John Ternus just became the heir to Tim Cook's empire, and the market yawned.
Here's what confuses people: Cook spent 14 years turning Apple into a *financial services company wearing a hardware costume*. Services revenue went from 8% to 22% of the total. That's not product innovation—that's leverage. Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Card, AppleCare, the App Store take rate—these are margin machines that require *institutional knowledge of how to extract value from an ecosystem*, not knowledge of how heat dissipates in silicon.
Ternus is a mechanical engineer. His entire career has been about making things smaller, more efficient, and thermally stable. iPad. AirPods. The engineering inside every Mac generation. He's brilliant at *constraints*. He is not trained in financial extraction.
The market has priced this as continuity because Ternus is an insider and the press release called it "seamless." But it's not. It's an inflection. And the timing is terrible.
Here's why: the capex cycle that everyone assumes will carry big tech through 2027 is hitting physical walls, not demand walls. Ternary Bonsai is shipping at 1.58-bit inference—that's not elegant optimization, that's desperation. You don't move to ternary quantization because demand is soft; you move there because 16-bit and 8-bit models have *exhausted their efficiency frontier*. Same story with the EU battery mandate starting in 2027—manufacturers will have to support device disassembly, repair, and recycling at scale. That's not a revenue stream. That's a cost shock.
Meanwhile, 44% of uploads to Deezer are now AI-generated. Spotify and Apple Music are about to face the exact problem that killed YouTube's comment section: garbage dilution. But instead of comments, it's your entire catalog. The Services margin that Cook built—the one propping up Apple's valuation—depends on *scarcity and curation*. Infinite supply of AI slop inverts that equation overnight.
Ternus walks in the door just as the structural tailwinds flip. Hardware engineering is about *efficiency under constraint*. That's the next decade. But the market is still pricing Apple as if it's 2022—infinite capex, infinite growth, Services climbing toward 30%.
The succession announcement was read as bullish (stability, product focus). I'm reading it as bearish (the company is abandoning financial engineering because the jig is up).
Cook must know this. That's probably why he's taking a step back.
The enthusiasm for Ternus's appointment will hold through May, but by June—when Q2 earnings come in with Services growth guidance flat or declining—the market will reprize Apple as a *hardware* company, not a financial services company. Hardware multiples are lower. Apple underperforms the Magnificent Seven by 8-12% by end of Q3 2026.