Recent Comments

  • Joseph Bland on Alex Kantrowitz: A Gemini-powered Siri is 'OK for now' - 'Apple’s “payment” for renting Gemini, assuming it’s actually happening, will just be a reduction in what Alphabet pays Apple for being the default search engine on Apple products. That will increase Alphabet’s net profit by what, a billion a year? Hardly a massive ROI. And the private info of Apple users will be shielded from Alphabet’s prying eyes. It is, however, going to be a massive payday when Alphabet gains AI access to all the Android AI users’ personal info, which is the real reason behind Mr. Market’s bet on Alphabet….'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Regardless of the granularity of Apple’s stock price history (1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, 2 years, 5 years, or 10 years), what you see is peaks and valleys. And they’re very hard to predict, regardless of the granularity. Of course, broadly speaking, you can see the impact of the various macro economic events, including the dot com bubble recession of 2000-2002, the S&L or Great Recession of 3008-2009, and the Covid recession beginning in 2020 during President Trump’s first term. Now we appear to be heading into what can only be called the Trump Recession. However, in the specific case of Apple, we also appear to be on track for significant technological gains. But we’ve been there before. Following the Great Recession, the technology didn’t matter; the stock submarined, and stayed submarined for years, in spite of the phenomenal growth of what may be the most seminal invention ever to come out of Apple, the iPhone. Apple grew it’s coffers by leaps and bounds year after year, at precisely when AAPL, also year after year, was valued, as Horace Dediu put it, “like a steel mill going out of business”. But that’s why Apple is special. Starting about 12 years ago, and growing more so every year, every single time AAPL has been beaten down, it springs back up to grow even higher. So what happened 12 years ago? Buybacks happened. Not in a vacuum, mind you; technological growth continued as well. But buybacks slowly but surely shrank Apple’s stock float, making it more and more impervious to options traders by shifting the balance of AAPL ownership back towards long term investors, much as it was before institutional owners abandoned the stock in drives during and following the Great Recession. So yes, I expect Apple to be pulled down by the mass stock devaluation of the coming Trump recession. But I also expect that Apple will then regain all the ground it lost, and then some, just like it has done for the last 12 years.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'Apple silicon is a major advantage/differentiator. No amount of money could compensate Apple enough for giving those up to competitors.'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Gregg, MacStadium has been rack mounting Mac’s for probably two decades now. They brought in Mac Studios a couple years ago.'
  • Daniel Albaugh on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'TSMC Overseas Fabs – A Success? It was a long read, but worth it. Quite interesting.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - '(From that release) During exhibition hours, NeurIPS attendees will be able to interact with live demos of Apple ML research in booth # 1103. These include: MLX – an open source array framework designed for Apple silicon that enables fast and flexible ML and scientific computing on Apple hardware. The framework is optimized for Apple silicon’s unified memory architecture and leverages both the CPU and GPU. Visitors will be able to experience two MLX demos: – Image generation with a large diffusion model on an iPad Pro with M5 chip – Distributed compute with MLX and Apple silicon: Visitors will be able to explore text and code generation with a 1 trillion-parameter model running in Xcode on a cluster of four Mac Studios equipped with M3 Ultra chips, each operating with 512 GBs of unified memory. FastVLM – a family of mobile-friendly vision language models, built using MLX. These models use a mix of CNN and Transformer architectures for vision encoding designed specifically for processing high-resolution images. Together, they demonstrate a strong approach that achieves an optimal balance between accuracy and speed. Visitors will get to experience a real-time visual question-and-answer demo on iPhone 17 Pro Max.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Setting up my two 60d Limit Sells now at 291 and 301 per Roger’s recommendation. Squirt qty’s so low and the cost basis on them not that low so I am not worried about the CapGains on it. Again, I only sell these tiny bits on climbs (I have a FOMO problem LOL). Cheers, longs!'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Here’s a summary of the various Apple projects they’re presenting at NeurIPS: https://machinelearning.apple.com/research/neurips-2025'
  • Romeo Esparrago on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'Both of youse – superhelpful, superknowledgeable. Thank you.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Great advice! The “two halves don’t make a wrong” recommendation is what I’ll do.'
