Apple's global iPhone shipments dropped by nearly 10% this quarter, a new research report said.
Global smartphone shipments rose by 7.8%, as Chinese smartphone makers shipped more.
Samsung surpassed Apple's shipments by 10 million units in the first three months of the year.
In another blow to Apple, iPhone shipments fell nearly 10% in the first three months of the year, even as global smartphone shipments increased.
South Korea-based Samsung beat its American counterpart by 10 million units in the first quarter, according to a report released on Monday by market researcher International Data Corporation. Samsung regained its top spot as the smartphone maker with the highest shipments, a title it lost in the last three months of 2023.
iPhone shipments are a closely watched metric because the devices comprise the bulk of the company's sales. The company sold $69.7 billion of iPhones in the three months ending December 31, according to the company's most recent quarterly report. Services came in second, at $23.1 billion.
Apple is facing a slew of challenges this year. iPhone sales fell in China, a key market. In recent months, the company abandoned an expensive and decade-long electric vehicle project, and like other Big Tech companies, Apple was recently hit with an antitrust lawsuit by the US Justice Department.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider sent outside regular business hours.
Global smartphone shipments rose for a third straight quarter,up 7.8% year-over-year, signaling a rebound in the overall industry. Last year, annual shipments rose 8.1% from 2022, when they fell lower than 2013 levels due to weak demand and inflation.
"There is a shift in power among the Top 5 companies, which will likely continue as market players adjust their strategies in a post-recovery world," Nabila Popal, an IDC research director, wrote in Monday's report. Apple and Samsung "both saw negative growth in the first quarter, it seems Samsung is in a stronger position overall than they were in recent quarters."
Both Apple and Samsung saw a drop in year-on-year shipments, while Chinese manufacturers Xiaomi and Transsion saw close to a 34% and 85% rise, respectively,from the first quarter last year, per the IDC report.
Mark Cuban (left) and former President Donald Trump (right).
Michael Reaves via Getty Images; Joe Raedle via Getty Images
Mark Cuban says he'll be paying $288 million in taxes to the IRS.
"I pay what I owe," Cuban wrote on X.
The billionaire says he's "proud to pay my taxes every single year," unlike one ex-president.
Billionaire Mark Cuban says he's happy to pay his fair share of taxes — unlike one former president.
"I pay what I owe. Tomorrow I will wire transfer to the IRS $288,000,000.00," Cuban wrote on X on Sunday.
"This country has done so much for me, I'm proud to pay my taxes every single year. Tag a former president that you know doesn't," Cuban added, in what appeared to be a jab at former President Donald Trump.
I pay what I owe.
Tomorrow I will wire transfer to the IRS
$288,000,000.00
This country has done so much for me, I’m proud to pay my taxes every single year.
"I don't want a snake oil salesperson as president," Cuban said of Trump.
"Trump voters are happy with their snake oil whether it works or not," he told Axios.
All things said, Trump hasn't been the biggest fan of Cuban either.
"I know Mark Cuban well. He backed me big-time but I wasn't interested in taking all of his calls. He's not smart enough to run for president!" Trump said of Cuban back in February 2017.
Cuban said he had nothing further to add when BI approached him for comment.
Trump has been evasive when it comes to talking about his tax returns. When he was first elected in 2016, Trump claimed that he was under audit and would release his tax returns when it was complete.
Parts of Trump's past tax returns were also obtained by media outlets like The New York Times. In 2021, The Times reported that it had obtained more than two decades' worth of tax returns for Trump and his businesses.
According to The Times, Trump did not pay any federal income taxes for 10 years. The former president paid $750 in federal income taxes in 2016 and 2017, per the outlet.
Trump's finances have come under intense scrutiny, particularly as his legal debts continue to pile up.
On April 1, Trump posted a $175 million bond for his New York civil fraud case after an appeals court slashed the amount he was required to pay. Trump was originally ordered to pay a bond of $454 million.
Trump experienced a brief turn in fortunes last month when shares for his social media company, Trump Media & Technology Group, skyrocketed after it went public.
According to Bloomberg, Trump's net worth went up by more than $4 billion when Trump Media's shares rallied.
Amazon has been trying to compete with other major grocery stores including Trader Joe's.
John Keeble/Getty Images, Michael Siluk/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
In 2016, Amazon launched a private-label brand, Wickedly Prime, to compete with Trader Joe's.
The company hired a former senior manager at Trader Joe's snack division, per WSJ.
