Apple is entering a new phase as John Ternes prepares to replace Tim Cook as CEO, marking a major change in the company’s executive era. Analysts are keeping an eye on whether Apple can successfully integrate its hardware expertise with AI to maintain growth in the emerging market.
Unlike Cook, who was known for his public diplomacy, Ternes will face increasing pressure from the Trump administration to shift manufacturing back to the US. Apple recently lost the title of world’s most valuable company to Nvidia due to investor concerns over Apple’s slow rollout of generative AI.
Despite starting with Siri in 2011, Apple has struggled to turn that early advantage into a market-dominating AI platform.
Investors want to know whether Ternus will join the AI ​​race, or whether it will follow Cook. “New Apple products are expected to boost its offering, and there is some hope that Ternus can move quickly to put his stamp on the company,” said Kathleen Brooks, research director at
“The external environment will be challenging for new CEOs – tariffs, wars and supply chain concerns need to be factored into their growth plans.
“The real question for investors is what comes next, not who comes next,” said Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.
“Turnus now faces the challenge of turning Apple’s superior AI software, including its partnership with Google’s Gemini, into a truly AI-based device experience capable enough to drive the next major hardware upgrade cycle,” Britzman said.
This change is a strategic move to combat incrementalism – the tendency to release small updates rather than bold new technologies.
Under Cook’s leadership, Apple saw a fourfold increase in annual profits and massive global expansion, making him one of the most successful leaders in history.
Cook is known as an operations person focusing on logistics, fulfillment and scaling rather than a product visionary like Steve Jobs.
While financially stable, Apple’s product line remained largely stagnant under Cook, with critics noting the reliance on incremental updates rather than revolutionary new engines of development.
Additionally, Apple has faced criticism for being slow to adopt generative AI, choosing to integrate technology from Google and OpenAI rather than leading the field independently.
Unlike Cook, Turnus has a strong hardware background, indicating a strategic shift toward new product categories like foldable phones and wearable glasses.
Analysts suggest that Turnus will have to escape the gravitational pull of the iPhone to ensure the company’s success for the next 20 years.
Additionally, the leadership change may signal a move toward deeper integration of AI into hardware and a shift from protecting a system to exploring new and uncertain technologies.
