Apple continued to defy the problems gripping the rest of the smartphone market, posting a 33% increase in quarterly profit on the back of surging iPhone sales and explosive growth in China.

We're live blogging the earnings and call with analysts at http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/

5:11 pm

Moving on to products: New MacBook. "Very happy with response from customers."

5:10 pm

More on energy farms and renewable energy for the data centers. "Apple is deeply committed to these initiatives," he says.

5:10 pm

Apple is responsible for creating more than 670,000 jobs across Europe, he says. He is touting the data centers being created, and the environmental footprint, but also that a lot of the jobs are through the app store.

5:08 pm

(And ResearchKit, the science data-gathering app family.)

5:07 pm

Cook is high-fiving on lining up retailers for Apple Pay. Best Buy is in, but also a health-care payment network, he says. And he is going through health apps that are being developed through HealthKit.

5:06 pm

Talking about the $200 in total capital return. More to come. Cook also mentions that the Discover is now on board with Apple Pay. That's the last of the big card companies.

5:05 pm

We've made 27 acquisitions in the last 6 quarters.

5:05 pm

One of Cook's favorites: We are growing the Mac while the PC industry contracts.

5:04 pm

App store had its best quarter ever. Services revenue of near $5 billion is a record.

5:04 pm

Cook: strongest March quarter ever. Higher rate of people switching to the iPhone than in previous cycles.

5:03 pm

Safe harbor statements now, and Tim Cook and Luca Maestri can be heard clearing their throats, getting ready.

5:03 pm

The call is under way. Thanks to everyone for hanging around through the technical difficulties. Hope that doesn't happen again.

5:02 pm

Interesting wrinkle in the data chart. All of Apple's geographic revenue segments were down from that ridiculous first quarter. ... Except China. That region, which includes HK and Taiwan, was actually up 4%.

4:58 pm

Apple just posted its data sheet for the quarter. You can see it here. Services revenue was nearly $5 billion. The "other products" group had revenue of $1.69 billion, down 10% from a year earlier. I'll be honest, I don't know if any Apple Watch preorder numbers are included in there. But it does speak to the end of the iPod.

4:53 pm

Here is the first cut at the earnings story from Daisuke Wakabayashi.

4:50 pm

We've got a few minutes before the call.

4:50 pm

Revenue from Greater China was up 71% to $16.82 billion. That compares with $21.3 billion in the Americas region, which was up 19%. Revenue in Japan fell 15% to $3.46 billion.

4:48 pm

Apple is boosting its dividend by 11% and its share-repurchase program to $140 billion. In all, Apple pledged to return $200 billion to shareholders through buybacks and dividends by March 2017. It had previously promised to return $130 billion by the end of 2015.

4:46 pm

I'll just chalk that hiccup up to overwhelming popularity and demand for a live blog from yours truly. Cause the alternatives just get me all enraged.

4:43 pm

Readers, my apologies. We had some technical difficulties and it looks like a whole swath of my posts never showed up.

EPS: $2.33 .. this is above Wall Street forecasts.

Revenue is $58 billion, also above what Wall Street expected. Apple sees revenue in Q3 of between $46 billion and $48 billion.

Net income was $13.6 billion.

The gross margin figure was 40.8%, above Apple's own guidance.

Sales numbers:

iPad was 12.6 million

iPhone was 61.2 million

Mac was 4.6 million

4:35 pm

Apple does so much business overseas, I wonder what the bite from the stronger dollar was. It's been a sharp blow to other companies.

4:32 pm

iPad sales: 12.6 million

4:32 pm

Gross profit margin: 40.8%

4:31 pm

Revenue: $58.01 billion

4:30 pm

Numbers are out:

4:30 pm

I mentioned earlier that Apple doesn't give out guidance on its profit, but it does talk about margins. Three months ago, itestimated its profit margin would come in between 38.5% and 39.5%.

4:26 pm

Still waiting. Had I know, I would have made a coffee run. As my kid says, dangit.

4:22 pm

Still waiting on the numbers. Checking in on the stock, it finished up 1.8% at $132.65. After hours, the stock is up about a half-percent.

4:20 pm

I was a big fan of this tweet earlier. Really sums up the past few years.

