Recent Comments

  • Roger Schutte on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'I squirted another traunch of our most appreciated shares into our donor advised fund.'
  • Bart Yee on The delayed launch of Samsung's Galaxy 26 gave Apple's iPhones a boost - 'David & Gregg, thank you both for your observation that a delayed Galaxy S26 launch is just that, delayed, and diehard Galaxy users would not jump ship, least of all to iPhone because of that. BUT, if social media (Reddit) is to be believed, there’s plenty of folks in both the iOS and Android worlds who will voice their displeasure & dissatisfaction with either iOS or specific Android maker/Android software problems, or had hardware or support issues, and now are willing to try something else not their current product. Now here’s where Counterpoint and others’ use of percentage market share as a marker gets fuzzy, for me at least. Let’s say Q1 last year Apple sold 100 units, Samsung 50 units, and the Android rest 100 units. Total 250, Apple share 40.0%. FFwd to this Quarter, and say Apple sells exact the same 100, Samsung only 44, and the rest contracts to 86. Total is 230, a 8% shrinkage of the total market. Samsung goes down 12% due to delayed sales of flagships and maybe contraction of its low & mid devices, the rest of Android declines 13%, total Android drop = 13.6%. Here, Apple sells no more, no less, 0 volume gain, yet “market share” increased to 100/230 = 43.5%, a 9% increase while not selling any more YoY, and “could be” interpreted as filling the vacuum left by Samsung’s deficit and Android’s decline. Now certainly, Apple could have sold 106 while Samsung sold 45 and Android fell to 85, giving Apple 106/236 = 45%, a volume gain of 6% YoY, while its market share increased 12%, Android dropped 14%. This time a real Apple gain against a real Android shrinkage. To me, Apple cares not a whit about market share or what Android (or PC) competition is doing, precisely because Apple has no control over that. What Apple DOES care about is selling more in absolute terms which grows revenue, or more revenue in absolute terms by growing ASP (“favorable mix”, “leverage”), either way, it’s growing revenue YoY, that’s why focus is not on how many widgets sold but how much you make, and take home. Android loyalists NEVER talk about revenue or profits for the Android vendor, instead focusing on number sold (but not average price), specs, features, parts, battery size, and value bang for the buck they spend, sure in the belief that they paid the least for the most. If their favorite maker sold more in a particular region, then it’s superior and other regions are rigged, particularly the US. No question that the US banned Huawei on security grounds, giving Apple, Samsung, Motorola most of the country, and no Chinese OEM has made any serious attempt to crack the market. Yet in China, Samsung is essentially discriminated out, India, while populous, has a limited, for now, purchasing power. In regions like Europe, Asia Pacific where Apple and Android do compete, Apple maintains control of the premium tier, Android the rest. That is how it always has been. A few even say that only India and China are the true large markets that prove the dominance numerically of Android and US & Europe are rigged against “foreign” Chinese makers. Android numeric advantage, Apple Revenue advantage. Oh, One other thing. Any pointing out how Apple makes more revenue to them, they’ll tell you Apple has brainwashed you and others to pay for overpriced junk that could be bested by Android products at a cheaper price, so you’re just contributing to a greedy monopolistic American consumerist company, while Chinese OEMs offer real value, real tech, for a more affordable price, and they don’t prioritize profit over serving vastly more people. But the android folks also have little brand loyalty, flitting and swapping products at will, buying new smartphones every 2-3 years and discarding the old ones, as if that wasn’t consumerism at its worst. And of course, you have to be a true techie to love and enjoy and modify an Android because that’s what all Android people do, that makes them technologically more advanced than those people who use a closed off iOS that’s simple and too easy, meaning anyone who is buying one is not technically inclined and knows little about tech, just buys what Apple gives them, and they’d buy different if they only could see what else was out there. That makes Apple buyers inferior to Android buyers. Some say all of Apple’s sales and revenue figures and data Apple puts out are lies, and so is the sales data that research firms publish if it isn’t complementary to their favorite. Etc. etc., it’s a real nasty jumbled world out there in Android land.'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Michael, Good for you! Enjoy! That’s basically my instructions to my wife, daughters and Mom if something happens to me and I pass before them.'
  • Michael Stur on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'I sold all my AAPL when it hit 300 ! I will reinvest in several distributing equity funds, since at 73 I need a stable income…'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Cy: There was no Microsoft bailout. Microsoft invested in a special class of Apple preferred stock. Microsoft’s investment in Apple was never deployed for any purpose that involved the operations of the company and Microsoft profited handsomely from the conversion to common and the eventual sale of the shares. Microsoft at that time also committed to continuing to release and support Office for Mac. The companies ended the litigation between them (important to Microsoft) and entered into a cross-patent licensing agreement. Apple agreed to make Internet Explorer the default browser on the Mac. What prompted these actions may have been Apple’s litigation concerning the San Francisco Canyon Company and its work for Microsoft. There’s more to this story than most people know.'
