Does Apple have another surprise up its sleeve?
Just because Tim Cook prefers to be straight with analysts — offering them more “realistic” earnings and revenue guidance than the low-ball numbers Steve Jobs used to feed them — doesn’t mean Apple can’t deliver earnings surprises anymore.
In April, for example, Apple reported fiscal Q2 earning per share of $1.66 (adjusted for June’s 7-to-1 split), nearly 15% above the Street’s $1.45 consensus.
Apple doesn’t give EPS guidance anymore, but for the quarter that ended June 28 the company told the Street to expect revenues to come in between $36 billion and $38 billion.
The consensus among the more than two dozen analysts polled by Fortune — 15 Wall Street professionals and 12 amateurs — is that Apple will report revenues of $38.4 billion. The amateurs, as usual, are more bullish than the pros, although the gap between the two has narrowed considerably over the past two and a half years.
We’ll find out who was closest to the mark when Apple reports its fiscal Q3 2014 earnings after the markets close on Tuesday.
Below: Their recent track records.
Follow Philip Elmer-DeWitt on Twitter at @philiped. Read his Apple AAPL 1.44% coverage at fortune.com/ped or subscribe via his RSS feed.
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