Apple CEO Tim Cook's decision raises eyebrows

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Tim Cook was hired in 1998 by Steve Jobs from Compaq, where Cook had been content in his role and initially hesitant to leave.

“[Jobs] told me a little about the design, enough to get me really interested," Cook said in an interview with Charlie Rose. "And he was describing what later would be called the iMac. And the way that he talked, and the way the chemistry was in the room, it was just he and I. And I could tell I can work with him.

“I looked at the problems Apple had, and I thought you know, I can make a contribution here. And working with him, and this is a privilege of a lifetime. And so all of a sudden I thought, I’m doing it. I’m going for it.”

This year marks Tim Cook’s 26th year at Apple, where he’s worked with and led the company from the edge of collapse to a tech titan valued in the trillions.

Related: Tim Cook's net worth: How much the Apple CEO's stock is worth

Cook still sticks to his morning routine, waking around 4 a.m. daily. “I’m an early bird,” he said last year on the "Dua Lipa: At Your Service" podcast, adding that the peaceful hours of the morning give him the freedom to focus on what he finds most important.

As he approaches his 64th birthday this November, Cook remains active at Apple's helm. The company is working on several major development projects, including artificial intelligence and augmented reality advancements.

Apple plans to launch iOS 18.1 and Apple Intelligence on Oct. 28 and announce new Macs and an iPad mini in late October, Bloomberg reports.

The big potential associated with those projects may make a recent decision by him curious to some.

Jefferies warns that expectations for the iPhone 16 and 17 might be "premature."<p>NurPhoto&sol;Getty Images</p>
Jefferies warns that expectations for the iPhone 16 and 17 might be "premature."

NurPhoto/Getty Images

Analysts’ latest updates on Apple

On Oct. 7 Jefferies downgraded Apple  (AAPL)  to hold from buy with a price target of $212.92, up from $205, thefly.com reported.

The analyst likes Apple Intelligence long term and calls the company “the only hardware-software integrated player that can leverage proprietary data to offer low-cost, personalized artificial intelligence services.”

However, Jefferies warns that expectations for the iPhone 16 and 17 might be "premature," pointing out that AI-capable smartphone technology could still be years from realization. That makes current projections for these models "overly optimistic."

Related: Analyst resets Apple stock forecast ahead of crucial rollout

Bank of America said on Oct. 3 that iPhone Pro ship times were stable but below prior years.

B of A thinks the initial demand could be lower due to the unavailability of Apple Intelligence at launch. The investment firm expects demand to increase after the AI features are available. The firm reiterates a buy rating and $256 price target on Apple shares.