Eight years, 9 products, $600 billion of new market value. Apple's incredible journey in one simple chart. $AAPL

pic.twitter.com/ZFDfTSg4ei

--- Dennis K. Berman (@dkberman) April 27, 2015

4:17 pm

There is a super handy sheet on Apple's site you can look at, too. Here is the table for Q1 results. And here is the one from a year earlier, where we'd compare results.

4:11 pm

I still think it's a crazy coup that Apple gets free advertising from big banks regarding Apple Pay.

4:10 pm

I also expect Apple to talk about how successful Apple Pay is. There are a bunch of banks and retailers signed up, and Apple can stay with this for the long hall. I don't know how you measure financial success easily, and any money made it folded into the services line on the balance sheet, along with iTunes and the App Stores.

4:05 pm

I'd like to level set some expectations here: I don't type as fast as a newswires! So when the numbers come out, I'll get them to you. Just not like a robot.

4:04 pm

Thanks for the questions, readers. The call is at 5 p.m. ET, and you can listen here. Mind the instructions about what device or browser to use. The earnings can come any time after 4 p.m. ET.

4:02 pm

Good readers, you are always invited to share your thoughts in the comments area. I'm not terribly interested in the Apple v. Samsung flame wars. Outside of that tired commentary, let us know what you are thinking. Specifically, if you were able to ask a question on the conference call, what would it be?

4:00 pm

(Reminder that analyst forecasts on per-share profit are usually compared with the adjusted figure, not the net income bottom line.)

3:59 pm

With a few minutes to go before the closing bell on Wall Street, Apple's stock is up 1.6%. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect earnings of $2.16 a share, compared with a split-adjusted $1.66 a year earlier. (Apple had a 7-for-1 stock split in June.)

Revenue is expected to be $56.08 billion, compared with $45.6 billion reported a year earlier. If Apple hits that forecast, it would have to pass the top end of its own guidance last quarter, at $55 billion.

3:56 pm

And, of course, we're looking for some sense of how sales of Apple Watch went during the preorder period, and perhaps the launch weekend. I'm not hopeful for specific numbers, but I wouldn't be surprised if CEO Tim Cook doesn't say the activity has blown past the company's expectations.

Remember, the Apple earnings sheet doesn't include the Watch on its own line, like the phone, tablet and computer. That goes in the "Other Products" category, which also includes Beats, Apple TV and now the iPod. But we know Apple didn't make enough of the Watches for the launch. Let's see what else the company has to say.

3:51 pm

Another area to keep an eye on is Apple's cash position. It was at a staggering $178 billion three months ago. We're watching to see if Apple ups its program to return money to shareholders. It has less than $30 billion to go by the end of the year to fulfill the current plan.

3:49 pm

Outside of the smartphone sales, there are a couple of other things to watch in the earnings report and during the call. One is sales in the Greater China region, which includes Taiwan and Hong Kong.

China is an increasingly important market for Apple, and deals struck there have helped the company push ever-more products. For Q1, the company reported sales of $16.14 billion. A year ago, revenue from the region was $9.29 billion.

3:46 pm

It's important to keep those numbers in mind. Apple Watch and Apple Pay ate up the majority of news headlines in recent months. The MacBook gets a lot of attention, and even Mac computer sales have been shining. The iPad continues its downward trend, suffering from twin challenges of a slower upgrade cycle and bigger-screen phones eating into demand for tablets. Despite all of that, the iPhone is the story.

3:43 pm

What will Apple do for an encore? Don't expect sales to match that heady number from Q1. Still, Apple is expected to show robust growth in phones from a year earlier.

Analysts polled by Fortune Magazine think Apple sold 56.8 million iPhones, 30% more than the same period a year ago. That's still pretty impressive. Analysts at FactSet are expending a similar number of around 55 million, according to CNN Money.

3:37 pm

Yes, it's second-quarter earnings even though the calendar year is typically the end of the first quarter. Apple's first quarter includes the holiday season. Three months ago, the company had a bonkers quarter.

To put it more professionally, it was the most profitable quarter of any publicly traded company ever. It was all thanks to sales of the iPhone, with hit 74.5 million thanks to Apple's new pair of bigger-screened phones.

3:34 pm | Welcome! | by Brian Fitzgerald

Hello everyone. Thanks for stopping by our live blog for Apple's second-quarter earnings and the company's call with Wall Street's financial analysts.

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