Recent Comments

  • Gregg Thurman on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Something is amiss here. The NASDAQ 100 is down 0.46% for the day. AAPL is down 6.15% for the day. Had it not been for AAPL‘s fall from grace, the NASDAQ would have been up for the day. How come the market penalized AAPL so much with today’s announcements, and gave virtually everyone else a pass?'
  • James Hillhouse on The price hikes have landed - 'Karma is blind and tough.'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'Horace posted this on Asymco Plus this AM: “Why iPhones prices don’t change” by Horace Dediu “…The iPhone has grown in capabilities exponentially but the price has remained the same. To illustrate, I considered the storage provided by each iPhone in the list (all 160 models). They span 4GB to 2048GB. If we divide the inflation-adjusted price by the storage we get adjusted dollars/GB and the graph for all iPhones is shown below: [graph] Note that this is a logarithmic scale. The pricing went from $75/GB with the iPhone (1) to about $1/GB with iPhone 17. A two-orders-of-magnitude reduction…” Mr. Market is clearly not doing his homework.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'The market’s over reaction to today’s announcement has me thinking that, just like the post WWDC selloff, AAPL will rebound to some degree over the next week. How much is impossible say.'
  • Fred Stein on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'So far, no one lowered their PT. AAPL now trades nearly 14% below average PT, vs. the sweet spot of a 10% discount.'
  • Bill Donahue on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'Interesting that CNBC only refers to Cook’s reiteration last week of impending price hikes, and not to his original mention during the earnings call months ago.'
  • Bill Donahue on The price hikes have landed - 'Nice unsubstantiated swipe at Apple at the end, there. “”We told a couple of the customers who were being very aggressive with pricing at that time that this is not constructive,” he said, without naming Apple…” And, for the record, without naming anyone at all. Note they also didn’t name me. And just to be clear, I wasn’t being aggressive at all with them over pricing. That said, this is what happens in a boom-bust industry and market: companies lose money during bad times, hoping to survive until good times, when they can enjoy 80% profit margins on super-high prices because of screaming demand with no anticipated slowdown. Nobody expects customers to pay more than they have to during the slow times, when deals are available. That said, Apple also has a history of securing future production by signing long-term deals that presumably do provide a life-raft to suppliers during tougher market times.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'Months in advance, company warns of impending chip shortages and need for price increases. Market shrugs. Stock trends higher. Company eventually increases prices as warned months prior. Market responds with apparent shock. Yet another example of how little people (or algorithms) pay attention to company news (or anything real) when making investment decisions.'
  • Bill Donahue on Suppliers say the September launch of Apple's foldable iPhone is on - 'Oops – yes, 2027. Thanks Joe. And yes, if the eventual price for foldables is as high as predictions indicate, adding the extra cost for chips now makes it ridiculous.'
  • Ron Fredrick on Premarket: Apple is red - '**With apologies, I’m stealing a post from Seeking Alpha which I think very succinctly addresses the issue which caused AAPL to drop so much today. The person, who identifies on Seeking Alpha as glenlake46, correctly addresses the issue with his comment, IMO. glenlake46 ” It’s not as if Apple is raising prices at a time when everyone else is holding the line. Check out the price of houses, cars, and food. And the new MacBook Pro for $1999? I paid more than that for a MacBook Pro fifteen years ago. What’s extraordinary in all this is that consumers have paid essentially the same across the years for vastly improved functionality. That’s the story. More, much more, for the same price or, inflation-adjusted, even less.”'
  • Fred Stein on The price hikes have landed - 'Regardless, Apple’s demographic can afford the price hikes.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'CFRA just published a brief note that I read as supportive of the price increases in defense of margins. Dan Ives at Wedbush, in a story that’s just across the wires, is also supportive of price increases. Dell is down today 6.23% and HPE is off 5.04%. Apple is now off 5.59% with 30 minutes remaining in today’s session.'
  • David Emery on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'Market reaction is totally irrational. Other companies will be hit much worse by this. What was it, a 40% price hike on Microsoft Surface?'
  • David Emery on The price hikes have landed - 'Micron blames Apple And/or NVIDIA??? Apple has generally been willing to capitalize critical suppliers, when the business case and partnership with the supplier is there. Or does this indicate there was other tension between Apple and Micron? But more than displays or assembly, ‘memory’ really is a component market where Apple (and others) can choose between suppliers.'
  • Robert Stack on The price hikes have landed - 'I blame it on the price you have to be willing to pay for private, on-device AI. It also puts this “bad news” on Tim Cook, and off the shoulders of incoming CEO Ternus.'
  • Robert Stack on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'As the dust has settled post-WWDC and the better analysts (e.g. Wamsi Mohan, Joanna Stern) are showing enthusiasm about upgraded Siri and the way Apple AI is being implemented, announcing price increases after these positive reviews is a smart move. If WWDC 2026 had been a disappointment ala WWDC 2024, and had Apple followed with price increases, the reaction would have been far worse. In some ways Apple can spin the price increase as the price you pay for now functional, on-device, private AI. Which come to think of it, isn’t really spin at all. Just the facts, Ma’am.'
