Bart Yee on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'I highly recommend reading the following, it’s a fascinating blog article from KORE1, a tech focused Staffing company (headhunters) based in Irvine, CA, looking back at Apple “staffing changes” from 2024 to present, and how that creates a supply of Apple sourced well trained and experienced engineers, managers, senior IC’s (individual contributors), and retail facing personnel who are then potentially available to talent “buyers”, in this case for KORE1’s network of financial services, insurance, HR outsourcing, and Healthcare IT companies who are looking for and hiring talent. It’s a candid, blunt assessment from a headhunting, talent supply and acquisition point of view, where Apple’s (and others) personnel are the product & supply, and prospective Company HR, job descriptions, and active hiring (internal headhunters) is the demand. https://www.kore1.com/apple-layoffs-2026/ “Gregg Flecke, KORE1. Almost three decades placing technology professionals into financial services, insurance, HR outsourcing, and healthcare IT buyers. KORE1 collects a placement fee when you hire ex-Apple talent through our IT staffing services practice, so the angle here leans toward “the resumes are real, the pool is unusual, and the heuristics your team uses for ex-FAANG candidates do not transfer cleanly to ex-Apple ones.” Bias on the table.“ Some key points made: “Sources for the analysis below: Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman on the April 29 Vision Products Group redistribution. Apple’s own December 1 press release on Giannandrea’s retirement and the April 22 Q2 FY26 earnings call. IDC’s Q4 2025 Vision Pro shipment estimate. The IAM’s public statements about Towson. Employee posts on Blind and TheLayoff. Salary aggregator data from Levels.fyi and ZipRecruiter. And what our financial services and healthcare desks at KORE1 have been seeing in the candidate flow since the VPG memo went out. Apple sits in a different category than the rolling AI restructurings at Google and Microsoft or the morning-email cuts at Atlassian. Different shape. Same end state on the supply side.” “What Apple Has Actually Done in 2026 Five events. None of them came packaged as “layoffs.” Stack them and the talent flow becomes obvious.” “None of those is a 1,600-person memo. Stack the supply implications and the picture shifts.“ Vision Pro: “ A 1,000-person hardware-and-systems org does not get evaporated cleanly. Reassignment is the official term. In practice, two-thirds of the people we have spoken with since early May are either openly looking, taking exploratory calls, or quietly updating LinkedIn for the first time in five years.” “The reassignment numbers are unkind to senior individual contributors. The receiving orgs (Siri, foundation models, accessibility, Software Engineering) already had headcount plans for 2026. Absorbing several hundred displaced engineers means flat or slowing internal promotion velocity at the senior IC ladder, which is the exact career stage where Apple historically loses people to other employers who can offer a faster path. Retention at the staff and principal level is what breaks down first.” emphasis mine. (Very clear perspective & reasoning when it comes to employee responses to staffing changes, especially evaluating your worth to Apple (or current employer) and then to other prospective employers. Of course, KORE1 and companies like them can help these folks plug into job networks.) “Three. Apple is still hiring into the Vision Production Group for the next program. Tom’s Hardware confirmed in April that requisitions remain open for the smart glasses program (codename N50). The role profile is shifting: fewer custom-silicon-for-headset engineers, more lightweight optics, sensor fusion for wearables, and AR overlay work tied to Apple Intelligence. Senior ICs who built the Vision Pro display chain are not always the best fit for what comes next. They are an excellent fit for buyers outside Apple’s competitive set.“ “The compensation conversation is harder. Apple RSUs are difficult to replace at any non-public buyer. The mission and stability lines work, and they work better than most recruiters expect.” Plus plenty of blunt, bottom line talk about how to lure, chase, interview and make your job offers attractive enough to land Apple talent. It’s a fascinating (to me) read in the tech employment underbelly. See also any number of additional articles from KORE1 in their blog on tech focused layoffs at bunches of companies recently. Link sent to Phil. PS – the outlines of the Apple business decisions, realignments, and their fallout are very telling of shifts in product roadmaps. Tim, John and Kevan earning their experience and jobs. After all, engineering talent is part of the supply chain.'