Recent Comments

  • John Konopka on Premarket: Apple is red - '@Bart Fascinating data. Thank you!'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'John: According to the report on Apple’s investor site, repurchases have totaled much less than $100 billion per year. Last fiscal year open market repurchases totaled $89.3 billion. In FQ1 this year (the December quarter) the company deployed $25 billion for open market repurchases. In FQ2 (the March quarter) repurchases came in at $11 billion.'
  • ben luna on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I would upvote this 100X if possible. This is great investigative data, Bart! Thank you.'
  • Bart Yee on Bloomberg: Apple is flirting with Intel and Samsung behind TSMC's back (video) - 'Gemini says: “TSMC is currently building three advanced semiconductor fabs in Phoenix, Arizona, with plans to expand to a total of six. The first fab began high-volume production in early 2025, with the second and third facilities scheduled for production by 2028 and 2030, respectively, as part of a $165 billion investment in the region.” Key Details on Arizona Fabs: Total Planned: Up to 6 total fabs are planned to form a “megafab” cluster. Expansion: Following a massive $100 billion investment update in March 2025, plans expanded from an original two, then three fabs, to six. Advanced Packaging: The site includes two, potentially expanding to four, advanced packaging facilities to support “all-American” chip production by 2030. Capacity: The Arizona complex is designed to produce 30% of TSMC’s 2-nanometer and more advanced capacity. The project, which is the largest foreign direct investment in U.S. history, is supported by $6.6 billion in U.S. federal grants. —————— What is Apple’s role in TSMC’s building of Arizona fabs? “Apple is the anchor customer and key driver for TSMC’s Arizona chip factories. By committing to buy millions of advanced chips, Apple enables TSMC to build leading-edge, 4-nanometer and 3-nanometer fabrication facilities in the US. This partnership aims to strengthen the American semiconductor supply chain and secure a local source for iPhone and Mac silicon. Key Aspects of Apple’s Role: Primary Customer & Financer: Apple is the first and largest customer, providing crucial demand that justifies TSMC’s $65 billion investment in Arizona. Technology Driver: Apple’s need for advanced chips—for AI, 5G, and data centers—drives the requirement for high-end technology (4nm and 3nm) at the site. Supply Chain Localization: Apple is moving part of its silicon production to the US, aiming to produce tens of millions of chips annually at the Arizona site for its devices. Infrastructure Support: Apple works closely with TSMC and other suppliers to establish an end-to-end U.S. silicon supply chain. Synonyms/Related Roles: Anchor Tenant: The foundational client ensuring the plant’s financial viability. Strategic Partner: Collaborating closely on development and high-volume manufacturing. Lead Customer: Driving the adoption of new, local technology nodes. Technology Partner: Assisting in ramping up manufacturing yields, crucial for quick production success. This initiative is a critical part of Apple’s broader effort to increase its investment in U.S. manufacturing.” Note bene: These AZ TSMC as well as Texas Samsung fabs are a direct result of lobbying by Apple and others for the Chip Act of 2022 under the Biden Administration. We are seeing the long term results and effects of this investment and of course, long term planning by Apple and others. “The CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 is a US federal law designed to boost domestic semiconductor research, development, and manufacturing. It provides approximately $53 billion in subsidies, grants, and tax credits to reduce reliance on foreign chip production, primarily targeting competition with China. The act also funds R&D in AI and quantum computing, and mandates strict, 10-year security guardrails against expanding manufacturing in “countries of concern”. Note bene II: These fabs will also require massive amounts of electricity and cooling water in an area already known for high heat, worsening drought, and electrical grid strain. But land, previous tech, and of course politics played a role in where it’s located.'
  • Rick Povich on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'PED’s take: Worth sees the current price as an entry point into AAPL ahead of WWCD Well of course he would. All the smart guys wait until a stock hits ATH before they press the “BUY” button. I take Worth’s affirmation as a more serious death threat than the infamous “Law of Large Numbers”'
  • Robert Stack on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'Personally, I look at chart reading as akin to tarot card reading. Or interpreting the ouija board. Anyone can “see” hints of whatever they want. Related question: Why aren’t most fortune tellers incredibly wealthy?'
