycles lengthening, China competition intensifying, and you still beat iPhone revenues despite the weaker performance in China. Curious how you’re thinking about the 15 cycle overall, given what you saw in the December quarter. And I’ve a follow-up.
Tim Cook: Hi, it’s Tim. The — we were up 6%, as we mentioned in the opening remarks. We are happy with that performance. Underneath there, we had really strong performance in several parts of the world with all-time records in Europe and rest of Asia-Pacific. As I mentioned earlier, we did particularly well in several emerging markets from Latin America to the Middle East. And we set December quarter records in India and Indonesia. And so, really some spectacular broad-based reactions to iPhone. We also importantly set an all-time record worldwide for iPhone upgraders. And the installed base hit a new all-time high consistent with the — our overall devices. And so, there’s lot of good things. Luca mentioned in his opening comments that iPhones were four out of the top five smartphone models in the U.S. and Japan and four out of the top six in urban China and the UK, and all top five in Australia, and the customer satisfaction level for iPhone 15 hit 99%.
If you look at iPhone 15 since the announcement of it and shipment in September, so this is including some of Q4 and you compare that to iPhone 14 over the same period of time, iPhone 15 is outselling iPhone 14. And so, we feel very good about that, and the upgraders hitting a record is particularly exciting for us.
Wamsi Mohan: Great. Thank you, Tim. And as a follow-up, obviously, you’re just launching the Vision Pro and it’s an entirely new category. It’s a price point that’s a much higher starting price point relative to most of your other, probably over the last decade, product introductions, but just wondering how would you measure the success of Vision Pro over time and which Apple products adoption curve would you look at as potentially the most similar? And is there a way in which we could think Vision Pro could eclipse maybe something like the iPad in revenue over time. Thank you.
Tim Cook: You know, each product has its own journey. And so, I wouldn’t want to compare it to any one in particular. I would just say we couldn’t be more excited. Internally, we’ve got an incredible amount of excitement from developers and from customers that can’t wait till tomorrow to pick up their units. And we are incredibly proud to be able to demo the unit in so many of our stores in the U.S. starting tomorrow for people that are — that want to check it out. And so, we’ll see and report the results of it in the Wearables category that you’re familiar with. I think that if you look at it from a price point of view, there’s an incredible amount of technology that’s packed into the product. There’s 5,000 patents in the product and it’s, of course, built on many innovations that Apple has spent multiple years on, from silicon to displays and significant AI and machine learning.
All the hand tracking, the room mapping, all of this stuff is driven by AI. And so, we’re incredibly excited about it. I can’t wait to be in the store for tomorrow and see the reaction myself.
Wamsi Mohan: Thank you so much, Tim.
Suhasini Chandramouli: Thanks, Wamsi. Operator, we’ll take the next question please.
Operator: Our next question is from Amit Daryanani with Evercore. Please go ahead.
Amit Daryanani: Good afternoon. I have two as well. I guess, first off, I was hoping you could talk a little bit about what you’re seeing in China right now. I think from a geographic basis, one of the few places that was down double-digits, while everything else was growing. So, I’m hoping you spend a bit of time discussing what are you seeing there from a competitive perspective and more importantly, from a demand perspective in China?
Tim Cook: Yeah. If you look at iPhone in China Mainland, which I think has been the focus of a lot of interest, and you look at it in constant currency, so more of an operational view, we were down mid-single digits on iPhone. And so, it was the other things that drove the larger contraction year-over-year. On the good news side, we had solid growth on upgraders year-over-year in Mainland China and we had four of the top six smartphone models in urban China. Also, IDC just put out a note, that you may have seen, that we were the top brand in — for the full year and for the December quarter. And so, there’s some good news along with – obviously, we’d prefer not to [contract] (ph).
Amit Daryanani: Fair enough. And then, as a follow-up, you folks have implemented a fair bit of changes around the App Store in Europe post the DMA implementation there. Can you just touch on what are some of the key updates? And then, Luca, as a net of it all, do you see it having any significant impact financially to your services or a broader Apple P&L statement? Thank you.