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'Here’s a local article about how Towson Town Center has slowly but surely fallen since the Pandemic amidst changes in shopping behaviors, the rise in online shopping, and overall retail and mall traffic declines seen across the US. While some of its anchor stores are still present, 42 storefronts are now vacant with another store closing and 3 more including the Apple Store scheduled to close end of June. https://www.thebanner.com/economy/towson-town-center-shopping-mall-decline-VTZ7LRSEOFFU7BZK7ENL4HIQ4M/ “U.S. malls are in trouble, thanks to the rise of online shopping, changing retail strategies and shifting consumer behavior. There were some 2,500 in the 1980s, compared to about 1,200 today, with another 300 expected to close by 2028, according to Capital One research. With scarce anchor tenants and above-average retail vacancy rates, malls struggle to remain profitable. But Towson Town Center shoppers and retailers believe something more is at play. They point to out-of-order escalators and mall security that can’t keep up with shoplifting. Large groups of teenagers make other shoppers uncomfortable, retailers said, despite a longtime rule that they must be accompanied by an adult some evenings. Others call concerns about the mall and unruly youth overstated. “The mall itself is not run very well,” said Daeshell Higgins, a sales associate at Tory Burch. She said the mall’s owner, the Chicago-based General Growth Properties, is riding on the mall’s reputation from its heyday in the 2000s and 2010s, when it was a regional destination.“ Rinse and repeat for any number of regions in the US. Is it any wonder then that Apple must closely look and reexamine its US retail stores and locations and make changes as they see fit? I would imagine that while maybe still popular, this (opened in October 2002, 24 years ago) Towson store may be hit with additional rent/lease hikes and continued declining retail conditions in general. Per Gemini “The Apple Store at the Towson Town Center was last majorly renovated and expanded on September 29, 2018. While a Baltimore Sun index indicates a grand reopening retrospective, local customers and staff noted that the store did not receive any newer updates or modern floorplan overhauls during its subsequent years. Following these periods of stagnant layout updates, Apple permanently closed the Towson location on June 20, 2026, citing declining mall conditions.” While I don’t doubt that Apple may have been ticked and resistant to unionization, and fought it every step of the way, Apple certainly is within its business operations rights to decide on its store footprints and justifications for closing this store. If it coincides with eliminating a union shop, guess what, it’s not the first or the largest even in recent memory. While I side with labor (like the MLBPA), this isn’t that exceptional. See Musk’s keeping unionization out of Tesla, and Amazon & Google’s active resistance towards unions.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Following Apple’s $8.89 gain on Monday (up 2.90%) to close at $315.20, the shares are off $1.11 at $314.09 overnight. Broadcom releases results on Wednesday. The shares rose $21.60 or 4.70% on Tuesday to finish the session at $481.57 while setting new all-time highs and pushing the company’s market cap to $2.28 trillion. The shares are up 93.63% over the past twelve months and are now trading overnight and ahead of earnings up $13.92 at $495.49. Let’s see what the morning brings…'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'Thanks for the kind words, Ron, but I did my bit for public service as a family doctor and medical educator for 27 years, finally retiring in 2014 with highest pay way below what seasoned Apple engineers make today ($185K-$290K plus stock vesting options). While I worked in education at a major private University of Health Sciences, the slightly lower pay was offset with a very generous 401K and 7% matching program. My greatest financial move was when I was let go the first time in 2012 (Dean and I didn’t agree on an admissions interview process change), I was able to take 13 years of 401K savings invested in Total Stock market & tech index growth (Avg ~15% annual growth) from 2000-2012 and rolled it over to my IRA, 90% of that was then invested into AAPL stock, and another years worth of the same 401K similarly invested when I was hired back for 1 year of work. All of that was invested into AAPL stock as well, benefitting from the run up to and subsequent 7:1 split, and the rest is history. As for political office, nah, I left medicine partly due to the politics and paperwork, but miss the education, teaching, and patient care. Evidence based medicine and teaching was the latter half of my career, I like to think it helps inform me and us about to analyze Apple and how they work and prosper.