Recent Comments

  • Steven Philips on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'Daniel Eran Dilger – as best I recall.'
  • Steven Philips on A man, a dog, an Apple Watch - 'I’ve fallen so many times while running that I’ve perfected my tuck & roll. It doesn’t even set off my watch. In the beginning, half the times when it did respond I’d just hit “did not fall”. Realized later that I was sabotaging the function. Remember to always hit “fell, but OK”.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on A man, a dog, an Apple Watch - 'God bless, Neil! Thank you, Apple!'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Robert: That’s a good question…I don’t know. But this quarter’s $3.24 billion of net income per week has to go somewhere.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Roger: Is the diminishing impact on the fully diluted share count from the share repurchase program worth the cash cost of about $100 billion per annum that’s being deployed for this form of financial engineering?'
  • Arthur Cheng on A man, a dog, an Apple Watch - 'I had a couple of falls in the past couple of years, bad enough that both times my Apple Watch asked whether I need help. Luckily I didn’t both times. But knowing the monitor is working really is priceless. I am mid 70s now and falling is getting more real these days'
  • Michael Goldfeder on A man, a dog, an Apple Watch - 'Man’s best friend has some competition with the Apple Watch. What a scary situation and glad it turned out well for you and Ginger. A life can change in an instant. Thanks for sharing.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'Got a reply to my DED inquiry. Dan is still with us! He just writes when he sees fit. Thanks for checking in on him, I’ll pass along that you were looking for him.'
  • Fred Stein on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'Hi David, A partial answer, below: While TSMC handles all of Apple’s most advanced process, other foundries make other chips. As well there are 3rd parties, Intel, Samsung and others that handle advanced packaging, for the various multi-chip products. There’s a lot more to this… above my pay grade.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Kirk: I appreciate your perspective on Apple’s share price performance at this time. In my view, there’s nothing “wrong” with Apple. I do have concerns for those expecting some kind of big bounce in the share price just because they want a big bounce in the share and without a credible thesis to support a big bounce in the share price.'
  • David Emery on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'One more thought: What are those “best foundries” (plural!) that Apple has no access to??? Apple has a long-standing deep relationship with TSMC, even if it has been eclipsed as TSMC’s biggest customer. What other foundry has both the technical capabilities as TSMC, and the scale as TSMC, to produce chips for a significant number of commercial products on a demanding schedule?'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Michael: Apple is a great American enterprise and among the most successful enterprises in the first quarter of this century. However, I don’t see the share price performance of the most recent 25 years repeating itself. I consider Apple a high quality enterprise that will sit quite well in many investor portfolios but it’s not a stock I expect to double anytime soon. There are other mega caps I consider at this time more attractive for investing additional dollars than Apple.'
  • David Emery on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'While the US dithers (both federal policy and Big 3 automakers), China is eating everyone’s lunch on EV manufacturing and sales. About the only other viable alternative is coming from Korea. I lost most of my (very small) investment in Polestar. Nice cars (I had one as a rental for a long weekend), but not price competitive with what’s coming from Korea, let alone what could come from China. And GM’s obstinate decision to “own the vehicle and its data” means I’ll never look at a GM vehicle as long as Mary Barra (and successors) continues down that path.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'Some look with bewilderment as to why tesla stock shoots up after reporting terrible numbers. When Tesla released the Roadster (I tried to become a dealer) EV was all the rage and the public wasn’t aware of Musk’s personality quirks. Today, investors no longer see EVs as a high margin (even though it remains high demand) industry. There are just too many viable manufacturers around the world to maintain margins. Production costs are vastly lower than ICE vehicles. This is going to lead to price erosion, especially now that government subsidies are being withdrawn (as they should be). Pulling back from an industry destined to become low margin (think personal computer or handset industry), in favor of other industries that will remain high margin for a lot longer, is being viewed as a good thing.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'A little internet research revealed Daniel’s whole name and where he is last listed as employed. I made an inquiry about him via email.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'I remember Daniel, but not his full name. Anybody got it? I remember him being a reckless motorcycle rider. I hope that didn’t catch up with him.