Recent Comments

  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (12/29/25-1/2/26) - 'Peter: Thank you for the feedback! II’ve been looking for a format that provides meaningful insights on the data for subscribers. There’s a lot happening in the markets today and I’m closely following a few sectors including tech (of course!) as well as broad market trends. Apple doesn’t trade in a vacuum or a void. For those of us that invest in the company or are considering an investment in Apple, context is important, in my view.'
  • Kirk DeBernardi on The EU praises Apple - 'Make the entirety of the Apple ecosystem a membership with a dollar annual fee and tell the EU — and their ilk — to go piss up a rope. (Haven’t heard this admittedly provacative idea shut down here yet.)'
  • Kirk DeBernardi on Saturday Apple video: Out of the box (2006) - '…and may the disparity in the principle of simplicity remain as far apart.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (12/29/25-1/2/26) - 'I’m not real impressed with Steve Kovach’s coverage of Apple and the tech sector nor the coverage of Dan Howley at Yahoo! Finance. What I’d like to know is how Apple will facilitate the monetization of AI through its products and services for OpenAI, Alphabet and others. In addition, what is the market forecasting for iPhone demand for the iPhone series to be released next September? Considering the average age of the installed base of handsets and the size of the Apple customer universe, I believe there’s a huge opportunity for the company to widen its economic moat and heighten the barriers for competition as AI-related services are made more available to the public. There’s a time window available at present. How will Apple exploit this opportunity?'
  • Peter Graff on This week's Apple trading strategies (12/29/25-1/2/26) - 'What a treasure trove of data for serious investors and wannabes! Many thanks.'
  • David Emery on The AI rich get richer - 'I’m a huge fan of tax simplification, and I’d start with eliminating capital gains tax rate. That would impact me. The tax code is WAY too complicated, too full of special interest tax breaks. Many of those were passed for a good reason (others just to make some contributor happy), but the net effect is to produce a system that is widely gamed by those who can afford to hire tax accountants and attorneys.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (12/29/25-1/2/26) - 'Listed below are the three-year share price performances of the Terrific Ten equities ranked by percentage gains over this time and the percentage gains in the major stock indexes over the same period. NVIDIA (NVDA) up 1,191.58% Broadcom (AVGO) up 527.85% Meta Platforms (META) up 455.09% Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) up 293.16% Tesla (TSLA) up 298.46% Alphabet (GOOG) up 254.88% Amazon (AMZN) up 176.05% NASDAQ Composite – up 125.17% Apple (AAPL) up 111.26% Microsoft (MSFT) up 102.49% S&P 500 – up 80.03%
 Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) up 62.21% DJIA – up 46.63%
 Russell 2000 – up 43.39% This three-year comparison provides context for the market performance of the Terrific Ten enterprises. Only one of the ten enterprises (Berkshire) has unperformed the S&P 500 over the three-year period. Apple, Microsoft and Berkshire have underperformed the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite. Berkshire is listed on the NYSE. Apple and Microsoft are Nasdaq Components. Three of the four top performers in this 3-year period are involved in chip design or production.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (12/29/25-1/2/26) - 'Entering this week’s trading, below is the market cap scoreboard of the Terrific Ten. These are the 10 largest enterprises ranked by this metric. NVIDIA (NVDA) $4.63 trillion Apple (AAPL) $4.04 trillion Alphabet (GOOG) $3.78 trillion Microsoft (MSFT) $3.62 trillion Amazon (AMZN) $2.49 trillion Meta Platforms (META) $1.67 trillion Broadcom (AVGO) $ 1.67 trillion Tesla (TSLA) $1.58 trillion Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) $1.25 trillion Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) $1.07 trillion Whether the AI trade has become “crowded,” the hyperscalers” have become “overbought,” or investors have become “tired” of the trade, there are many market euphemisms that can be misapplied to describe the relative lack of gains versus the markets and the major indexes by several of these enterprises at this time. Apple, for example, is up 9.18% year-to-date as we close out the calendar year on Wednesday versus a gain of 22.18% for the Nasdaq Composite, 17.82% for the S&P 500 and 14.349% for the Dow 30. Investor interest may be broadening and much of the AI capital deployments are benefiting industrial enterprises and not just enterprises within the tech sector.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on The AI rich get richer - 'I just saw “Good Fortune” by Aziz Ansari, costarring Keanu Reeves & Seth Rogan. More of an observational film about this topic.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on New York Times reporter takes his Apple AirPods to Tokyo - 'The ( v u l c a n ) \\// emojis I entered aren’t showing. Bummer.'
  • David Emery on The AI rich get richer - 'Well, the definition of “income” is that it has to be realized. That’s to distinguish it from a wealth tax, which would have to solve all those valuation questions. That’s very much established law. Note it took a Constitutional Amendment (16th) to authorize an income tax. The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration. Those who would argue that amendment would cover a wealth tax are, as we say these AI-enabled days, “hallucinating”'
  • David Emery on The AI rich get richer - 'On our trip to New Zealand, I took a photo of the Carnegie Library in Hokatika https://www.heritage.org.nz/list-details/1702/1702'
  • Fred Stein on The AI rich get richer - 'Thanks David, When I lived in Petaluma California, they had a Carnegie library. Imagine how remote (40 miles for San Francisco, also a small city) this agricultural / lumber town was back in those days.'