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Jacob: If Warren Buffett (or anyone) is always right, they aren’t working hard enough at their craft. At different times I’ve had 90 or more different equities in my portfolio simultaneously. Some (by my standards) have been big and some have been very small (often spin-offs from other holdings, etc.). I’ve realized all of them don’t need to be winners for me to succeed. If every equity I’ve purchased turned out to be a winner I’d view my selection process as too conservative. Out of 10 equities I choose for investment only six have to be winners, on average, for me to succeed. Because I research my selections, most of my selections (at least 8 out of 10) tend to be winners. Out of those eight winners four or more tend to be big winners that more than make up for any losses. In practice if I wasn’t willing to risk any losses I would have missed out on some big (and sometimes surprising!) winners. In the end because winners tend to outperform losers (the most I will lose on an investment is the value of that investment versus winners which can provide exponential gains on the original investments) the sum total of my losses over the years work out to less than 1% of the total gains. To minimize the impact of losses I have never played options, never used margin or used loans of any kind. The point is WB has often recounted the losses he’s had and the ill-timed investments he’s made. Absent WB’s willingness to take risk, Berkshire would not be the $1 trillion market cap company it is today.'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'Given what you said, he wouldn’t have a chance of winning!'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - '@Bart Yee – Your comment, as usual, is full of actual facts and figures combined with logic…you need to run for an elected office. 🙂'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'If you pay more taxes for it, yes!'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'Congress apparently has no problems with literally hundreds of bricks and mortar stores and restaurant closures (just this year and of course all of 2025) by major and minor chains, franchisees, and operators. You know, regular people doing regular jobs. Same with AI displacing creatives in Hollywood and the arts. This is not to mention the entirety of pretty high paying high tech jobs lost in the AI / tech worker / labor rethinking resulting in layoffs en masse of likely much higher paying than most Apple store personnel. But since those are individual employment contracts, not union, it’s perfectly ok for companies to lay them and their non-union contracts off, despite fairly lucrative contract and severance terms. Per Layoffs.FYI 2026 159 Tech companies worldwide have laid off 115,907 tech employees in the first 5 months of 2026. Funny, I couldn’t find Apple in the company list. TrueUP has it at 97,000 US employees out of 148,000 layoffs worldwide, showing how US tech companies laid off a disproportionate number. Wonder how many US employees were laid off twice from 2025 and a new job in 2026? 2025 275 tech companies laid off 124,636 tech workers, again, I couldn’t find Apple in that list. 2024 551 companies laid off 152,922 workers. Apple didn’t lay off any openly. Now to be fair, Apple did lose some employees to retirement, attrition, and poaching (which results in continued employment elsewhere at higher pay), and from “published reports” Apple did some realignment in 2026 with Vision Pro development (allegedly), as well as sales and education marketing in 2025, and reportedly (Gurman) final discontinuation of Project Titan automotive group as a unified engineering staff in 2024. Tier that in with 3 reported retail closures and you have something along the lines of 1000 previously at Project Titan, and between 700 to maybe 1500 total including 250 retail at the Apple Stores. I come up with at worst 2500 people and engineers displaced from their previous jobs, have opportunity to re-align with Apple, or are then considering and openly looking for and accepting offers for jobs and work outside of Apple. That would be 2500 from 2024 through to today, compared to mass layoffs that the tech industry has created. If we make a ballpark guesstimate of 2/3 of tech layoffs worldwide are occurring in the US, and that from my count, roughly 400,000 tech jobs were laid off worldwide since 2024, 270,000 of those jobs were US. If we assumed Apple lost every one of those 2500 engineering and retail workers to outside companies, that