  • Horace Dediu on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'It is pure arrogance to suggest you know why a stock moves. The only reason is that there is a difference of opinion between buyers and sellers. If there is only one seller and one buyer you will be very hard pressed to know either opinion. Forget it if there are more than two people involved. Distrust anyone who says they know why a stock moves.'
  • Gregg Thurman on The delayed launch of Samsung's Galaxy 26 gave Apple's iPhones a boost - '” with ~25% remaining before expiry ” Whoops. I hate it when this happens. The above should read: “with ~5% remaining before expiry “.'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple's in the AI catbird seat - 'And the link to the media story: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ai-scribe-system-hallucinations-9.7197049'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple's in the AI catbird seat - 'Here’s the link to the Auditor-General’s report: https://auditor.on.ca/en/content/specialreports/specialreports/en26/2026_AI_EN.pdf'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple's in the AI catbird seat - 'They aren’t even partially-functioning-brain-like. They’re statistical phrase generators, with zero intelligence or thought.'
  • Stephen Gordon on Apple soars to a new record close: $298.97 - 'Darren – I ran your comment through Gemini and here’s the short answer… “Premarket is often just low-volume ‘noise’ where macro jitters drag prices down on thin liquidity. The 9:30 AM reversal marks the entry of institutional ‘real money’ that ignores these early head-fakes to buy high-quality names at a relative discount.”'
  • Gregg Thurman on The delayed launch of Samsung's Galaxy 26 gave Apple's iPhones a boost - 'A bit OT: Since late May I’ve made 4 trades, all deep in the money, moving the Strike progressively higher with each trade because AAPL wasn’t content to laze around. Tomorrow is the last day I can trade my MAY $272.50/$275 Call Spreads. They are going to finish the cycle about $25 in the money. That’s huge. My main tranche still has two months to go before expiry, with WWDC occurring in about 3 weeks. That trade is up ~41% with ~25% remaining before expiry and requires a Close above $275 to achieve max profit. I’m thinking of rolling all of my contract into JUL $280/$285 Call Spreads. With the little bit of cash I have left over from my initial $40,000 to test the waters, I will net a little over 104% ROI on my March investment by July expiry, all the while targeting a 30% ROI, while moving my positions up, exploiting AAPL’s run. After July earnings I’m thinking of increasing my ROI goal to 40%-45% (still in the money) for OCT. If I’ve calculated this correctly, those contracts will be ~$10 in the money when purchased. Does anybody see anything fundamental with Apple that would cause AAPL to decline more than $10 after July earnings and GUIDANCE by OCT expiry? Of course GUIDANCE will be key, but I’m expecting another round of strong GUIDANCE. Unless there is no interest in my options trades I will continue posting them.'
  • Darren DMW on Apple soars to a new record close: $298.97 - 'AI still delivering. I just sold a parcel of MRVL for $181. I bought that parcel only 12 months ago for $55. With an AAPL ATH that got me a small sale at $299.80 it’s been a good day.'
  • Darren DMW on Apple soars to a new record close: $298.97 - 'I have been monitoring premarket the last week or so. Premarket opens at 6pm Aus time. I am pretty sure the last 5 days AAPL has been in the red for the most of each pre-market session and then starts climbing right on 9:30am open. What can we learn from this disconnect between pre-market and regular trading?'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple soars to a new record close: $298.97 - 'Cisco, which jumped $2.58 to close at $101.87 after setting an all-time high of $102.01 earlier in the day, is up $22.10 or 21.69% after hours following the release of earnings. It’s been a very good day for many of the leading names in the tech sector. Micron also jumped 4.83% to close at $803.63.'
  • Steven Philips on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I hope the “yearly low” hit in mid May this year! 🙂'
  • David Emery on The delayed launch of Samsung's Galaxy 26 gave Apple's iPhones a boost - 'With integrated memory, Apple’s SoC costs would STILL be driven by the production costs for the wafers. It seems to me there’s no significant incremental costs for Apple’s SoC based memory, unlike those vendors who have to pay the price for, and compete for -separate- memory components. Now that wouldn’t hold for persistent storage, where Apple would still have to compete for similar products.'
