Apple Inc. (AAPL) might be about to lose one of its most important executives, and the timing couldn't be much worse. The company is already juggling leadership transitions, AI ambitions that need accelerating, and the usual pressures of being one of the world's most valuable companies. Now add this to the mix: the person who built Apple's chip business from scratch is thinking about leaving.
The Man Behind the Silicon
Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported Saturday that Johny Srouji, Apple's senior vice president of hardware technologies, has told CEO Tim Cook he's "seriously considering" an exit in the near future. According to Gurman, Srouji has spent months "evaluating his future" at Apple, though nothing's final yet.
This matters because Srouji isn't just another executive. He's the architect of Apple's custom silicon strategy, the chips that power iPhones, iPads, and Macs. That transition away from Intel processors to Apple's own designs has been one of the company's biggest strategic wins in recent years, delivering better performance and tighter integration across devices.
The Executive Exodus
Srouji's potential departure isn't happening in isolation. Apple is experiencing what you might generously call a leadership refresh, or less generously, a wave of high-level exits.
Chief operating officer Jeff Williams recently announced his retirement. AI chief John Giannandrea stepped down from his role. Policy leader Lisa Jackson and general counsel Kate Adams have both announced retirement plans. Design executive Alan Dye reportedly left for Meta Platforms Inc. (META).
That's a lot of institutional knowledge walking out the door at once, and it's happening just as Apple faces pressure to prove it can compete in the AI race that's reshaping the tech industry.
Succession Planning Accelerates
Last month, reports emerged that Apple has ramped up preparations for a leadership transition, with the board and senior executives discussing who might eventually succeed Cook, who's led the company since 2011. John Ternus, senior vice president of hardware engineering, has emerged as the most likely candidate, reportedly earning strong support across Apple's leadership team.
Some investors are getting impatient. Ross Gerber has called for new leadership and suggested Apple should partner with Google on AI, even proposing that replacing Siri with Google's Gemini AI could reshape the company's future. Gerber praised Cook's tenure but emphasized that change is necessary for Apple to stay competitive in today's tech landscape.
Whether Srouji ultimately decides to leave or not, the fact that he's seriously considering it says something about the moment Apple finds itself in. Stability has long been one of the company's strengths. Right now, that stability is being tested.