Recent Comments

  • Ted Kluger on Saturday Apple video: What motivated Steve Jobs - 'Inspiring! It’s very cool that he shared so much of his personal journey with the world – to our benefit!'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple vs. Russia - 'Good. FU Putin and your authoritarian regime.'
  • Bill Donahue on Premarket: Apple is green - 'That’s what I was thinking too. Although that’ll depend on when the options vest. I’m sure everyone’s pushing for the shortest vesting period possible. That said, I’m guessing he’s already a rich guy. I have to remind myself that most people aren’t like me and motivated more by working with the best people on interesting and challenging things, than jumping top whoever’s going to pay me the most. I also would never work for Sam Altman. Or any other snakeoil salesman.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Premarket: Apple is green - '” Paul Meade just made a horrendously bad decision, IMO.” I would tend to agree. My only reservation from agreeing 100% would center around guarantees that OpenAI IS going public in the very near future, and he’ll be able to cash out his signing stock options before the house of cards collapses.'
  • Bill Donahue on Premarket: Apple is green - '“Apple’s Vision Pro hardware chief defects to OpenAI” https://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/apple-vision-pro-hardware-chief-200410759.html Paul Meade, V-P overseeing the Vision Pro headset and Apple’s upcoming smart glasses, is jumping ship to OpenAI next week (**** according to Bloomberg) Apple’s Vision Products Group will now be managed by his deputy, Fletcher Rothkopf. What I find most surprising about this is that OpenAI is still able to poach significant talent from a company like Apple, when there are serious predictions out there that OpenAI will go under within the next 18 months because of its wildly unsustainable financial situation. Which is why they’re racing to IPO, in hopes of using proceeds from the IPO to pay for the vast datacenter buildout deficit they’ve anchored themselves to. Of course, if that’s not actually a sustainable business, then the inevitable financial cratering will just have been delayed for a bit, and the risk and debt transferred from insiders to blindered investors. Paul Meade just made a horrendously bad decision, IMO.'
  • Gregg Thurman on The price hikes have landed - 'Took another look at my iMac. It’s an M1 bought in November 2021. It does everything I want it to, but it’s soon to be 5 years old. I haven’t turned it on in over a year, but with AI here may find it necessary to upgrade sooner than later. I’ve decided not to wait (fear of memory costs). Delivery is expected end of July.'
  • David Emery on Premarket: Apple is green - 'If nothing else, thanks for reminding us that Volume speaks almost as loudly as Price.'
  • Bart Yee on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Joseph, how do we have a Yo-Yo casino when Apple has taken out 37% of AAPL’s float over the past decade as you are so fond of pointing out? It’s not yet July, a so-called blackout month so Apple is still out there with the “possibility” of buying back shares what was yesterday a -13% discount from its all time intraday high set 18 days ago. Yet a several days before today you were speaking glowingly of AAPL clawing its way back up from $290 back over $300 and on its way back (eventually) to near All Time Highs of $315. I absolutely understand how you, I and a lot of AAPL longs felt when yesterday’s knee-jerk reaction to Apple’s price hikes on select iPads and Macs caused a significant drop ON PAPER (mine was a higher 6 figure) to our investments. Yet, like Robert has been saying, we’ve been here before, (twice, back in Dec. 2025 and April 30-May 4th), for some, it’s just a bump in the road, soon to be left behind in the rear view mirror. For others a (another) buying opportunity for our favorite company navigating its way through yet another unprecedented EXTERNAL event affecting its operations. Frankly, this isn’t like previous stock markets of the 90’s and 2000’s where AAPL was buffeted by huge swings, ITS WORSE!! Why? Because there’s trillions more dollars out there chasing every cent of profits, much faster, more sophisticated program, algorithmic, hell, even AI trading at even higher speed and magnitudes higher volumes than ever before. Rapid movement of stock market liquidity in and out, back and forth, sector to sector, stock to stock, and of course, the geopolitical uncertainty that underlies all of this – it’s mind blowing and frankly mind numbing. While we fret (a little) on daily market postings and some of the AAPL gyrations, we still have plenty to be thankful for from Apple, AAPL and its management threading through uncharted rapids and rocks. I for one am quite happy that yesterday’s irrational sell off of over $275 billion in market cap was reversed by 48% today meaning there was $132 billion net cap flowing back to the stock, telling me there’s investors like us who are logically thinking through Apple’s moves, deeming them necessary and correct, and knowing/feeling the future for Apple and AAPL is still upward. Yesterday’s drop volume was 107M shares, double normal volume. Today’s volume was over 260M shares(!!!) so large institutions must be piling back in because that’s about $72B worth of trading today. The market is what it is, a place where everyone is trying to make or save a buck, so there’s always the competing interests, actions, and motivations of everyone involved. I’d suggest just focusing on what you need to do to have Apple be your nest egg and retirement funding source. If you didn’t need to sell anything recently, then you’re not affected at all except psychologically, so time to go outside and enjoy the California weather.'
