Outrageous Predictions
Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026
Saxo Group
Chief Investment Strategist
Apple has never needed to be first. It usually lets others race ahead, waits for the technology to become useful, then packages it for the mainstream.
That playbook worked for smartphones, watches, payments and earbuds. But AI is different because the market has already picked several winners. Nvidia owns the infrastructure narrative. Microsoft and Google have moved quickly in productivity and search. Meta is pushing AI across social, ads and devices.
Apple, meanwhile, has been treated as the elegant giant that is still trying to find its AI voice.
That is why WWDC matters. It is not just a developer event. It is Apple’s chance to show that AI can become part of everyday device behaviour — not another app, not another chatbot, but a reason to keep buying into the Apple ecosystem.
The curiosity point for investors is simple: can Siri finally become useful enough to matter for Apple’s earnings story?
Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference begins on 8 June, and the main focus is expected to be a major Siri overhaul. Reports suggest the new Siri could become more conversational, more capable of handling complex tasks, and more deeply integrated across Apple’s operating systems. AI features are also expected across writing tools, search, photos and system-level functions.
For investors, this is not just a software event. It is potentially a test of whether Apple can turn AI into a consumer upgrade cycle.
The market wants to see three things:
Apple does not need to win the AI data-centre race. It needs to win the AI distribution race.
The market will be watching whether Siri can move from “answering questions” to taking actions — across messages, calendar, email, photos, maps, apps and search. That would make AI less of a separate product and more of a new layer of the operating system.
Apple is not entering WWDC from a position of weakness — and that is exactly why expectations are demanding.
So WWDC is not about whether Apple can surprise from a low base. It is about whether Apple can show enough AI progress to justify a premium valuation.
The bigger point: WWDC may shape the near-term narrative, but this is not only a one-day trade. The real proof will come later through iPhone demand, device upgrades, Services engagement and developer adoption.
There are three main risks.
First, WWDC could disappoint if the Siri upgrade feels incremental. Apple has had AI expectations before, and investors may not give it unlimited patience.
Second, China remains a key swing factor. Premium demand has been resilient, but competition from Huawei and other local brands remains intense.
Third, valuation risk is real. At around 37–38x earnings, Apple can still perform if earnings momentum improves, but the margin for disappointment is thinner.
Apple’s WWDC is shaping up as a test of whether AI can become the next layer of the Apple ecosystem.
The company already has the installed base, brand loyalty, Services engine and balance sheet. What investors need now is proof that Apple can make AI mainstream in a way that actually changes user behaviour.
The bull case is that Siri becomes the gateway to a new iPhone upgrade cycle.
The risk is that WWDC becomes another polished Apple event that leaves investors asking: nice, but where is the urgency?
For a stock already trading at a premium, Apple does not just need to show AI. It needs to show why AI makes the next iPhone cycle harder to ignore.