  • Bart Yee on The delayed launch of Samsung's Galaxy 26 gave Apple's iPhones a boost - 'Here’s the relevant data from Samsung’s 1Q26 quarterly report: Samsung smartphone portion of MX revenues last quarter (by my estimations) had a +3.5% YoY revenue increase to ~$20.4B and using IDC sales of 62.8M, gives an ASP of $324, yet saw a -35% DROP in YoY operating profits, down to just ~$1.43B, again divided by 62.8M = net smartphone profits around $23/$324 sale = net profitability of just 7.0%. This drop was due to decreased low/mid sales, memory costs, delayed & a very short Galaxy S26 sales quarter. Here’s their color commentary: 1Q 2026 Results ➢ MX • Sales & profit increased centered on premium product mix • Secured single-digit profitability via proactive cost optimization 2Q 2026 outlook: (includes full quarter of profitable premium Galaxy S sales and newly released A series midrangers and budget phones w/price increases) ➢ MX • Amid diminishing launch effects, drive revenue growth YoY via flagship sales & new A series • Decline in profitability expected despite flagship-centric sales & resource optimization 2H2026 outlook (includes 8th Gen Z Foldables launch in late July/Aug) ➢ MX • Solidify flagship-led sales & upselling initiatives to pursue comprehensive growth • Address evolving customer needs through strengthening foldable product development • Pursue efficiency initiatives to mitigate impact of rising cost pressures on profitability (If you thought Apple earnings reports were heavy on jargon, Samsung’s are riddled with Corporate-Speak cliches and vague goals of “efficiency”) (increase prices vs sales promotions which see-saw revenue vs profits, culling lower priced models & ranges, reduce costs by going to even lower cost, lower tier Samsung Exynos or Qualcomm CPU’s & MediaTek versions for budget models, push users to higher margin models, etc.) yet despite all this mitigation, MX will likely lose money over the entire year. Why? Because Samsung can’t control all of its external costs and because they already have lower margins in these low/mid service ranges, they have little margin buffer to work with. I suspect if we search and examine Xiaomi, Huawei, Vivo, Oppo, Lenovo/Motorola, earnings, we will see the same thing. For some, they, like Samsung, have other divisions to ease the pain or even mitigate any losses in smartphones, but that can’t last forever. It’s not clear how long this AI memory surge will persist but somewhere, smartphone makers will face losing money for a while and hard decisions will occur.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple soars to a new record close: $298.97 - 'NVIDIA rose $5.05 or 2.29% to $225.85 while setting a new all-time high of $227.84 earlier in the day. Alphabet jumped $15.27 or 3.94% to $402.62 while also setting a new all-time high earlier today at $403.70. Apple, in the #3 spot on market cap, advanced $4.07 or 1.38% to $298.87 and set a new all-time high of $300.92 in afternoon trading. The AI trade certainly isn’t over!'
  • Bart Yee on The delayed launch of Samsung's Galaxy 26 gave Apple's iPhones a boost - 'Hi Bill, there was a story out before Samsung’s and Apple’s earnings regarding SVP TM Roh, MX Smartphone division, warning about profitability issues for Samsung smartphones in the coming years if memory prices remain high: Report: Samsung execs worried company could lose money on smartphones for the first time The AI-driven memory shortage is hitting Samsung’s bottom line. RYAN WHITWAM – APR 24, 2026 9:58 AM | https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2026/04/samsung-may-be-bracing-for-first-ever-annual-loss-in-smartphone-business/ “Selling smartphones used to be easy—everyone wanted one, & every new phone was a lot better than the one that came before. Things are different now that smartphones are mature products. Plenty of manufacturers have thrown in the towel, leaving big players like Samsung to sell a new phone every couple of years. But even Samsung may find it tough to turn a profit in 2026 due to the ongoing race to build more AI capacity. According to Money Today (Korean), Samsung MX (mobile experience) head TM Roh has warned company leadership that it could be headed for the first net loss on smartphones in the company’s history. Even during times of economic strife or amid pandemic-related supply chain chaos, Samsung still made money on smartphones. The skyrocketing price of DRAM and NAND may be what finally breaks the streak despite strong Galaxy S26 sales. Shortages of these components have affected all types of computing hardware, from consumer laptops to servers. The LPDDR5x memory found in most mobile devices is increasingly important for AI. Nvidia’s Vera AI CPU…which will have up to 1.5 TB of LPDDR5x memory…The CPUs in a single (36 Vera rack) server will consume enough RAM for 4,600 Galaxy S26 Ultra devices (12GB each). Until recently, the application processor (which includes the cellular radio) was the most expensive component of most smartphones, & the display usually came in right below that. The AI era has upended the formula, roughly doubling the cost of memory & storage. According to Counterpoint Research, RAM will account for more than a third of the cost of building a budget phone in mid-2026. Even with more expensive devices, memory is still north of 20 percent of the cost… Higher demand, higher prices There