  • Roger Schutte on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'Fred, did you really read the whole report? I couldn’t get through all of it. Lol.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'In early trading Apple is again setting new all-time highs. The shares are up $1.28 at $287.47. The high on the day so far is $288.61. Alphabet is higher by $.172 at $317.74. Nearly 75% of S&P 500 components are higher on the day at 10:30am in the east. The major indexes are now mixed.'
  • David Emery on Apple's 'lacks juristiction' defense fails in Luxembourg - 'Well, “standing” in the US is a complex legal issue. It’s been at the heart of most of the Trump Executive Order lawsuits. Plaintiffs have lost many times on the argument “they don’t have standing” (and IANAL, but it seems the same set of circumstances produces different results in different trial courts and appellate courts.) Extrapolating loosely to NL and EU, I’d expect Apple to have tried reasonable legal arguments, but judging (no pun intended) those arguments would require deep knowledge of NL law on ‘standing’. p.s. nice photo! I interviewed for a job in Lux city once.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Apple's 'lacks juristiction' defense fails in Luxembourg - 'What do we know about the Dutch foundations that have filed the case? Do they have apps on the App Store? If so, do they solicit donations through these apps and how would that be handled with regards to App Store fees? In what way is Apple abusing their dominant position? Aren’t there other App stores that they can release Apps through secondary to a previous decision? Or am I off base here?'
  • Fred Stein on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'For perspective on chip making in the US, SemiAnalysis has an on-line newsletter. A recent article discusses TSMC’s decades long work on this. It’s a long read, and more useful than a rumor.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'Can the second source be a different fab within the same company? Because Apple does not have a second source for its most advanced chips. Also, is this a precursor for Apple being able to sell models of its earlier chips? I really don’t think so but this story has me wondering about this and then brings up a whole different thing. Can Apple become a chip designer/seller? Or am I getting too far out on the limb?'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Alex Kantrowitz: A Gemini-powered Siri is 'OK for now' - 'So Apple not owning the core technology may or may not be a problem. Especially if it gets commoditized(which he sees some evidence of). Sort of has some similarities to issues that Google and the Android phone makers have had. But making the core hardware hasn’t given Google any advantage in terms of the phones it markets. At least not yet. And the market still doesn’t think that the hardware business is very hard. But if it wasn’t very hard, wouldn’t the Google phone offerings have gained more market share?'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple's 'lacks juristiction' defense fails in Luxembourg - 'Jezus tap-dancing kriminy.'
  • Greg Lippert on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'yes they need to proven trustworthy'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Index futures have a greenish luster this morning and are higher about 45 minutes ahead of today’s opening bell. After reaching new all-time highs on Tuesday, Apple is in the red $0.29 at $285.90 pre-market. Alphabet is up $0.35 at $317.37 following Tuesday’s $0.90 gain to $316.02. Microsoft is down $0.30 at $489.70 as we approach the start of Wednesday trading.'
  • Roger Schutte on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'PED, the M1 is the lowest M series chip and it came out in 2021. It’s in the Macbook Air’s sold only at Walmart. The M1 is likely the lowest volume and thus safest to let Intel start with.'
  • David Emery on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'secure a second source to meet supply-chain management requirements. Requirements set by whom, exactly? Tim Cook, the supply chain genius? Or Ming-Chi Kuo, the notorious rumor-monger? And what are these ‘requirements’, for delivery schedule, cost, quality? Intel has had issues with all 3 of those, I believe.'
