Zinger Key Points
- Court ruling blocks Apple from charging 27% on alternative payments; Spotify already approved outside billing.
- Developers expected to rush updates; Match, Bumble, EA may see margin lift if decision holds.
- Learn the top momentum trading strategies for today’s whipsaw market, live with Chris Capre on Sunday, May 4 at 1 PM ET. Reserve your free spot now.
In a week dominated by earnings buzz, a seismic shift in the app economy flew under the radar: a federal court gutted Apple Inc's AAPL 27% commission on alternative in-app payments – handing Epic a big win and developers a rare moment of leverage.
JPMorgan analyst Cory A. Carpenter says the ruling didn't get nearly the attention it deserved.
Epic Gets The Last Laugh – For Now
After a multi-year legal saga, Apple's attempt to cling to commissions on external payments has unraveled. The latest ruling declares that Apple cannot charge a commission on alternative payments, effective immediately. That's already materialized in Spotify Technology SA's SPOT latest app update, which Carpenter notes was approved without commission fees.
Developers are expected to jump on the opportunity. We expect “developers to flood the app store with similar updates in the coming days," said Carpenter.
Apple is appealing the decision. But unlike before, it must comply in the meantime—developers have at least two months to implement zero-commission alternatives unless the Ninth Circuit grants a stay.
Google: The Chill Bystander
Meanwhile, "Google Play transactions are not impacted by this ruling." That's because Alphabet Inc‘s GOOGL GOOG Google already offers its "User Choice" billing in many countries, with slightly lower fees – 11% for subscriptions and 26% for in-app purchases.
Carpenter points out that "Google's subscription service fee of 15% is already half that of Apple's 30% service fee."
Margin Gains Incoming?
If the ruling holds, developers stand to benefit. Carpenter estimates annual margin boosts of:
- Match Group Inc MTCH/Bumble Inc BMBL: 3–6%
- Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc TTWO: 1–2%
- Electronic Arts Inc EA: ~0.5%
- Playstudios Inc MYPS: 3–7%
AppLovin Corp APP may also gain indirectly as developers redirect savings to user acquisition.
A decision on the stay could take two months. But for now, the power dynamic has shifted – if only temporarily.
Read Next:
Photo: Shutterstock
Edge Rankings
Price Trend
© 2025 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
date | ticker | name | Price Target | Upside/Downside | Recommendation | Firm |
---|
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.