Recent Comments

  • Romeo Esparrago on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'Yes, Happy Hope Full New Year!!'
  • Jonny T on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'Here’s to us all creating some great new memories in 2026! And three cheers to our choirmaster Philip EdW!'
  • Greg Lippert on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'Happy New years! May the wind be at your back in 26!'
  • Bill Fouche on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'So sad to learn that Apple isn’t winning in the cloud-based protein-folding, self-driving auto, and AI-designed drug markets that it has not entered. Doomed!'
  • David Drinkwater on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - '(In agreement …) This seems kinda like a pre-emptive CYA: “What we’re really focused on is LLMs and AI, but just in case that doesn’t work out, we also think that everything we are doing can be applied to run of the mill computing — only much, much faster.” “weasel words”, perhaps, but in a different environment/direction than Joe suggested above.'
  • David Drinkwater on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'Happy New Year, All. May it bring (artificial) intelligence and (real) joy to you all.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'James: There’s some very strong research from Apple on the economic impact of Apple products in the education space including a January 2023 report titled “The Total Economic Impact of Apple Devices for Education.” Apple is deeply invested in the education market and school districts are a very important market for Apple worldwide. In addition to the economic benefits of choosing Apple products for schools, there are credible claims Apple products in the school environment lead to higher teacher retention rates and greater student enrollment and engagement. Apple will not be pulling iPads out of schools in favor of foldable iPhones for students.The education market alone is reason for Apple not to discontinue the iPad line. Last fiscal year the iPad delivered $28 billion in revenue to Apple, representing a 5% increase in revenue from the line year-over-year and representing just over 10% of revenue generated from iPhones, Macs and iPads. Apple’s not going to throw that much revenue into the dustbin of history.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'On this final day of the year the S&P 500 index dropped 0.74% to finish at 6,845.50. This represents a 16.39% gain on the year. Today over 95% of index components closed in the red. Morgan Stanley has a 7,800 forecast for the S&P 500 in 2026. That represents an expectation of a nearly 14% gain from today’s closing level. Best wishes to every one as we enter the new year. My expectation is for Apple to deliver greater than a 20% gain in the share price over the next 365 days, surpassing the gain in the S&P 500 on the year. Be well. Stay safe. Enjoy New Year’s Day and all of the opportunities we encounter in the market in coming year. I’m bullish on equities as we enter 2026.'
  • James Hillhouse on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'I’ll place a gentleman’s bet with Greg of $100 (sans interest), if that’s appropriate, that the iPad survives—even thrives—post foldable iPhones. I won’t burden the folks here with the simple-minded basis for my bet… …ok, I can’t help it! The fact is that it’s not uncommon for me to have my MBP M4 and iPad Pro 11” M5 open while I’m working, all the while using my iPhone to tick-off reminders or tasks I’m accomplishing or responding to Messages while I’m working. I got into this habit after one job setting in which I was issued an iPad and told not to do business on my iPhone, only on the iPad. I got hooked. And then Apple had to go and make it drunk-monkey easy to use the iPad as an extension of my MBP. If anything, I’ll use the foldable iPhone’s screen realestate to enhance my other tasks while continuing to use the MBP–iPad the way I do today.'
  • David Emery on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'I wonder how much this is Huang’s attempt to make a case for the circular financing that NVIDIA has been using to sustain its valuations… Is this an argument that the terabucks used for AI datacenters might have a path to ROI beyond AI LLMs???'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - '@PED Thank you for the thoughtful post! I believe it’s important to not only follow Apple, but also the forces and trends in the tech sector that are influencing Apple’s future. Similarly, Apple’s product development will influence the ways in which AI will be experienced by billions of the world’s citizens. Apple doesn’t exist in a vacuum or void nor do the shares trade in a vacuum or void. I believe this interview occurred in September 2024. I recommend the podcast series from Goldman Sachs available through Apple podcasts. I have three GS podcast series in my iPhone’s library for listening throughout the week.'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'When I place my iPhone Pro against my iPad Pro, it is 6 times smaller in screen size. Both have different use cases. A foldable with an iPad Pro screen size would indeed be silly. Currently I pick up my iPad or iPhone, look at it and use it. This is how Jobs envisaged it and in my estimation he is still right. An iPad or iPhone is an optimal device – a thin flat tablet. A foldable assumes one configuration is compromised – likely the thick folded config. On ‘foldables’ cannibalising another iDevice. Not happening.'
  • Stephen Gordon on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'Have my eye on the sky blue M4 MacBook Air, mostly for the portability. Amazon is selling the base model for $200 cheaper, so I may buy it there. I use a M1 MacBook Pro for work, and it’s been a trusty work horse since I first got it in 2023.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'You can pry my 13-inch iPad Pro out of my cold dead hands. Agreed. If you want a larger screen get an iPad and save a thousand dollars.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Button is a Hold on Apple - '@Ron: With earnings season reporting approaching at the end of January for Apple, we will need to be vigilant on SA as all the Apple Trolls will be out in force with their articles of “Doom and Gloom” starting this week. I can’t wait for the one to show up from: “Stoned Fox Das Kapital.”'