  • Gregg Thurman on The price hikes have landed - '”there may be a glut and demand slowdown starting in 2028, well before the time any new foundry could come online.” Difficult to argue that logic, but then, with Apple’s penchant for owning everything that goes into its products, would Apple use this as a wake-up call to start designing its own memory? Not only would Apple have more control over supply, but it would have pricing advantages other consumers of memory would not have. Then there is always the prospect of improving memory performance specifically for Apple products. Memory standards (that always entail compromises) wouldn’t necessarily apply to Apple’s designs, being developed for specific proprietary products. Add to that, in 3 – 4 years additional foundry capacity would be coming online, thereby weakening foundry pricing power. All-in-all I see nothing but good things coming from Apple developing its own memory technology/silicon.'
  • Steven Philips on Counterpoint: Customers pay more for book-type foldables - 'The hinge type. Imagine an actual clam shell vs. a book.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Today (June 26) at 4:54 PM Eastern somebody bought 9,032 shares of AAPL @ $301.xx ($2,725,242).'
  • Robert Stack on The price hikes have landed - 'Bart asked: “What foundry has the spare capacity and cost effective production to make them [memory chips]?” Maybe Intel? It would be a good time for them to enter this business if they had the capability to make them.'
  • Jim Fonda on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'Joseph, you commented: Mr. Market is clearly not doing his homework. My take is that Mr. Market does a lot of homework, but it is usually the wrong homework, and that he hasn’t a clue about what is going on. That can be rewarding or frustrating. The fact that Apple goes down when it should go up is frustrating. However, Apple pays attention to its business, so its stock eventually goes up in spite of how confused Mr. Market is.'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'I upgraded my M3 MBP for an M5 MBP just before these increases knowing they were coming and because Apple gave me great trade in value. So glad I did!'
  • Joseph Bland on Counterpoint: Apple to Hit Record Market Shares in 2026 - 'You forgot your /s, David…. Upvoted anyway!'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Yesterday’s overreaction IMO was just an excuse to help shorts cover: Short interest was (134.675) Million as of April 30, 2026. 2.931 Short interest was (138.782) Million as of May 15, 2026. 2.744 Short interest was (155.886) Million as of May 29, 2026. 3.384'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'Hi, Daniel. “Now will customers hold back… because of the higher retail prices.” IMO, no. I bought a new loaded MacBook Pro about a month ago, and I’m very glad I did! Bottom line: There’s nothing to say these prices won’t keep increasing, both from inflation and from continuing price gouging. (Come on, chipmakers: The chips haven’t suddenly become more expensive to manufacture! Just look at the profits they’re recording!) Also, what’s the impetus for prices to suddenly drop now that they’ve been raised? Both these factors tell me that higher prices for Apple will be a non-event. Not so for other computer manufacturers, of course….'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Down 6% yesterday and up 3% today – welcome to the Apple yo-yo, 2026 edition. This is par for the casino marketplace it has been decided we have to live with.'
  • Bill Donahue on Counterpoint: Apple to Hit Record Market Shares in 2026 - 'For iPhone sales to remain flat when the iPhone market share is predicted to increase from 23% to 25%, obviously they’re forecasting a decline in total smartphone sales. I don’t know about that. Given what’s been going on in China and India, and with the upcoming integration of all the AI functions they described at WWDC, I’m thinking iPhone sales increase YOY for 2026.'
  • Bill Donahue on Counterpoint: Customers pay more for book-type foldables - 'What’s the difference between clamshell and book-style foldable smartphones? Is it just size?'
  • Steven Philips on Counterpoint: Customers pay more for book-type foldables - 'The author makes a good case for foldables that I really hadn’t considered. There will still be the weight and size “pocket ability” issues – (especially with pulling down running shorts! 🙁 ) – but the image Philip provided showing a photo – or video? – right on the seam is impressive. I’ll now have to think hard instead of dismiss.'