The employee was hounded for data on Trader Joe's best-selling snacks and margins for each product.
An Amazon team that was developing the online giant's private-label food brand, Wickedly Prime, repeatedly pressured an ex-Trader Joe's senior manager for data that could help the company compete with the popular grocer, The Wall Street Journal reported.
In 2016, Amazon launched Wickedly Prime, which sells an assortment of food and snacks like roasted cashews and garlic mustard aioli. The project was just one of a few ways Amazon was entering the food space.
According to the Journal, Amazon appeared to have a model it wanted to replicate for Wickedly Prime: Trader Joe's.
So the company hired a former senior manager from the grocery store's snack foods division. The Journal reported that she was told only after being recruited that her role was to help create a product line for Amazon's private label.
According to the report, Amazon wanted to replicate the top 200 items sold at Trader Joe's. Because this data is not readily available, an Amazon manager repeatedly hounded the ex-Trader Joe's employee — who is not named in the Journal's article — for six months over data on the store's top products.
Eventually, according to the report, the former Trader Joe's employee gave up the requested data after the manager demanded that she hand over any emails and documents she preserved from her time with the grocer.
The Amazon manager also pressed the ex-Trader Joe's employee for data on the margins for each product. She refused, and the manager resorted to yelling at the employee, according to the Journal.
"You just have to give us the data!" the manager yelled, according to a source who saw the interaction and recalled it to the newspaper.
The Amazon team soon distributed the data on Trader Joe's top-selling products and thought about how it could take advantage of it, the Journal reported. But another employee soon reported the use of Trader Joe's data to Amazon's legal department.
According to the report, the employees who accessed the data were eventually fired.
A spokesperson for Amazon did not respond to a request for comment sent during the weekend.
"We do not condone the misuse of proprietary confidential information, and thoroughly investigate any reports of employees doing so and take action, which may include termination," an Amazon spokesperson told the Journal.
The former Trader Joe's employee's experience gives an inside look at Amazon'sbroader, aggressive efforts to compete with other grocers.
When Amazon was preparing to launch its own line of food and household products around 2015, it filed for trademark protection in more than 20 product categories, from coffee and pasta to razors and cleaners.
The online retailer opened its first brick-and-mortar Amazon Fresh grocery store three years later.
Trader Joe's established a cult following with its customers partly by developing snacks and foods through its private label. But a recent investigation from Taste, a food publication, alleged that the popular grocer may be copying products from small food brands.
A Trader Joe's spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment sent during the weekend.
But Josh York, the 40-year-old CEO of in-home personal training company Gymguyz, takes it a step further and starts his mornings at 3:29 a.m., he told Fortune.
After having a cold rinse in the shower, he launches into an hour-and-a-half workout followed by a three-minute ice bath.
"It's what makes me superhuman," he told the outlet.
2. Bob Iger prefers to work out in a dark room with the TV on mute
It's meant to have benefits like promoting heart health and benefiting cells. Experts warn against taking more than one tablespoon daily to avoid consuming too much vitamin A.
4. Or if you're Elon Musk, your morning routine includes eating a doughnut
Another popular diet with successful CEOs is only eating within specific time windows — intermittent fasting.
6. Taking an afternoon nap in the office
Robin Zeng, whose role as CEO of the world's largest EV battery manufacturing firm CATL makes him known as China's "Battery King," takes a daily nap at noon in the office, according to an interview with the FT.
Jack Dorsey, who runs financial services company Block, adhered to a strict wellness schedule that allowed him "just to stay above water," when he was also CEO of Twitter. Each day involved walking five miles, meditating for two hours, and only eating one meal.
She advocates "eyes-open" meditation, which involves being mindful at any moment in everyday life.
"Once you learn how to do eyes-open meditation — something you can literally incorporate at any time — you can be engaged with the world but still very connected to yourself," said previously told Business Insider. "I rely on it to feel more whole."
9. A massage just before midnight
If reading a book and meditating isn't relaxing enough, Steven Barlett, a former CEO and founder famed for his Diary of A CEO podcast, calls for an 11 p.m. massage.
"I often get massages in the evening — it sounds crazy, but usually my masseuse comes over at 11 p.m," he told The Telegraph.
10. A more unusual habit among CEOs, Tobias Lutke says he never works later than 5:30 p.m.
"The only times I worked more than 40 hours in a week was when I had the burning desire to do so. I need 8ish hours of sleep a night," he said in a thread on Twitter, now X.