  • Bart Yee on Premarket: Apple is red - 'If anyone bothered to examine the Q2 2026 10Q, last quarter here’s what Apple did for share repurchases: Jan 2026 (a blackout month prior to reporting on Jan 29, also iPhone demand & sales known to have risen significantly, memory prices rising sharply, and supply constraints in SoC chips and memory BOM occurring) 41.032M sh @ ASP $259.26 = $10.64B spent Feb 2026 (blackout over, memory costs soaring, burning through retained inventory, new memory contracts for 2026 and new products introduction 2H26 now in play…oh, US begins Iran Conflict Feb. 28, 2026) 1.395M sh @ ASP $265.20 = $370M or $0.370B Mar 2026 (impacts of Iran Conflict multiply – oil & gas prices shoot up, shipping in MEA disrupted, costs for logistics spike, Helium for chips curtailed, memory prices continue to spike unabated (if you could even source any from any supplier, Apple continues to see iPhone and now new Mac Neo supply being constrained by parts shortages, plus margin erosion may begin…Oh, Apple announces CEO transition, Ternus & Parekh begin to exert influence on Financial policy, presumably with Cook & Board support…and more when I really think about it) 0.00M shares @ no price given = $0.000B spent Total 42.427M shares $11.0B spent Yes, you saw that correctly, Apple bought $10.6B and 42M shares in January, a blackout month, and then after the blackout was lifted / over, bought just 1.4M shares in Feb. and CEASED buying any shares through the end of the quarter. Were shares too expensive? Hardly, Feb shares ranged $255 to $275, avg ~$265, and March shares lower, range $245 to $263, avg ~ $254. So out of the AAPL market for 2 whole months going into earnings reporting. Shares were range bound otherwise, $245 low, $275 high, till now.'
  • Joseph Bland on Bernstein raises its Apple target $10 to $350 - 'Congrats, Gregg!'
  • Steven Philips on Bernstein raises its Apple target $10 to $350 - 'So now Dan will have to raise his target to stay on top? 🙂'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Wow!Talk about a negative spin to a story of positives! It’s illogical to say that buybacks DON’T support the stock price, and just as illogical to say that if they did it would somehow be a BAD THING. As they say in The Fantastics, moderation is the moral. Sure, if the underlying company was weak, it might, if the numbers were large enough, be somehow covering up weakness. But neither of those two things are true about Apple: It’s not weak, but strong, and there’s no way Apple’s buybacks constitute a major force on the quarterly market. Apple is, however, the largest single player in the AAPL market, and since it sits out the open market possibly one month out of each quarter (but still uses ASRs upon occasion even then), then it’s no surprise that, as I said, when the cat’s away the mice play. And vice versa. And the advantage to long term stockholders of Apple buying back undervalued stock is unarguable: Look at the average price Apple has paid for its anti-dilution program, and look at the present price, and you’ll see a huge difference. Meanwhile, buying back nearly half the float has in effect quietly nearly doubled the ownership per share of what was then a much, much smaller company. It was literally an investment that has paid forward an ROI, and it was bought at an average price that was itself a bargain. You know, I have no problem with being rationally convinced, because nobody has a right to their own facts, and if I’m wring, I’m more than happy to be taught I’m wrong. But standing off at a distance and lobbing unsubstantiated bombs is just the equivalent of fake news shouted at the top of one’s lungs, and that I have zero interest in even considering.'
  • John Konopka on Premarket: Apple is red - 'If Apple is spending $100B a quarter on buybacks (actually probably less) then this works out to ~5M shares a day. According to SEC rules they can’t exceed 25% of daily volume. Today that was ~45M shares so 25% would be ~11M shares so Apple buybacks could be significant but not huge. Also, if I read the rules correctly, they can’t drive the price higher but they could set a floor. The buyback price can’t be higher than any other bid. I’m happy AAPl was up today, but I have no idea why it happened.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - '(”nicknamed Worthless”) Even with today’s reversal of Worth’s past recommendations (all negative), the nickname remains appropriate.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Bernstein raises its Apple target $10 to $350 - 'After Friday and Monday’s depressing prints, I was surprised that my JUL contracts sold this afternoon. Using the proceeds, I placed a new BUY order, expanding the number of contracts, for JUL with a higher Strike. When it fills (if it does) I’ll announce what I got.'
  • Kemble Widmer on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'If technical analysis worked reliably, Carter Worth would be worth a mint. He is not. If technical analysis worked reliably virtually every investment house would use it. They do not. I could go on.'