  • Steven Philips on Daniel Ives: Apple held off as long as they could (video) - 'Not that I see Apple’s supply chain chip market control as a bad thing, but it’s now like those chip suppliers are saying “the shoe is now on the other foot” and are exerting their own control to maximize their profits. From their standpoint this is obviously a good thing. Maybe Apple exerted too much control and they may never get it back. So higher prices will now be a fact of life. Or maybe the AI demands will come crashing down and the over capacity in chip manufacturing will have companies come crawling back. This definitely creates a pressure of the known unknowns on Apple. They need to show that they have this handled which ever way it goes.'
  • Bill Fouche on Counterpoint: Customers pay more for book-type foldables - 'Journalists these days will go to such lengths to avoid any appearance of partisanship or brand loyalty. The facts reported in this story seem to support the more truthful angle that Apple’s anticipated entry into this market will be only viable one at the highest end of the “price bands.” It will create enormous new demand for a premium foldable. And it will also suck most of the preexisting revenue that now trickles into the pockets of Samsung and Samsung-wannabes. Apple is about to gobble up one of the few profitable safe harbors beleagered Android vendors have been able to hide in. But the story doesn’t actually say this (and in fairness it is only close to inevitable, not absolutely inevitable.) The “price tier” angle above reminds me a lot of how politics is covered in the Times these days. They cannot bring themselves to report that in our two party system, one of our great parties has completely jumped the shark. So we see coverage sort of like this (which, to be clear, I have completely made up): “Both parties are falling captive to their extremes – the right to insurrectionist cultists who want to invade american cities wearing balaclavas and packing AR-15s, and the left to the socialists who want Medicare-For-All and better bus service.” We live in strange times, my friends.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Daniel Ives: Apple held off as long as they could (video) - 'For the past several years everyone was predicting that Apple would be raising their prices yet it never happened. A credit to Tim Cook and his supply chain expertise in action. Now that everyone in “Big Tech” has been hit with the memory price increases, all of a sudden Apple gets punished with the hysteria escalating to Defcon 1 armageddon being amplified by everyone in the talking head media. Apple’s ability to successfully navigate around this problem for such an extended period of time is ignored as if it was an anomaly with zero credit being given to the masterclass being orchestrated by Tim Cook and the entire Apple team. Reminds me of a poster my father had on the wall inside his warehouse when I was a kid. It said: “One Aw S#*@ wipes out 99 Attaboys.” Now I can see the underpinnings of how that phrase still applies decades later.'
  • Ron Fredrick on Apple's Industrial Design shakeup: Mark Gurman speaks (video) - 'Ben, I very much agree with Neal. In fact your comment was so well stated that I asked my wife to read it as well. 🙂'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Although yesterday was a painful day for shareholders, I commend Tim Cook and Apple’s executive team on the decision to raise prices to preserve margin and protect product quality.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'In early afternoon trading Apple is up $3.77 at $278.93. The shares are now trading in a range first visited in early May and prior to the run-up into WWDC 2026. All four major indexes are at least marginally in the green today.'
  • David Emery on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'John Gruber: https://daringfireball.net/linked/2026/06/26/price-hiked-apple-tv-4k-is-4-years-old The only way this makes sense is if these prices are really meant for the upcoming new hardware, and those new models are more ambitious home hubs that warrant $200–250 prices. Here Gruber is talking about AppleTV, boxes but I think his reasoning holds for the entire Apple product line. Introduce the pain of price hikes now, in the ‘off season’, so in the fall, the new products can come out with no price hikes.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Apple's Industrial Design shakeup: Mark Gurman speaks (video) - 'Ben, Very well said.'
  • Daniel Epstein on Apple's summer price hikes: What the analysts are saying - 'These price increases are a bit annoying. Of course if you look long term the prices overall have not increased as much as inflation and if you include new functionality and capabilities arguably the bang for your buck has increased substantially over the years. Now will customers hold back on new purchases a bit longer because of the higher retail prices. Probably they will try to save a bit but likely they will end up buying what they need and want which presumably that is what they have been doing all along. If Apple was the only company needing to hike prices it would be a different situation. In the end I think Apple will not let this supply issue last forever but short term there is not an easy solution.'