FT has learned about the possible departure of Tim Cook from the post of CEO of Apple
Apple's board of directors is preparing for CEO Tim Cook's resignation next year and is stepping up efforts to find a successor. This was reported on November 15 by the Financial Times newspaper, citing sources.
"Senior management recently stepped up preparations for Cook to hand over the reins of the $4 trillion company after more than 14 years at the company," sources told the publication.
According to sources, Apple's senior vice president of hardware development, John Ternus, is seen as Cook's most likely successor, but "no final decision has been made yet."
It is clarified that the long-planned transition is not related to the current results of the company's activities.
"The company is unlikely to appoint a new CEO until the next earnings report is released at the end of January, which will fall during the critical holiday period," the publication says.
The change of CEO in early 2026 will give the new leadership team time to get comfortable before major annual key events — the developer conference in June and the launch of the iPhone in September, the material says.
Cook, the former chief operating officer of Apple, who turned 65 this month, has led the company since 2011, succeeding co-founder Steve Jobs, who died a few months later. During Cook's leadership, Apple's market capitalization grew from $350 billion in 2011 to $4 trillion.
Earlier, on August 1, it was reported that the tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump would result in costs for Apple and could cost almost $2 billion. Apple CEO Tim Cook said that, in his opinion, the duties imposed caused the greatest damage at the beginning of the year, when Trump began his trade standoff with China.
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