  • Fred Stein on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'I loved it. Best recollection early in Jensen says, “protecting the investment of software developers is our number one priority.” Later he talks about one architecture across all applications and back/forward compatibility. Apple’s xOS plus A/M Series is very similar. I call this the “Magic Carpet”. Both Magic Carpets span the globe with 3rd parties adding applications that people love, ensuring continued growth and a deep moat.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'I upgraded from both iPhone 13’s Pro Max to the 17 Pro Max. I’ve always used the heavy duty Otter Box protection cases. So fortunately I’ve never had any issues with cracked screens, etc. The new devices work great, just as my former iPhone 13 Pro Max did when it was traded in for the $300 credit. Someone someplace is getting a brand new pre-owned 13 that will last for many years for them. Apple has it going with lots of active devices world wide. Bart, thank you for the exhaustive list of products utilized by you and your family. That’s an orchard of devices in a single household.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - '@Steven: There’s always that to consider if the supply lines are interrupted. Hopefully, shareholders will be a priority for all cleaning products.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - 'Hap: Just remember Apple built the AI turnpike to customers. Dan Ives is just providing a navigational aid for investors on which path enterprises and consumers will travel to reach the destination. It’s the most scenic, the most efficient and most direct path to follow.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Apple closed trading on December 31, 2024 at $250.42 and just closed the books on 2025 at $271.86. That’s a gain of 8.56% on the year. I’m looking forward to 2026 and all of the new products and services Apple will be releasing next year.'
  • Joseph Bland on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - '“…while leaving it comparatively weaker in cloud/datacenter‑scale accelerated compute…” Weasel words at best. iCloud may be “small” but it’s firmly established, growing, and being used by the affluent Apple customer base. You can bet that Apple is ginning up for their Cloud to have access to an Apple Intelligence in the not-too-distant future – and one that learns from everyone else’s mistakes.'
  • Bill Fouche on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'You can pry my 13-inch iPad Pro out of my cold dead hands. Screen size matters a lot to many of us. There is unlikely to be a foldable iPhone that can match 13-inch screen dimensions in the foreseeable future. It would have to fold up into 6 little segments! Most unlikely. Way too thick and bulky in the pocket!'
  • Hap Allen on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - '“Now the consumer revolution goes through Cupertino,” Leave it to Ives to come up with a catchy metaphor.'
  • Joseph Bland on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'Upvoted! I was going to post a “yes, but”, Bill, and then I read your comment. You nailed it!'
  • Digant Jariwala on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - '“I sound like an idiot” — CNBC’s Joe Kernen Truer words have never been spoken …'
  • Steven Philips on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Michael, You’re all set if there’s another pandemic! 🙂'
  • Bill Donahue on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - 'Funny Ives refers to Musk as a “war-time CEO”. Maybe. But I’d put him on the Mussolini side of that “war-time leader” ledger, similarly made mostly of entitlement, threats, rage, vengeance, delusion, and dishonesty. Give me a leader like Tim Cook, during good times and bad.'
  • John Konopka on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'It’s true that for narrowly focused applications an AI trained just on that task can be very effective. It is not clear how well this can be generalized or whether there is anyone willing to pay money for this. I strongly suspect that the rich Wall Street guys have already put a ton of money into this. If they can find a 0.1% advantage it is worth it to them.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Although the market is down as we enter the final trading hour on the final day of the year, I’m grateful for the successes so many of us have achieved as 2025 comes to a close. The S&P 500 is up over 16% this year and the Nasdaq Composite is up over 20%! Happy New Year to all Apple 3.0 subscribers! May 2026 be a year of continued success and a year of peace and prosperity for each of us and our families! Godspeed and full speed ahead!'
  • Bill Donahue on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'Is this Huang just trying to change the tune on a focus on the race to Gen-AI that by all indicators is a black hole for cap-ex that isn’t going to be successful for those spending the money, to one saying, “Yeah, but the REAL advantage and value is the advance in computing that this all enables!”? Because while that story may work for Nvidia, which makes and sells computing hardware, it doesn’t work for the companies buying and building compute capacity in their race to Gen-AI. Especially when China’s probably going to start flooding the world (and the USA) in the next year with scaled down AI models that are approaching performance parity with the major LLMs and far more efficient from a computing perspective. It also doesn’t explain away Nvidia’s circular financing of AI companies’ purchases of that compute power and the risk that that represents to Nvidia shareholders. This strikes me as very similar to a hindsight view of the internet boom: obviously it changed the world and how we all function daily. But in 2009, there were a whole lot of companies spending the big bucks and attracting huge investment dollars that were shown to be nothing but balloons when the bubble burst. If/when the bubble bursts, there will be a vast computing capacity infrastructure that will suddenly be on the market and being sold for huge discounts during bankruptcy proceedings, which will then send out tsunamis in the market for computing power and the ROI for any company that’s been building datacenters. Some sectors and companies will certainly benefit from the incredible advances in computing, but that’s strictly a commercial target market for compute-sellers, and I’m betting that not all of today’s super-scalers and LLM-peddlers will be able to pivot without taking a huge hit. It’s why I like Apple more and more: they’ve been focusing on providing the main tool for the majority of humanity to access and use AI in their daily lives, whether or not they actually realize it (and preferably not). All while prioritizing user data security, and remaining relatively agnostic about which model is being relied on and largely immune to the financial risks of chasing and pushing in-house AI models.'