On Wednesday Apple filed its form 10-K for the fiscal year 2008 as mandated by the SEC. As is required in the form 10-K Apple listed many of the risks that could effect the company.

Amongst some of these topics includes (as listed by Fortune Apple 2.0 blog):

  • The effects of a global financial meltdown
  • New lawsuits stemming from the Apple stock option investigation
  • Price cutting, piracy and Mac OS clones
  • Badly managed product transitions in a particularly volatile environment
  • Rapid product obsolescence and unexpected inventory write-downs
  • Shortages of NAND flash memory, DRAM and LCDs, and associated price increases
  • Disruptions in foreign contracts for manufacturing and logistics
  • Deal-breaking demands by digital film and music suppliers
  • Getting caught infringing on other people’s patents
  • Third-party software developers deciding to abandon ship
  • The discovery of serious bugs and manufacturing defects in Apple products
  • Late-in-the-quarter events that disrupt the usual seasonal fluctuations in sales and revenue
  • Failure of overseas mobile phone carriers to properly support the iPhone
  • Changing laws and regulations in overseas mobile phone markets
  • System failures, network disruptions, breaches in data security
  • Extreme fluctuations in the company’s stock price
  • Political events, war, terrorism, natural disasters and public health emergencies
  • Difficulty attracting and retaining key personnel given the new option regulations
  • Ongoing lawsuits decided against Apple
  • Fluctuating foreign currency rates and changes in international tax laws, labor conditions etc.
  • Declining sales in stores that have long leases and are particularly expensive to maintain
  • Acquisitions and business strategies that go sour
  • Distributors, resellers, wholesalers and catalog companies getting squeezed or going bankrupt
  • Material losses in the company’s $24.5 billion investment portfolio
  • The effect of worsening economic conditions on unsecured non-trade receivables
  • New laws and regulations related to health, safety and environmental protection
  • Changes in the company’s tax rates
  • Insurance problems. “For certain risks, the Company does not maintain insurance coverage because of cost and/or availability”

All Things Digital is also noting that the form 10-K reveals that recently departed senior vice president of the iPod division Tony Fadell will collect an annual salary of $300,000 until March 2010 in his position as an advisor to CEO Steve Jobs.

In addition the filing states that Fadell will also receive health benefits and be expected to keep a distance from Apple competitors. If he doesn’t he will lose 77,500 restricted Apple stocks that will vest in March 2010.

Download Apple’s 2008 form 10-K.