  • Bart Yee on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'IDC’s numbers are a little and a lot off depending on what they’re referencing: “Apple’s shipments are forecast to grow 6.1% YoY in 2025, up sharply from 3.9% in the last cycle.” “Apple is set to have a record year in 2025 with shipments forecast to cross 247 million units, thanks to the phenomenal success of its latest iPhone 17 series,” said Nabila Popal, senior research director with IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker.” For 2024, IDC estimated 232.1M, a preliminary estimate Jan 12, 2025. I have not found any correction to that. If iPhone sales grew 6.1%, that puts it at 246.3M, a little off from 247.4M. Either the growth rate is actually 6.6% or the 2024 number was revised by IDC internally to 233.2M. Small potatoes. This number is more egregious: “This calendar year will not only be a record period for Apple in terms of shipments but also in value, which is forecast to exceed $261 billion, with 7.2% YoY growth in 2025.” This bugged me a lot and should have raised some eyebrows at IDC and here. Why? As I had pointed out a few days ago, CY2024 iPhone revenue was $200.619B. That’s a long ways from $261B, because $261B would represent 30% YoY growth!!!, not 7.2%. When I had calculated potential forecasted CY2025 iPhone revenues, based on Q1 FY2026 quarter’s 10% iPhone revenue growth as guided by Apple CFO Parekh, I came up with $216.5B, a 7.9% YoY growth. If we instead sub 7.2% growth, we should get $215.1B. I believe the $261B figure is an erroneous typo that should actually be closer to $216B instead!! I’d certainly love to to see $261B in annual iPhone revenue someday but it’s not CY2025, maybe end of year 2027 because that would require only 10% YoY revenue growth in 2026 and then 2027. Another cross check was taking $261B divide that by projected sales of 247.4M, giving an ASP of $1055, an astounding 19% rise from 2024’s $888. Given current and past robust sales of base model iPhone 17 & 16’s in 2025, it’s just not likely yet. If IFolds became a huge hit, maybe that’s possible into 2026 & 2027. I’ve sent an email to IDC to inquire about this typo or maybe miscalculation possibility.'
  • Greg Bates on Apple's Amar Subramanya has his work cut out for him - 'Investment thesis: The people running the Magnificent Seven (and a bunch of other great companies not growing quite as fast) are smarter than the journos writing about them. So whom should we believe? The Mag 7 need profits (or sometimes zero profits and massive growth of the business–see Amazon’s earlier days, for example), while the journos need eyeballs. So the CEOs are running their companies, looking for opportunities and hyper vigilant for disruptive innovations that could kill them. And the journos are desperate for controversy; when there is little, they employ the chicken little sky-is-falling strategy: Apple is the next Blackberry! Nvidia is the next Intel! AI is the next Internet bubble! These headlines are better at grabbing attention than ones that might better reflect reality: Apple is the next Apple. Nvidia is the next Nvidia. AI is the next transformative opportunity and will have many winners. These headlines fail because everyone knows they are highly likely to be true–why read what you already know? Investment opportunity: buy and hold, tune out the noise. We’ve all seen those articles, “If you had invested $10k in __________ 30 years ago, today you’d have made millions. A more accurate headline would be: If you had tuned out the noise 30 years ago and just sat there, you’d have made millions. That’s why so few people actually invest $10k in one stock for 3 decades; they have trouble tuning out the noise generated by journos who can’t make a living unless there is controversy. Trust the smartest people, not the cleverest writers.'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'The PCMag article is from when Apple talked about the product. Their booth at the show today was showing it in action. See my latest post on Twitter for pix and comments. Search for @Graphex1'
  • Charles A. on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'https://www.pcmag.com/news/apple-thunderbolt-5-macs-ai-clusters-mlx'
  • Rodney Avilla on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Search for “ Apple demo’d a mini AI cluster” And it should pop up.'
  • Charles A. on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'I couldn’t find a link for that, either.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'I looked up neurlPS Roger is there a link to the demo? I couldn’t find one. With what you saw, does the demo make you think Apple is working on a rack mount server?'
  • Gregg Thurman on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'Thank you David. I’ve been hanging with the wrong dummies. In 2010, when I first started tracking Apple’s Earnings reports (and started developing my own theories about “PE”). I’ve asked different forums about PEG. Nobody could give me an answer that satisfied. There was a result, but what did it mean? So, is there a range? If so, what’s the mean result? Where are the danger points in the calculation? Is there a historical PEG chart? Essentially I need some context in order to gauge what I’m looking at. Thanking you in advance.'