Fast-food franchisees in California are raising prices to offset the state's new $20 wage.
Paul Weaver/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
Fast-food franchisees in California fear diners will flock to Chili's and Applebee's to avoid price hikes.
Limited-service restaurants are raising prices to offset the state's $20 wage for fast-food workers.
As a result, the price gap between fast-food and casual dining restaurants could narrow.
California recently raised its minimum wage for fast-food workers to $20, and franchisees raising prices to offset this fear they could send some diners into the arms of casual dining chains like Chili's and Applebee's.
These chains aren't subject to the new minimum wage and, therefore, aren't expected to raise prices as much. This could potentially cause the price difference between fast-food and casual dining restaurants to shrink.
The $20 wage applies to workers at limited-service restaurant chains — those where diners typically don't get table service and pay for their food before eating it — with at least 60 locations nationwide.
Fast-food restaurants in California have been hiking prices to offset the wage, which is 25% above the state's general minimum wage.
Though the legislation was enacted on April 1, some restaurants gradually raised prices to avoid the sticker shock of dramatically hiking prices from one day to the next.
Shane Paul, who owns seven Jack in the Box restaurants in San Diego, told BI he'd raised the prices at his restaurants by about 10% or 11% over the past six to 12 months in anticipation of the higher wages. In previous years, he generally put prices up by around 3.5% to 4%, he said.
Transactions at his restaurants "are already trending down," he said.
Paul speculated some of the diners could be going to casual dining restaurants like Chili's or Applebee's instead, which he said had deals that meant diners could have a sit-down meal for "a dollar or two more than us."
Applebee's is a casual dining chain.
Scott Olson/Getty Images
Harsh Ghai, who said he owns about 180 Burger King, Taco Bell, and Popeyes restaurants in California, expressed similar concerns.
He told BI that his price increases were already impacting restaurant sales and that he expected more diners to turn to grocery stores and Chili's and Applebee's instead.
"We're gonna start to compete with them," Ghai said, speaking about the casual dining restaurants.
In a typical year, Ghai's restaurants put up their prices by between 2% and 3%, he said. But in the last 12 months, he's raised prices by between 8% and 10% — largely just to reflect food inflation, he said. He can't raise prices any further to absorb the higher wages because customers wouldn't come back, he said.
Scott Rodrick, who owns 18 McDonald's in northern California, told BI he had a "deep concern" that the new minimum wage "narrows the competitive gap" between different types of restaurants.
Executives at Kura Sushi, a sit-down Japanese chain with about 60 locations in the US, told analysts in early April that they thought the $20 wage would increase their value proposition as other chains keep increasing prices.
CEO Hajime Uba noted that Kura Sushi's prices were getting "closer and closer and closer" to fast-food pricing.
Diners generally go to fast-food and casual dining restaurants for different occasions, Brian Vaccaro, a restaurant analyst at Raymond James, told BI.
Sit-down restaurants typically attract diners who want to "relax and rewind" with family and friends. In contrast, people generally go to limited-service restaurants for the speed and convenience, he said.
Wages could soar across the entire restaurant industry
Analysts say that it's hard to predict exactly how diners' habits will change in response to the price increases at fast-food chains. People could buy more groceries, choose fast-food value deals, or switch to different restaurants.
Still, some analysts do expect other employers in the state — like full-service restaurants and retailers — to start paying workers more so that they can stay competitive, which could ultimately mean other restaurants increase their menu prices, too.
Still, in some cases, Vaccaro noted that servers at mid-priced, full-service restaurant chains are likely to already make $30 or more an hour, including tips, so price hikes may just be a way off.
"If casual dining can hold prices and doesn't see the upward labor pressure, it could receive some benefit as the gap between casual dining and limited service prices narrow," Sharon Zackfia, a restaurant analyst at William Blair, told BI over email.
"But limited service will still be cheaper, and the key tenets of fast and convenient will remain a positive factor for demand at limited service for customers on the go," she said.
Are you a fast-food worker excited about the new minimum wage? Or a franchisee or restaurant manager worried about how it will affect your business? Email this reporter at gdean@insider.com.
He said he was forced out as the firm grappled with declining client demand and too many hires.
Post-McKinsey, Gershanok co-founded Ohana, a sublet startup backed by Zillow and Airbnb's execs.