are already signs that RAM & storage costs are making phones more expensive. Motorola recently raised the price of its Moto G budget phones by up to 50 percent. Low-cost devices like the Moto G will feel the rising cost of components the most, making the very idea of a budget phone in the coming years suspect. With the prospect of sinking profitability in 2026, Samsung is also making changes. The recently released Galaxy A37 and A57 mid-range devices come with a $50 price hike over the last generation. The company has also increased prices on some more expensive devices, adding $80 to the Galaxy Z Flip 7 (512 GB) and Z Fold 7 (512 GB and 1 TB). Some of its tablets are also more spendy, including a $100 increase for the Galaxy Tab S11. With profitability in doubt, Samsung is on the verge of releasing new, ultra-expensive phones. This summer, the company will debut a new generation of Galaxy Z foldables, which are always priced even higher than the Galaxy S series. These devices come w/ample storage & RAM to help justify the exorbitant price tags. That makes them prime candidates for price hikes that leave foldables even more unrealistically expensive.” As we said before, even Samsung MX Mobile cannot get better memory prices from Samsung Semi, they have to get in line w/everyone else, incl. Apple, & MX has similar needs to Apple but much lower margins. Servicing the mid & low price range w/paltry margins depends heavily on keeping BOM costs under control, or risk raising prices & losing sales altogether. Android’s literal dependence on 90% of sales NOT being premium devices now makes them highly vulnerable to decreasing sales volume & share due to price hikes by makers desperate to salvage some margins. ALL non-iOS makers face this situation. Continued.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Time to sell another squirt, Darrin DMW? Hmmm…'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Hi, Cy. I’m guessing our average split-adjusted purchase price was about $4.50/share. That comes to a present ROi on the remaining shares of 66.666…X. That’s nothing compared to NVDA’s rise, of course, but it has served to keep the wolf from our door since the Great Recession. Tough times, those years….'
  • David Emery on Apple's in the AI catbird seat - 'WE HERE have known that for a long time.'
  • David Emery on Apple's in the AI catbird seat - 'Link to the Ontario study, please!'
  • David Emery on The delayed launch of Samsung's Galaxy 26 gave Apple's iPhones a boost - 'It’s -really hard- to argue the statistics from cell carriers on consumer preference. Companies like Verizon have a clear financial incentive to push Android phones, yet their iPhone base continues to grow.'
  • Bart Yee on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Well, a little bit of profit taking right in the last 5 minutes pulled AAPL back to close at $298.87, still up $4.07, +1.38%, volume was an above average 45M shares at close of regular session, we’ll see how much happens AH. All of this on a day with all but MSFT and NFLX of the Mag-7 green. GOOGL climbed over $400 close today. AAPL will likely consolidate here a bit, retest $300+ levels for awhile until any number of external factors may help or hinder AAPL from climbing a bit higher. (Big gains from any China deals, tariff reductions, Iran Conflict and SofH reopens maybe in the next 10-30 days?, Russia-Ukraine resolves (fat chance on that one, but at least Iran is spending some of its drone production on its own use rather than sending to Russia), or some other external positive white swan. There’s always possibility for any number of black swanlets to occur as well. Since it’s mid-May, there isn’t any real new or additional Apple news unless we get 1) updates about chip supply improving so Neo and Mac production and delivery times improve, 2) iPhone constraints improve, or monthly reporting suggesting continued iPhone strength in important markets like China, US, and India (some India news I sent to PED last night). 3) more rumors about WWDC developments.'
  • Alan Birnbaum on Apple's in the AI catbird seat - 'Frau Blucher…..'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Finally, Apple had a split-adjusted 26.5 B shares when buybacks started, and has spent $800+ B on buybacks. Per the Q2 10-Q, the share count was 14.7 B at the end of March. Apple has sold about 11.8 B shares at an average price of about $68/share. That’s a decent ROI IMO….'
  • Cy on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'My best purchase at $3.33 from Oct 27, 2008 (and a bunch of other lots around then ranging up to $3.78) have done some heavy lifting for sure. An 8,888% gain! I know others have done a lot better and I’m happy for them! Wishing I’d pulled the trigger on AAPL around the Microsoft bailout time. Thought about it and I was (stupidly) investing high risk back then so made sense. Would have been (an even bigger) game changer!'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'If you still own pre-March, 2012 shares (we do), from back when shares were a split-adjusted $20, then you’ve seen a 15X $ valuation. And when (not if) AAPL’s price doubles to $600/share, assuming no further splits, each will double to a 30X $ valuation for each of those pre-split shares.. Simultaneously, that pre-split share now owns closing in on twice as much Apple Inc., thanks to negative stock dilution.'