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Apple is also a far more secure customer for memory-makers and sellers than all of the “AI” mega-chasers, from a risk perspective. Apple’s demand and need for high-end chips will be higher in 1 year, 2 years, 3 years than it is today, because the iPhone is the primary medium by which most of its customers will interact with information and tech. Compare that to the LLM-peddlers and the fact that that entire industry is headed for a significant shake-out if they don’t demonstrate a viable financial model very quickly. So if I’m Nvidia or Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron or Kioxia, I look at demand, highlight that Apple is still one of if not the biggest customer, and then put it in a special category of its own entitled, “Keep This Customer Happy and Business Grows”, and everyone else in the “Manage The Response To This Extreme Short-Term Demand Very Carefully!!” pot. Predictability and risk associated with individual customers have to be major factors in the decisions on the allocation of capex for building significant new fab capacity, and also for who gets their order satisfied in a world of limited supply. And in those two categories, it looks to me like Apple’s #1. If there’s an AI datacenter bubble burst, it could very well quickly turn new chip factories operating at max output into stranded assets and big write-downs.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'I agree. Somehow I just can’t imagine Apple sitting on its ass waiting for memory prices to increase, without doing something proactive, not with the resources (intellectual, financial, contractual) it has at its disposal. Of course, the media, with no business expertise, can’t imagine there are things that can be done to navigate business challenges. They are trained to imagine and amplify the negative. Thinking positively is beyond them.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Musk will do whatever with his groups of companies + Tesla that is required to continue massive government subsidies. And the Tesla Board members will approve whatever he wants to do. And, of no small importance, a merger of those three companies will give him substantially more control over Tesla than he just required under his now-approved demand that the Tesla Board compensate him by rewarding him with another $800B in stock options to increase his company control. To paraphrase his rationale, “I need more control now so that when I build a robot army nobody will be able to remove me from control.”'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - '@Kirk: Another possible reason for a bounce back higher is that everyone seems to use Apple as their safe haven ATM to park their money while waiting for another stock to invest into with these funds. All the while Apple is now back into their buybacks post earnings and that can also create an unusual catalyst of sorts that benefits long term farmers and other holders of the stock.'
  • Kirk Burgess on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Don’t be too worried about the lack of a big bounce post earnings everyone. Apple is fairly richly valued here from a price to earnings growth perspective (a higher PEG than its peers) – so I see the great earnings beat as supporting the current price, rather than being a catalyst for a big move upward.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Fred: I don’t see anything that looks like a beachball. What is your current 12-month price target for the shares?'
  • Rodney Avilla on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - 'DESIGN or chip MANUFACTURING? Tesla has been designing their own chips for years now. The plan is to manufacturing them with the goal of 1 million wafers per month. Coming out of Musk’s mouth you never know what’s real or not. But this is one goal I hope becomes a reality Disclosure- I do not own nor plan to buy any Tesla stock.'
  • David Emery on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - '“stockpiling” or ‘reserving, via contract’. Either would work, methinks.'
  • David Emery on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - ' Tesla’s plan to become independent [from Taiwan & eventually China] for advanced processing chips, making their own. By ‘making their own’, do you mean chip DESIGN or chip MANUFACTURING? Either one requires a significant investment of money, time, and patience. Apple, of course, is doing its own design, and contracting out manufacturing. Will Apple go with Intel as a second source manufacturer? Mebbe, that would have both supplier diversity and political (made in USA) benefits. I suppose a grand merger of Tesla, Xai and SpaceX could include chip manufacturing via robots in space…'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Gregg, I don’t understand your comment of share buyback yielding a 4-5% increase in value when share count dropped 2.25% the past year.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'Buybacks add 4% to 5% to the value of AAPL each year. An annuity will do that without the wild gyrations in value.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple blows past expectations and its shares fall. What gives? - 'I am 99% certain the bounce is in the bank as a future credit but which isn’t being spent just yet With a good nights sleep under my belt, I find myself a bit ashamed of my response to WSs lack of reaction to Apple’s numbers. WS never (with regard to Apple/AAPL) reacts immediately to earnings reports and guidance. They always take the weekend to fully digest what their lying eyes have seen, what their lying ears have heard, before they trust them. Then, in order to not gross out the market WS will start buying slowly (to keep the price down longer so it can accrue more low cost shares), increasing volume marginally as the price of AAPL goes up, until you look behind you and you see that AAPL has increased by 8% or 10% without leaving a wake behind it. For all I know WS may even sell some shares during this period to weaken demand and prevent AAPL from heating up too fast.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Apple's got plenty of memory chips. What it lacks is access to the best foundries. - '“ cards close to their vest.” I agree with that approach. They don’t have to announce future plans, I’m just hoping that they have such plans.'