  • Joseph Bland on Suppliers say the September launch of Apple's foldable iPhone is on - 'Hi, Bill. “…and shipment in 2017.” Most likely you meant 2027. I can’t begin to have an opinion about Apple launching this next year. But I suspect that it may be possible, assuming they’ve been putting all the pieces together for long enough, and have solved the major issues. Still, the sticker shock won’t be helped by the new bump in prices.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Micron drives Apple's prices - '” I think there will also be some that will get new hardware but may decide on a lower priced model with less memory” I see greater use of iCloud, and less on device memory, as a solution to price increases. Am I looking at this wrong? If I’m right, Apple Store reps might be receiving training to offer that as a solution to memory costs.'
  • Joseph Bland on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'I think AAPl just shed a bunch of short term investors. We’ll soon see how many follow….'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'BTW, the only truly green stock on my tech watchlist today is QCOM, but weirdly, it’s because they’ve diversified into data centers. I say weirdly, because data centers are pretty much why Qualcomm’s handset business is showing signs of cratering – because it’s not helped at all by the massive price hikes in chip costs driven by data center AI- based growth.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Yes, it’s tempting to buy at this price, but we won’t be doing it. Yes, we have cash on the sidelines, but it’s there for a reason. We only sell, and generally we only do that to pay our bills. However, we went heavy (for us) into cash, and have maintained that, ever since this President took office – we call it our TIF (Trump Insurance Fund). There is a giant knife suspended over the stock market that has zip to do with Apple/AAPL. My advice is to be cautious about catching it. Unfortunately, even Apple investors may have put themselves in a position where they need to sell NOW to avoid selling LATER. And Apple’s valuation compared to, say Microsoft’s, is very juicy looking. So we won’t be buying (and certainly not selling!) no matter how attractive the present valuation looks. That huge knife, just like this President, is completely unpredictable. Even, in the short term, for Apple/AAPL.'
  • Bart Yee on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'June 27, 2026 is Apple’s end of June Q3 Quarter, so there may be a very short run on existing products at current pricing at retailers. The full effects will not be seen until Q4 begins on June 28, 2026 through September 26, 2026. We will see if Apple raises prices on current iPhones ahead of iPhone 18 introduction. It’s very likely iPhone pricing will have to rise.'
  • Ron Fredrick on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'David Thall said: “MY TAKE I believe when most users upgrade their Macs, they do it regardless of the price. Ditto their iPhones – which they’re going to want to do in order to have the power to fully use AI.” **Upvoted and I very much agree with you, David. As long-term AAPL investors, my wife and I have upgraded our iPhones *every* year…and the previous years were long before the memory for AI was needed for full capability.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Apple's Industrial Design shakeup: Mark Gurman speaks (video) - 'Ben, I don’t disregard Gurman but he is a bit of a twat. He constantly takes an anti Apple stance no matter what he is reporting on. It makes the message hard to listen to because you constantly are trying to read between the lines instead of just trying to understand the information. It is so tiring to try to figure out what Gurman’s information actually means despite the message he delivers. Design, as is engineering, is really about form and function. I don’t know if one is subservient to the other. They both need to be strong. Maybe things haven’t changed as much as some would like because the present design works well with the present engineering. And I don’t see anyone else coming out with a very different design that puts Apple and the rest of the industry to shame and that needs to be copied.'
