Steven Philips on Evercore: The Apple flywheel is in full effect - '“Flywheel”. Groucho Marx’ best character. 🙂'
on Apple investors: Mark your calendars for June 8 - 'There are ads and there are ads! I don’t object to them per se but it totally depends on how they’re presented. Semi on topic, the ads on Apple’s F1 app sure reflect its market! Cadillac, financial management firms, nice family gatherings – on the back of a yacht! AmEx etc. All well executed beyond the standard ad. I hope these really pay off for Apple.'
on Morgan Stanley survey: Good news for Apple suppliers, bad news for Android - '@Bill You beat me to it. I had copied the same paragraph. The writer is following Macalope’s rule of Apple journalism. All news must be interpreted as bad for Apple.'
on Apple investors: Mark your calendars for June 8 - 'Here’s a question for the PEDosphere: Will adding Ads to Apple Maps make you less likely to use this? At what point would ads drive you away from a service you use? I don’t use Apple News mostly because of the ads. I dislike the ads in Apple Stocks, but they haven’t YET driven me to to an alternative. And I’ll note in passing you can run ad blockers for webpages, but there are no equivalent things for ads in apps (at least that I know of…) (This is relevant because ad and ad revenue are always in the background for developer conferences.)'
on Morgan Stanley survey: Good news for Apple suppliers, bad news for Android - '“However, iPhone owners’ perception of Apple Intelligence deteriorated Y/Y, with its ranking as an upgrade driver slipping from #5 last year to #7 this year (7). The US showed the largest deterioration, falling from #5 to #9, indicating Apple has yet to deliver the AI functionality that consumers expect and desire from their smartphone vendor.” One could read it another way: people “want” AI features on their new smartphone, perhaps because of all the marketing and AI hype they see, hear, and read… but then after using an iPhone they realize they don’t need or want it and don’t have a strong feeling about why they would, when compared to other new features and functionalities available in an upgrade.'
on Evercore: The Apple flywheel is in full effect - 'Increases momentum to provide stability & reserve greater power. I like that word, too. Always .'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - 'Great point, Gregg. Based on the article and estimate, that would be cannibalizing. I’m interested in a foldable iPhone that doubles as a magic carpet and costs what my SE cost me, so it could cannibalize both my iPhone SE and my Honda CR-V. Sadly, I’m going to be stuck buying just normal iPhones for the foreseeable future.'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - 'I would rather have a pair of light Glasses to replace a large iPhone that would spatially unfold a screen of any size I wanted in front of me so I can watch something in the plane and all other use cases. But that’s ridiculous LOL! 😉'
on Mark Gurman: Why Apple's AirPods Max 2 is a letdown - 'I’m glad to see the update! Love mine. Yes, the case looks silly but at least it adds no bulk. The “auto-shutdown” (in lieu of manual power off) really has not been a problem. They are beautifully built, feel good, and sound impeccable.'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - 'Apple iFold potential sales As much as I’ve tried, I cannot find any of the market research companies trumpeting actual or estimates of the CY2025 Foldables sales figures, all Android or Huawei of course. While Counterpoint did say Samsung led a rebound in Q3 with their Z Fold 7 introduction and a 65% the best estimate I can find says IDC estimates 10% growth from 2025 to a 2026 levels of 20.6M sales. That implies 2025 sales overall were about 18.7M in 2025. That compares poorly with 2024’s sales of 17.7M, only a 6% increase from 2024 despite Samsung’s better Q3. Counterpoint reports that currently Fold to Clamshell design sell about 52:48%. With Apple’s Fold coming in 2H 2026, that ratio is expected to rise to 65:35 annually. It is not clear whether the 2026 target of 20.6M Foldables includes the iFold sales or not. If we assume it doesn’t, if Woodring is suggesting $40B revenue in 12 months, with an average ASP of $2000, that would be 20M sales. Figure 30M in 18 months. If the ASP includes a $100 increase like in memory costs or part of AppleCare, then $40B is reached with 19M sales. Incidentally, this would have Apple taking ~45-50% market share or more if sales are additive to smartphone sales. However, it’s quite possible that Apple takes bigger bite because many iFold sales will be conquest sales into Android foldables.'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'In pre-market trading Apple is off 0.40% in line with movement with the major indexes. The shares are trading down $1 at $250.49. The shares closed in the green $3.50 at $251.49 on Monday. Today’s session begins in 10 minutes… So far I like yesterday better than today!'