would be 0.92% or less than 1% of the total cohort of US displaced tech workers over the past 2.5 years, IMO, a very, very low record of company forced turnover. Why Congress isn’t concerned one whit about bricks and mortar service jobs, and higher profile (if you’re looking, 270,000 of them) tech jobs lost, not to mention job upheaval related to trade wars, tariffs, international logistics disruption and reigniting of inflation due to the Iran War, etc. etc., but you can send a letter of 78 union jobs at an Apple Stores closing at The Towson Town Center where now fully 25% of storefronts are closed, and hundreds of workers have already lost their jobs, and Apple has determined it’s not a location they want to stay in. But more power to you, Congress critters, you didn’t care when Crate & Barrel closed, then Tiffany, Louis Vuitton, Tommy Bahama, Madewell, Banana Republic among other closed at Towson before Apple. You do you.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Jacob Feenstra said: “It’s not that Buffett is always right, but rather that he is often right.” **Exactly right, Jacob…upvoted!'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'You are right, Ron, and Buffett has admitted that they sold too soon. I would add WAY (too soon). But it is still their biggest holding at around 230 million shares. It’s not that Buffett is always right, but rather that he is often right.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I have great respect for Warren Buffett as an investor…what I don’t have is the opinion that he’s always correct with his investment decisions. Many times I’ve responded to online trolls trying to panic AAPL investors by referencing Warren Buffett selling large portions of AAPL shares. I merely pointed out that my wife and I bought the first AAPL shares of our all-AAPL portfolio a full 15 years before Warren Buffett decided to buy his *first* AAPL share in 2016. I never took that to mean anything other than Warren Buffett doesn’t always do the right thing when it comes to investing. The fact that Warren Buffett is not always correct in his *investing* decisions is further evidenced by him prematurely selling a great deal of the AAPL shares owned by Berkshire Hathaway.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'It’s interesting for Google to do this with stock, rather than bonds. How much does the new stock water the existing stock?'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'But, but – the article says it’s a high performing store.'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'To paraphrase‘Arthur’ They want more than enough.'
on 40 members of Congress warn Apple not to close its first unionized store - 'Yes. Clearly overstepping. But that’s our current congress. 🙁'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'A/the business push is extremely important. I think Apple really needs to direct specific structured software/hardware platforms to small/medium businesses. Especially with AI. Make it ready to use right out of the box.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Makes no difference- unless you think Trump is long term smart and doesn’t change his mind whenever something causes a tantrum.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - '@Joseph: Warren was selling Apple stock back in April and May 2024. Based on the pricing at that time in conjunction with his 13F SEC Filings, his sales were between $160ish and $180ish. Still owns a truckload of Apple, but pared down his stake by 50%. Spin ahead and we have this: AAPL 5/30/24 – 191.29 AAPL 6/2/26 – 315.20 Glad I stayed long and no reason to be selling Apple and buying Google IMO. Especially after they just announced a stock dilution of $80 Billion to finance their AI buildout plans.'
on Is this new Nvidia chip the reason Apple shares fell Monday morning? - 'Thanks. Could TSMC (or Intel) grow capacity fast enough to cover the demand if Windows-on-AI-ARM takes off?'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'From “Berkshire Hathaway Got a Sweet Deal on Alphabet Stock on Barron’s today: “Alphabet, Google’s parent, gave Berkshire a 6% discount off its Monday closing stock price. It isn’t that unusual—for very good reasons…The doubters point out that Berkshire is buying Alphabet stock after it has doubled in the past year—a move not keeping with Chairman Warren Buffett’s usual value approach to investing.” So basically B. H. used some of that money they got from selling AAPL years ago to buy some GOOGL years later – after the GOOGL cows got out of the barn door – and after Alphabet cut a deal with Apple to cooperate to some degree on Edge AI, which is why GOOGL went up in the first place. Not exactly a great play. More like a pretty conservative one….'