This is an as-told-to conversation with Ezra Gershanok, a former Business Analyst at McKinsey & Company and the cofounder of sublet startup Ohana.
Long story short, I don't regret my time at McKinsey & Company.
I was hired straight out of college as a Business Analyst, an entry-level consultant role at the firm. I'm glad I had the opportunity, and I appreciated the firm's high expectations and learned a lot from my colleagues.
However, several aspects of my job frustrated me.
There was an expectation that everything needed to be done immediately. I felt a constant sense of urgency even though we weren't building anything. My work output was always a PowerPoint deck, and its biggest impact was making whoever paid for us to be there look good.
In such an environment, you quickly realize that everything is political. Your ability to get on good projects, and even your performance goals, boil down to how well-liked you are by colleagues. Everyone at the firm can do the work so well that the higher-ups ultimately build teams of people they like working with.
The firm had clearly over-hired
My biggest issue was that McKinsey over-predicted how much work I would have.
I started at the firm in June 2021 as one among a class of pandemic hires. I left in March 2023.
During that time, McKinsey secured many government and private sector contracts and hired extensively, assuming there would be a steady workflow. Then, interest rates started rising, companies started tightening their budgets, and several realized they could automate much of their work. So, client demand began to dry up.
For me, the pace of the work started to slow down in the second half of 2021 and into 2022. Several jobs at the firm started to be seen as redundant. The pressure to cut down the workforce was palpable.
McKinsey doesn't normally conduct layoffs. Instead they push employees out by marking them down on performance. But the communication channels aren't clear when you're an entry-level employee. So, it's possible to get positive feedback from the clients you're working with and your direct manager, even when the higher-ups are trying to push you out.
And that's not a pleasant experience.
It would have been easier if they just laid me off
I remember getting a call in mid-February 2023. Things had gone pretty well on the project I was working on that week, which was on semiconductors, an pretty competitive to get staffed on. On Saturday, I got a call out of the blue from an Associate Partner who told me I was no longer on the project, even though I was supposed to go to Seattle that Monday to continue work. I received another call on Sunday and was told to talk to my Senior Partner because there was some hope I could get back on the project. But he flat-out said there was no way I was getting back on the project.
I had a meeting put on my calendar a week later and was told that senior managers would be present at the meeting to decide my fate at the firm. In the days leading up to the meeting, I kept receiving warnings that it wouldn't go well and that I was better off just quitting. I told them that I refused to quit before going through with the meeting.
At the meeting, they complained about my performance, even though it was clear that the real reason they wanted me out was because the firm had over-hired. It would have been easier if they said, "We're letting you go" or "We're firing you." Instead, they told me that the senior partners had met and decided that my next step was "search." I'd be paid for six weeks and given a guidance counselor who would help me look for another role.
I could have fought it, but I was pretty frustrated with my work by then. My biggest gripe is that McKinsey preys on people who are status-insecure. Everyone the firm hires is an overachiever. We want to do well, and what people care more about than money, honestly, is the gratification of our bosses.
Life after McKinsey
By then I was already thinking about solving this other problem I had experienced as an intern — the struggle of subletting. So my good friend, who was working at Apple at the time, quit his job, and we both bit the ground running, building a new startup called Ohana.
Ohana fills the gap between short-term rental platforms like Airbnb and long-term housing sites like Zillow. We provide an efficient way to sublease in NYC. We've found that the average host on Ohana saves $5,969 per sublease, and in the last month, Ohana has saved New Yorkers over $238,000 in rent. We've also brought on some heavy-weight backers, including Zillow's cofounder and former CEO, Spencer Rascoff, and Airbnb's former director of Engineering, Surabhi Gupta.
I'm passionate about the work I'm doing now. Looking back, the irony of my time at McKinsey is that they're constantly giving right-sizing advice to their clients, but completely miss the mark themselves.
Are you a consultant in a tough work environment? We would like to hear from you. Contact reporter Lakshmi Varanasi at lvaranasi@businessinsider.com.
Many boomers are holding on to their large homes, stressing the housing market for younger buyers.
For millennials with growing families, purchasing a home has become even more difficult.
For Biden and Trump, the issue of housing affordability could make or break their candidacies.
For baby boomers with growing families in the 1980s and 1990s, homeownership was a natural next step in their adulthoods.
But when their children moved out to pursue their own dreams years later, many of these boomers remained in their large homes. And at least for the foreseeable future, they're not going anywhere.
