Apple has
been overtaken as the most valuable company in the world - by its old rival
Exxon Mobil - after the iPhone and iPad maker saw its stock price fall.
Apple's
stock has kept on declining since it released its earnings report on Wednesday.
It
dropped 2% on Friday to $441.30 (£279.36) for a market capitalisation of
$414.5bn (£262.4bn).
Exxon
Mobil, meanwhile, gained 13 cents to $91.48 (£57.91) and has a market
capitalisation of $417bn (£264bn).
Apple's
earnings results suggested that its phase of fast growth - which is rare for a
company of its size - may be coming to an end.
On Thursday,
the stock saw its biggest one-day percentage drop since 2008.
Apple's
market capitalisation has now fallen by about $250bn (£158bn) - roughly the
market value of Google - since hitting a high last September, when the stock
traded above $700 (£443).
Exxon
Mobil runs the Mobil chain of petrol stations as well as refineries
Apple
first surpassed multinational oil and gas firm Exxon in the summer of 2011.
The two
companies swapped places that autumn, until Apple surpassed Exxon for good in
early 2012 before their latest reversal of fortunes.
"Apple
was clearly a momentum stock," said Kim Forrest, a senior equity research
analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group.
"Whenever
the numbers behind momentum stocks stop, the momentum players are out and the
stock tumbles."
Nevertheless,
Apple still managed to ship a record 47.8 million iPhones in the December
quarter, up 29% from a year earlier.
However,
that lagged behind the 50 million phones that analysts on average had
projected.
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