on Steve Jobs' 'Apple Hierarchy of Skepticism' (video) - 'The Macworld Expos died out from a combination of factors. First, trade shows overall were dying out as the web took over. You could now find out about cool new stuff right away Second, with the iPod and then the iPhone, Apple grew in power and influence. They no longer needed a trade show to get buzz, they gave the trade show the buzz. Apple got sick of twice a year needing to announce something big on someone else’s schedule and they pulled out of keynoting the show. It officially packed up a few short years later.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'And, with respect, Gregg, let ME be perfectly clear by saying I don’t disagree with a single thing you said. But maybe we can agree that Investor Sentiment can be divided into two major cohorts; that of long term investors, and that of shorter term traders – with a very gray area in between the two. That is, all I was saying was that the AAPL Beachball Volleyball game that’s going on between the two is part of what defined the difference between today and yesterday. I am also saying that I’ve watched that game for a couple of decades now as a full-on long term Apple investor.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I’m encouraged by yesterday’s intraday low ($305.02). Given the magnitude of the selloff, that AAPL held $305 (where I need AAPL to trade, at minimum, on JUL 17), is significant. Following that AAPL printed ATH and ATCH the very next day is very satisfying. All of my many trades since April 6 have been, and remained, in the money. As options premiums have increased (the result of improving investor sentiment), it’s going to get harder to buy as deep in the money as I have been doing.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I’m intrigued by the Google – Berkshire deal to raise cash through an equity offering to support its capex plans. It doesn’t appear the AI capex race is slowing down at all. Any thoughts on this issue – the ongoing AI arms race? Are there winners and losers in this race? I don’t see it slowing down any time soon.'
on Apple at $315.20: First record close of June - 'That, and the fact that Apple hold all the privacy cards.'
on Apple at $315.20: First record close of June - '” My take: Makes the damage done to Apple shares yesterday by Nvidia’s RTX Spark chip look like a one-day wonder.” That’s being overly kind. The reality of that announcement is that it was a big nothing burger, and strengthens Apple’s “AI” position tremendously. Nvidia’s announcement did nothing to advance its “AI” dominance, and greatly enhanced Apple’s position, as it ratified Apple’s threat to Nvidia. Tactically and strategically it was a big mistake.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'After one consolidation day, and one knee jerk dip response to NVidia’s RTX Spark and WinAIonARM makers announcements, AAPL rebounded today to a new all time closing high (ATCH) of $315.20 and just a quarter from the new all time Intraday High (ATIH) of $315.45. Volume was a goosed by 10M shares coming into play in the last half hour to a just below average 41M shares. For those keeping score, after one down day, Apple’s intraday highest low rebounded from $305.02 to $306.72 and should easily clear May 28th’s highest low of $309.57 tomorrow, barring any black swanny issue. The melt up into WWDC probably has a number of Institutional, managed and hedge funds hair trigger algorithms set up to sell during Monday’s keynote address, maybe no matter what Apple announces. There will be the classic “buy the rumor, sell the news” or for our UK friends, “travel and arrive” trades, because humans thrive on historic repetition and yes, there’s plenty of AAPL profit to be booked and then deployed elsewhere. But question is, will Apple’s WWDC announcements cause an AAPL sell off, or will that be moderated by those with (much) more optimism for the near term and heading into FY2027? Or even a rise followed by a bit of profit taking and consolidation before beginning the next leg up to $325-330 by June Q3 Earnings report? I also suspect Cook or Ternus will make a color commentary on increased production of Mac computer products to try to match “out of this world” demand. If Jobs were here, he might even say despite stepped up competition in chips from Intel, AMD and now NVidia, Apple Silicon AND MacOS still provide a superior, cost effective, and high performance, high efficiency experience for consumers, prosumers and enterprises who aren’t waiting 4-6 months for new NVidia powered PC’s and Laptops at undefined cost levels. Considering the memory crunch isn’t slowing down, PC makers will have a devil of a time keeping BOM costs down to hit specific price points palatable to consumers, but perhaps enticing to businesses, especially considering what typical Windows machines require or desire for memory.'