  • Bart Yee on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'From CNBC (my percentage changes added): “Apple stock drops 5% on MacBook and iPad price hikes due to memory crunch” Apple on Thursday announced price hikes on MacBook and iPad. Last week, CEO Tim Cook said price hikes were coming due to surging memory and storage costs. The memory crunch is in the financials of memory makers like Micron, which just reported that revenue in the latest quarter more than quadrupled. Apple on Thursday announced price hikes on MacBook and iPad, its first formal move to pass higher memory and storage costs on to consumers after CEO Tim Cook said increases had become unavoidable. Shares sank around 5% on Thursday after the price change, its worst fall since February. Here are the latest changes from Apple: MacBook Neo entry $599 increasing to $699 (17%) MacBook Air 512GB $1099 increasing to $1299 (18%) MacBook Pro 1T $1699 increasing to $1999 (18%) iPad Air 128GB $599 increasing to $749 (25%) iPad Pro Wifi 256GB $999 increasing to $1199 (30%) Apple’s online store briefly went down Thursday morning and updated with the price changes. “The consumer electronics industry is facing an unprecedented challenge,” the company said in a statement. “The rapid expansion of AI data centers has created an extraordinary surge in demand for ” Excerpt From “Apple stock sinks 5% after price hikes on MacBook and iPad” MacKenzie Sigalos, CNBC https://apple.news/Ae-lZYHhIS56Nb_PEWrBztA This material may be protected by copyright.“ For perspective, here info on previously announced price increases from Samsung on some of its consumer products, from Gemini: “To offset manufacturing cost pressures from soaring memory costs, Samsung has directly raised retail prices on its consumer electronics. Specifically, its mobile memory purchase costs surged by about 107%, which subsequently pushed up the average selling price of Samsung smartphones by around 23%.The price adjustments vary by product tier: Smartphones & Foldables: Samsung bumped the retail prices of foldable devices like the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Galaxy Z Flip 7 by $80. Across other mainline models (such as the Galaxy S series and FE lineups), consumers are seeing price increases of roughly $116. Higher storage variants and ultra-tier models have seen jumps as high as $300. Samsung’s price increases are focused heavily on higher-tier configurations and specialized form factors. Galaxy Z Fold 7 (512 GB / 1 TB): Increased by $80, shifting from $2,119.99 → $2,199.99 (4%) (512 GB) and $2,419.99 → $2,499.99 (3%) (1 TB). Galaxy Z Flip 7 (512 GB): Increased by $80, shifting from $1,219.99 → $1,299.99. (7%) Galaxy S25 Edge (512 GB): Increased by $80, shifting from $1,219.99 → $1,299.99. (7%) ((I thought this model had been discontinued. Yes, it was, but remaining stocks are still being sold by retailers, at already discounted prices. The new MSRP reflects the memory costs now but probably will be used by retailers to point out how much more of a deal it is to blow out remaining inventory)) Galaxy S25 FE (256 GB): Increased by $40, shifting from $709.99 → $749.99.(6%) Note: Mainline Galaxy S26 base models did not receive retrofitted price hikes, as their initial release pricing already factored in elevated manufacturing costs. Tablets: The 1TB model of the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra was hit with a $280 price increase. Tablets across premium, mid-range, and entry tiers saw price increases, with the highest hikes on top-tier devices: Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra Increased by $100–$280, with the 1TB model rising to $1,899.99 (17%) and 512GB base to $1,199.99. (9%) Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Experienced moderate increases of $50–$180, with the S10 Plus (512GB) moving to $1,299.99. (16%) Samsung Galaxy Tab A11+ Widescreen Saw increases of $50–$70, with 128GB models reaching $299.99–$329.99. (20% to 27%) Memory Shortage Context: These retail bumps are a direct result of supply constraints and rising component costs, with Samsung’s key memory modules surging by up to 60% to 100% in wholesale contract prices amid the global AI data center boom.“'
  • Raj Pandey on Premarket: Apple is red - '“…the firm raised its Fair Value Estimate on Apple from $270 to $290 based on expectations of higher prices in 2027…” When other companies raise prices of their products or services, Wall Street rewards them by driving their stock price higher. When Apple does the same, the outcome is quite the opposite. Echoing your sentiment: BUY APPLE NOW!!!'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'David, Upvoted. Also, I think there will also be some that will get new hardware but may decide on a lower priced model with less memory than they normally would have gotten.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'Ouch. That announcement and the market’s reaction hurt.'
  • Gary Morton on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'Today the market seems to believe that it understands the price elasticity equation for Apple and that the price increase will drive volumes down enough to lower the net profit. I seriously doubt that is the expectation Apple had when deciding on the price increases. I would expect that they’ll try to essentially hold % margins for products at the same level. This will mean MORE $$$ profit per product, since the price increase while the % margin stays constant means more $$$ profit per product. Given the resilience of Apple’s customer base with regard to general inflation, the net decrease in demand volume should be less than the net increase from higher prices. Mid-higher end consumer spending has continued to grow robustly despite higher inflation. Thus, this price increase should actually raise Apple’s revenue and earnings. Even with some slightly lower volumes. However, since the overall products revenue will grow relative to the Services revenue, there could be a small net margin % impact. I expect a lot of questions and commentary about all this in the FQ326 conference call. Until then, we’ll likely see mixed market reactions depending on the narrative of the day.'
  • David Thall on Micron drives Apple's prices - 'So far, Apple has increased the price of most of their products but not the iPhone or EarPods. I suspect they’ll do that when the new iPhones are released later this year. I’m sure Apple has calculated exactly what will happen to their sales and revenue if they raise prices to cover the increase in memory costs. I expect they’re probably looking further ahead and probably raised the prices a little more than they maybe needed to maintain profit margins because they assume memory prices will continue to go up. That’s why the price hikes are actually so much. They tore off the Band-Aid now. It’s the glass half empty half full scenario. The fact that they’re raising the prices means they’re going to ensure that they continue to generate good revenue and profits, even if sales are slightly depressed. MY TAKE I believe when most users upgrade their Macs, they do it regardless of the price. Ditto their iPhones – which they’re going to want to do in order to have the power to fully use AI.'