  • Daniel Epstein on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'So those of us who have long memories about Carter Worth’s (nicknamed Worthless ) calls on Apple stock might be happy to hear him have a higher opinion on the stock today at 280 or so. Because many of us old timers likely were invested in the stock when it was 1/3 of the price or lower we are probably not that impressed. If you listened to his advice in the relatively recent past you potentially missed a huge return before he has upgraded his call to Neutral. Now I don’t judge people on only one stock call but his reluctance about Apple stock calls into question his whole methodology for valuing a company and its stock potential. On the other hand at least today we don’t have to hear how a chartist is predicting a drop coming in Apple stock repeated ad nauseam.'
  • David Emery on Bloomberg: Apple is flirting with Intel and Samsung behind TSMC's back (video) - 'Could these alternate fabs produce A-series Neo processors?'
  • Steven Philips on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'Carter Worth rating change from “less” to Neutral/Hold your horses. 🙂'
  • Alessandro Luethi on Bloomberg: Apple is flirting with Intel and Samsung behind TSMC's back (video) - 'That’s a clever observation Greg!'
  • Alessandro Luethi on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Add me in Rodney – I hope too that Apple convinces with something more than buybacks!'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Rodney: If I believed Apple’s trading price was materially influenced on a daily basis by share repurchases or the lack of share repurchases I would sell ever share I own because I would consider the underlying business to be unsound and the share price easily manipulated. This isn’t Game Stop. It’s Apple. Thank you for your thoughtful commentary and positive contributions to the comment stream at Apple 3.0.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I hope that a green Apple can be explained without the propping by present buybacks.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Bloomberg: Apple is flirting with Intel and Samsung behind TSMC's back (video) - 'We tend to analyze such events using present situations. However, these discussions could be for scenarios 5-10 years from now.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'My guess for why the green Apple: It’s back in the open market. Which we knew would happen. The mice played, but the cat’s back.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Into the 1pm hour in New York and Intel is powering the S&P 500 index higher. The chip maker is up 13.07% today at $108.30. Year-to-date the shares are up 195%. Micron Technology is up nearly 11% today at $639.38 and has a market cap now exceeding $700 billion. Its shares year-to-date are up about 125%. Apple is currently up $4.92 or 1.78% today at $281.75. Meanwhile, PayPal has underwhelmed the market on forward guidance and is reportedly planning to cut 20% of its workforce over the next few years. The shares are off over 9% at $45.84.'
  • Greg Lippert on Bloomberg: Apple is flirting with Intel and Samsung behind TSMC's back (video) - 'Maybe Apple doesn’t always need TSMC’s most advanced chips and can have secondary suppliers at the lower end.'
  • Greg Lippert on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'Run Away!!!!!! – Monty Python & the Holy Grail'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Bloomberg: Apple is flirting with Intel and Samsung behind TSMC's back (video) - 'I think Apple is always having talks with all the chip makers. That is part of their ability to build their supply chain. I think Bloomberg is just trying to stir things up'
  • Joseph Bland on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'BTW, tangential to the topic, I wrote this today in response to Horace’s story today on Asymco One titled “Will Apple avoid giving their cash flow to Nvidia?”, responding to the Office Hours question, “Do you think Apple will start investing heavily in AI data centers?”: Sacto Joe Avatar Sacto Joe May 5, 2026 at 11:38 am ““It’s more that they want to avoid dependency.” I 100% agree. Apple doesn’t have a problem “partnering up”, but as the whole Google Maps fiasco made clear, it will refuse to be screwed over. And it has the cash flow to make that happen. That’s why the Apple/Nvidia spatial computing deal is so fascinating. Apple comes to the table with a lot: The Vision Pro, unmatched and nearly unmatchable capability in production of highest quality computer hardware, the M-series chips, and both Cloud-and-device-based personal privacy protection. The fruits of that potential partnership are, simply, mind-boggling. The issue, of course, is going to revolve around just how dependent one is on the other. And Apple having been burned many times, up to and including by Microsoft, would do well to be wary, and explore the possibility of “growing their own”, and leaving everyone else to Nvidia. Just my 2 cent’s worth…”'
  • Joseph Bland on Carter Worth on Apple: 'It feels like there's very little downside' - 'Shock! Hell froze over!'