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Peloton Interactive shares crashed 23% in a single session last month after the connected fitness company missed its second-quarter revenue target by $17.5 million, reigniting Wall Street's longest-running acquisition rumor: that Apple will buy the struggling brand.The February selloff pushed Peloton's stock to roughly $4.10, valuing the company at approximately $1.7 billion. Five years ago, at the height of pandemic demand, Peloton commanded a $50 billion market capitalization and traded above $167 per share.
The Apple-Peloton acquisition narrative has persisted since early 2022, when founder John Foley stepped down as CEO. It gained fresh momentum in late 2023, when Gene Munster of Deepwater Asset Management predicted Apple would acquire Peloton to bolster its Fitness+ subscription service.
That prediction missed its 2024 deadline. But in October of that year, Peloton made a hire that sent shares jumping 20% and gave the rumor new life: Peter Stern, formerly Apple's vice president of services and a co-founder of Apple Fitness+, became Peloton's CEO and president.
Stern's appointment struck analysts as more than a routine executive change. He built the subscription infrastructure Apple uses to deliver fitness content to millions of devices. Now he runs the company most often named as Apple's logical acquisition target in health and wellness.
Peloton reported second-quarter revenue of $656.5 million, below the $674 million consensus estimate. The miss came despite Stern's restructuring plan, which included an 11% workforce reduction announced in January 2026, primarily targeting engineering and technology roles.
The company's subscriber base has contracted from a peak of roughly 3 million to approximately 2.7 million paid members. Annual revenue has declined from $4.02 billion in fiscal 2021 to an estimated $2.4 billion. Net losses have narrowed somewhat, from $189 million to roughly $119 million in fiscal 2025, but the trajectory remains negative.
Apple, by contrast, holds more than $160 billion in cash. Its largest acquisition to date remains the $3 billion purchase of Beats in 2014. Analysts at Deepwater estimate a Peloton buyout, including debt and a standard premium, would cost between $9 billion and $12 billion.
Blackwells Capital, an activist investor in Peloton, has publicly urged the company to sell itself to a larger technology firm. Apple, Amazon, and Nike have all been named as potential acquirers.
The financial argument for a deal is straightforward. Peloton's 2.7 million subscribers would add an estimated $1.7 billion in annual subscription revenue to Apple's services segment, which Apple CEO Tim Cook has prioritized as the company's growth engine. Cook has also stated that Apple's "most important contribution to mankind has been in health."
For full coverage, visit https://www.linos.ai/business/apple-peloton-acquisition-speculation-2026/
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