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Apple Names John Ternus As Next CEO, Tim Cook To Become Executive Chairman

New Delhi: US tech giant Apple has announced that John Ternus, senior vice president of hardware engineering, will succeed Tim Cook as chief executive officer, effective September 1, 2026, concluding a long-running succession process that the board approved unanimously.

Cook — who has led Apple since 2011 — will transition to the newly created role of executive chairman, where he will engage with global policymakers and assist with select company matters.

Arthur Levinson — Apple’s non-executive chairman for the past 15 years — will move to the role of lead independent director on the same date.

According to the iPhone maker, Ternus will also join the board of directors effective September 1.

ā€œIt has been the greatest privilege of my life to be the CEO of Apple,ā€ Cook said in an official statement, praising Ternus as someone with ā€œthe mind of an engineer, the soul of an innovator, and the heart to lead with integrity.ā€

Ternus (50) joined Apple’s product design team in 2001 and rose through the ranks to become a senior vice president in 2021.

He has overseen hardware engineering across Apple’s entire product portfolio, playing a central role in the development of the iPad, AirPods, and multiple generations of iPhone and Mac.

Most recently, his team launched the ultrathin iPhone Air and the new MacBook Neo.

ā€œI am profoundly grateful for this opportunity to carry Apple’s mission forward,ā€ Ternus said. He also stated that he was ā€˜humbled’ to step into the role.

Moreover, under Cook’s stewardship, Apple’s market capitalisation grew massively from roughly $350 billion to $4 trillion, while annual revenues nearly quadrupled to more than $416 billion.

While the company’s services division alone now generates over $100 billion per year.

Earlier, Cook had dismissed speculation about stepping down, calling such reports ā€˜a rumour’ and reaffirming his commitment to leading the company. In a conversation on ABC News, Cook said he has no plans to slow down.

ā€œNo, I did not say that. I have not said that. That is a rumour going around,ā€ he said when asked about reports suggesting he might step back from his role.

(IANS)

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