on Schwab's Tom White shrugs off BofA's Apple price target cut - 'I’d shrug off a $ 5.00 change in a prediction, too. I’m just surprised that it wasn’t Schwab being negative. Their ongoing attitude towards AAPL was one of the reasons I left them years ago.'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - '@Steven That’s the great thing about stock market reporting. You can attribute stock moves to anything you want, Who will prove you wrong? As I recall, Horace pointed this out long ago. The stock market is kind of odd. We know exactly how many shares were sold and at what price, but we don’t know who bought and sold or why. Once in a while there is some specific news about a company that will drive the price dramatically. Most of the time we just guess.'
on Samsung went 1 fold 2 far - 'I would blame Android’s memory management as much, maybe more, than the high cost of memory. The MacNeo seems to be doing just fine with half as much.'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - 'That was my inspiration. I should have attributed it to Jobs. It makes so much sense.'
on Samsung went 1 fold 2 far - 'This story is ironic in so many ways. Per Ars Technica’s article: ““According to Bloomberg, Samsung will begin winding down sales of the massive foldable in its home market of South Korea, where the TriFold debuted in December 2025. The device will disappear from other markets like the US as inventory is sold. Samsung released the Galaxy Z TriFold for the US in January, making its run even shorter Stateside. Samsung didn’t offer a rationale for this decision, but poor sales probably isn’t it. While the phone retailed for a whopping $2,899, Samsung was selling every unit it could produce. The company’s website actually teased restocks until recently, and desperate buyers were paying above MSRP on the second-hand market. Blame for the discontinuation may rest with the rapidly increasing cost of components. Both storage and memory are getting much more expensive, and the Galaxy Z Trifold has a generous allotment of both: 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage in the base model. Samsung probably wasn’t making much money on the TriFold even with the sky-high price, and raising it even more would have been a bad look.” Excerpt From “After three months, Samsung is ending sales of the $2,899 Galaxy Z TriFold” Ryan Whitwam Ars Technica https://apple.news/AbBPuJyVZT8e1xhGfhN2ddA This material may be protected by copyright.” Ironic that Samsung Mobile couldn’t get even a small batch of memory DRAM and NAND RAM from Samsung DS at favorable terms, or possibly get better yields on double fold Displays from Samsung Display. Undoubtedly this first batch on sale in apparently limited quantities was made with pre-AI memory price surge chips. Now Samsung is finding their profits and margins are being squeezed literally from slim to none to negative.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Think firebombing Tokyo. Think that civilians get wasted as a “score” but presidents and cabinets are (supposedly) off limits. I personally think Dylan’s “Masters of War.” I’ll stand over their graves ‘till I’m sure that they’re dead.'
on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'Ain’t getting old grand? Thanks for the catch, PED!'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - 'Better you do instead of the competition.“ Jobs has been quoted of saying that on multiple occasions.'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - 'To be clear, I’m not against cannibalization. Better you do instead of the competition. And that is the point. How long have foldables been available? Seven years, and I don’t see any cannibalization of Apple’s large form factor Max iPhones.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Greg: Confirming your hypothesis: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/23/volume-in-stock-and-oil-futures-surged-minutes-before-trumps-market-turning-post.html'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Last I checked, the Commander in Chief said we weren’t at war. Perhaps he’s changed his mind – again. And the Geneva Convention would disagree with your take on Trump’s threats, something the US purportedly agrees to uphold. And this comment: “Then every Allied bomber pilot, copilot, navigator and gunner, and everyone in a command and control and maintenance role including secretaries and cooks since the 1930s is guilty of multiple war crimes” is wayyyy over the top. And I think you’re smart enough to know that.'
on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'Joe, you’ve had $350 for three years, not $300. $350 is still available under the new rules. Do you want to change your bet? Send me an email.'
on Three Apple analysts see gold in the iPhone fold - '$40B is not so big. Apple sold about 247M iPhones last year. At an ASP above $2K * 20M (or 8% of last year’s sales), that’s $40B. Erik says 18 months, 50% more, or $60B. A fully optioned for memory Galaxy Fold costs $2,499. Gregg’s point about cannibalization remains valid.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'War is about destroying the enemy’s ability to wage war. Destroying infrastructure is a key part of that. Think Strategic Air Command (SAC) and the B-52. From 39,000 feet you can’t distinguish between an armed combatant and a cleaning lady.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Then every Allied bomber pilot, copilot, navigator and gunner, and everyone in a command and control and maintenance role including secretaries and cooks since the 1930s is guilty of multiple war crimes. Those still alive should be brought to trial and the guilty (all of them), due to the overwhelming number of violations, should be put to death.'