  • Hap Allen on The AI rich get richer - 'Chuck Feeney would be a great model. Basically invented duty-free airport shops. Made billions, then largely anonymously gave away all except two million. By design, his foundation self-extinguished before his death. “Since you can’t take it with you—why not give it all away, have control of where it goes, and see the results with your own eyes? It’s a lot more fun than when you’re dead.” —Chuck Feeney'
  • Adam Foster on Saturday Apple video: Out of the box (2006) - 'I’m with you guys remembering my Apple II with two external floppy drives… where did time go?'
  • Bart Yee on Apple closed at $273.81 for Christmas. Look who's underwater now - 'Pierre Ferragu is still employed by New Street as of today, Dec. 27, and has a current $270 price target in AAPL. Sent to Phil so he can add. www newstreetresearch com /company/apple/'
  • Steven Philips on The AI rich get richer - 'Gregg, I might quibble with some details, but not with the elimination of all personal exemptions. I’ve said forever (I’m that old!) that everyone should pay the same tax on the same earnings. IF you choose to have a kid – or 10 – or a house or other that’s subject to federal tax breaks now, that’s up to you. I have no obligation to pay for it. There are a lot of issues when you try to do social engineering via taxes. I do agree with Roger that taxes on unrealized gains gets problematic. Needs a lot of tinkering with inheritance rules etc.'
  • Steven Philips on The AI rich get richer - 'Too True'
  • Roger Schutte on The AI rich get richer - 'Gregg, appraising unrealized gains would be problematic. Yes, it happens when one passes and asset values are stepped up, but will there be refunds when asset values drop?'
  • Steven Philips on New York Times reporter takes his Apple AirPods to Tokyo - 'Gregg, Recent article in Wired about a new company trying to do just that. Currently in beta testing but to be available commercially next year? Company is called Fortell. Title “Want this Hearing Aid? Well Who do You Know” by Steve Levy 12/3/25.'
  • Greg Lippert on The AI rich get richer - 'Gregg, That’s too simple and makes too much sense. 😉'
  • Greg Lippert on The AI rich get richer - 'There is already a huge class of people who earned their money the old-fashioned way – they inherited it.'
  • Gregg Thurman on The AI rich get richer - 'Now the topic has shifted to my favorite subject. I believe the first $400,000 income per year (regardless of type) should have no tax. ALL earnings above $400,000 should be taxed at 50%, gains in this segment should be taxed even if not realized. Importantly, all personal tax deductions should be eliminated. Those making less than $400,00 wouldn’t need them because aren’t paying any tax. Those making more than $400,000 will have to alter their life style a bit. Far fewer McMansions and cruise line sized yachts, private jets etc.'
  • Gregg Thurman on New York Times reporter takes his Apple AirPods to Tokyo - 'I can’t wait for when AI is installed in my hearing aids. The problem with today’s hearings aids is that they amplify everything indiscriminately. The din in a restaurant can drive one insane. I have learned to turn off the aid facing a loud table. All of a sudden I can hear what’s going on at mine. The human brain has been managing sounds for countless millennia. But we abuse in the name of “experience”. Rock concerts should be banned.'
  • Gregg Thurman on New York Times reporter takes his Apple AirPods to Tokyo - 'I don’t know why everyone is so amazed by this feature. It was available to Capt. Kirk 60 years ago. “Computer” never missed a beat, even when translating Romulan.'
  • Joseph Bland on Saturday Apple video: Out of the box (2006) - 'As another New Year approaches, I share your wonder, Robert. A classic Apple video, PED! Thanks for the trip down memory lane! Happy Holidays! Sacto Joe'
  • Joseph Bland on The AI rich get richer - 'Hi, David. “When the bubble bursts…” The stock market as a game of musical chairs…. I’ve learned the hard way that’s a good way to get badly burned. Thanks, but I’ll stick with Apple and its moderate approach to maintaining or even growing our wealth.'
  • Joseph Bland on The AI rich get richer - 'The reason, PED, for the growing wealth disparity AND the shift away from our democracy is simple: The truly wealthy are the beneficiaries of a flat tax: Over a certain low bar, your tax percentage doesn’t increase. The destruction of the progressive tax system has resulted in a slow motion return to “The Gilded Age”, and massively shifted political power in the US to the few over the many. Why? Because the old progressive tax never adequately accounted for inflation. As a result, taxes were automatically raised year after year across the board, which literally fueled inflation, which raised taxes, etcetera. That gave President Reagan and the Republicans the excuse they needed to successfully throw the baby out with the bathwater, and institute a form of flat tax that hugely benefitted the wealthy over time, Note that the Democratic Party was just as complicit in this as the Republican Party, because automatically raising taxes gave them the funds to put in place The Great Society that they dreamed of. All of which has been very carefully and very thoroughly swept under the rug of political consideration….'
  • Joseph Bland on New York Times reporter takes his Apple AirPods to Tokyo - 'Hi, Steven. Again, an excellent application for AI.'
  • Joseph Bland on New York Times reporter takes his Apple AirPods to Tokyo - 'Merry Christmas, Bill. In the season finale to Pluribus, the iPhone speaks the translation, in both directions. Presumably with AirPods and iPhones, you will only hear yourself and the translated response. As regards context that would seem to me an excellent application for AI….'