For millennials now looking to purchase a home, especially those now having children of their own, the road has been difficult. The tight housing market has effectively cut them off from purchasing homes within their budget, and high-interest rates haven't helped.
But many boomers, some still working and trying to navigate their fast-approaching retirements, have chosen to remain in large properties. And many of these homes have continued to appreciate in value, giving boomers second thoughts about downsizing.
According to a Redfin analysis of US Census Bureau data, 28% of homes throughout the country that contain three or more bedrooms are owned by empty-nesters aged 60 to 78. Millennials with children own 14% of similarly-sized properties, a stunning disparity.
But what does this mean for the 2024 election, especially with Gen Z and millennial voters effectively priced out of so many housing markets?
A house of cards
When housing construction stood still during the housing crisis, it led to a lack of new homes for growing families.
And just last week, mortgage rates rose to nearly 7%, according to The Wall Street Journal. Compare that figure to 2020, when there was an average 30-year fixed mortgage rate of just 3.38%.
With the current housing shortage and less-than-ideal mortgage rates, many millennial families are not enjoying the same quality of life as their parents.
Millennials also grew up with soaring higher education costs, so many are still paying off student-loan debt. Others are also paying off record credit-card debt.
That means a lot of Gen Z and millennial voters are frustrated with leaders in Washington for what many see as inaction to address some of the most pressing issues of their generation.
President Joe Biden has sought to emphasize housing affordability while on the campaign trail, recently making a major speech in Nevada where he spoke about his administration's efforts to build new units. But right now many voters aged 18 to 44 aren't enthused with the administration, which could benefit former President Donald Trump despite the left-leaning orientation of many young voters.
Trump has continued to tout the success of the pre-COVID economy under which he presided, but it remains to be seen if he'll be able to win over the scores of millennials who soundly rejected the GOP in the 2016 and 2020 elections.
One thing is certain, though. There's still not enough housing.
"We don't buy every new set that comes out," 38-year-old collector Jonny Edmondson told The Wall Street Journal. "We've got to eat."
Lego's investment in sets for adults is paying off in spades. The company's revenue has doubled over the last decade to almost $10 billion in 2023, the Journal reported.
"We decided to focus on adults because we realized that we had a much bigger opportunity than we were tapping into," Julia Goldin, Lego's chief of product and marketing, told the Journal.
For adults, part of the appeal is displaying the finished product.
"Nowadays it's not so geeky," Sian Twynham, another adult Lego builder, told the Journal. "You can have a set on your coffee table, and no one would bat an eyelid."
Whether it's nostalgia or strategic marketing, toy companies are seeing big returns when they rebrand kids products for adult audiences.
Hasbro, another classic toymaker, has latched onto a similar strategy, rebranding classic games like Scrabble and Trivial Pursuit for both older and younger generations, the Associated Press reported.
US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Carney engaging missiles and drones in the Red Sea.
US Navy/MCS2 Aaron Lau
Iran launched an unprecedented missile and drone attack on Israel this weekend.
The IDF said 99% of the 300 or so Iranian munitions were shot down.
US forces destroyed more than 70 of them, according to Biden administration officials.
US forces engaged and shot down more than 75 of the missiles and drones that Iran fired at Israel this weekend, marking its biggest air-defense battle of the six-month-long Middle East crisis.
Iran and its proxy militias launched a barrage of 170 attack drones, 120 ballistic missiles, and 30 cruise missiles at Israel in a massive and unprecedented attack on Saturday night local time, according to the Israel Defense Forces.
It was the first-ever direct attack on Israel from Iranian soil. About 99% of the threats were intercepted by Israel and its partners, the IDF said, and most of them did not even cross into Israeli territory — a remarkable air-defense success.
US forces in the region eliminated more than 70 of the Iranian munitions, senior Biden administration officials told reporters on Sunday.
An Israeli fighter jet intercepts a drone.
IDF screengrab via X
Two US Navy destroyers operating in the eastern Mediterranean Sea — the USS Arleigh Burke and USS Carney — engaged and destroyed between four and six ballistic missiles, and a Patriot air-defense system shot down one ballistic missile above Iraq, an official said.
A majority of the remaining ballistic missiles were engaged by Israel's Arrow 2 and 3 systems, which make up the top echelon of the country's sophisticated air defense network. A few of the ballistic missiles entered Israeli territory and struck targets, including an IDF base, causing minor damage, the military said.
US fighter jets also shot down more than 70 Iranian one-way attack drones, the Biden administration official said. They would not say how many aircraft were involved in the interceptions.
President Joe Biden said he directed the US military to move aircraft and ballistic missile defenses to the region over the past week.
"Thanks to these deployments and the extraordinary skill of our servicemembers, we helped Israel take down nearly all of the incoming drones and missiles," he said in a statement.
The guided-missile destroyer USS Arleigh Burke.
US Navy photo/Petty Officer 3rd Class Scott Pittman
"Our forces remain postured to protect US troops and partners in the region, provide further support for Israel's defense, and enhance regional stability," Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said in a statement after the attack.
Britain's defense minister, Grant Shapps, confirmed that the UK also intercepted multiple drones. None of the drones or cruise missiles launched by Iran crossed into Israeli territory, according to the IDF.
The attack marked the US military's biggest air-defense battle of the ongoing and widespread Middle East crisis, which began with Hamas' October 7 terror attack across southern Israel, sparking an outburst of violence across the region.
Since October, US forces have engaged aerial threats launched by Iran-backed militias above Iraq and Syria, and also the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. The largest of these attacks involved more than 20 drones and missiles carried out by the Yemen-based Houthis earlier this year.
Damage from a missile impact at an Israeli airbase.
IDF
Tehran's attack against Israel, meanwhile, came in retaliation for an Israeli airstrike on an Iranian diplomatic facility in Syria at the start of April. The strike killed several military officials, including two generals in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Following the incident, Iran vowed revenge and telegraphed that it would retaliate against Israel. The Middle East had been on heightened alert over the past two weeks as it braced for a possible response from Tehran, which was unclear in terms of size and scope.
The attack on Saturday was met with resounding international condemnation, with world leaders blasting Iran as "reckless." The leaders of the G7 — which is made up of the US, UK, France, Germany, Canada, Italy, and Japan — said they expressed solidarity with Israel and are committed to the country's security.
"With its actions, Iran has further stepped toward the destabilization of the region and risks provoking an uncontrollable regional escalation," the leaders said in a statement. "This must be avoided."
For now, Israel appears to be calibrating a response to the Iranian attack, although it is unclear at this time what that may look like.
Ex-national security advisor John Bolton called for a "far stronger" response from Israel against Iran.
Bolton made the comments after Iran launched a barrage of retaliatory strikes toward Israel.
John Kirby told NBC News President Joe Biden did not want to engage in a wider war with Iran.
Former national security advisor John Bolton called for a "far stronger" response from Israel after Iran launched a missile and drone attack against the country.
Bolton, a UN ambassador under President George W. Bush and an advisor in President Donald Trump's administration, took to CNN shortly after the attack began to call out what he said was an insufficient deterrence strategy.
"What we had tonight was a massive failure of Israeli and American deterrence. Massive failure," he told anchor Wolf Blitzer. "A 200 ballistic missile, cruise missile, drone failure."
"I think notwithstanding that there appears to be very little damage, fingers crossed, until we get the final assessment," he continued.
The world is now waiting to see how Israel will respond. Bolton, for his part, said Israel should "reestablish deterrence in a major way."
"I think that means by definition, Israel's response — and there should be a response — should not be proportionate," he told Blitzer. "It should be far stronger because when deterrence fails to re-establish, you have to teach the adversary that any gain they may hope to get by any future attack will be more than outweighed by the damage that will be called."
Bolton, who was instrumental in the Trump administration's withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, then suggested that the Israeli government should use the attack to "destroy" Iran's nuclear weapons program.
Bolton said on NewsNation's "The Hill Sunday," however, that the Iranian government looked "weak" after its attack.
"Whatever it is, 300 plus drones, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles and maybe three or four got thorough," he said. "So, who's the fool in this posture right now?" Who looks weak? The regime in Iran looks weak."
Bolton also blasted the Biden administration for what he said was its "weak" posture toward Iran.
The United States helped Israel counter the aerial assault by intercepting dozens of Iranian drones and missiles.
On Sunday, White House national security communications advisor John Kirby on NBC's "Meet the Press" said that Israel's response would be "up to them" and repeatedly affirmed that President Joe Biden did not want to engage in a wider conflict with Iran.
"I'm certainly not going to get ahead of their decision-making," Kirby said of Israel, adding: "And as the president said to the prime minister [Benjamin Netanyahu] last night, that support for Israel's self-defense will stay ironclad."