Recent Comments

  • Steven Philips on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Bernie is, of course, one of those congress critters who are too old to make rational judgments. (Along with half of the rest!) (Not that you can really blame his problems on age.)'
  • Gregg Thurman on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - '”These price hikes aren’t unavoidable.” I can see his point. Cut buybacks in half and you may not have had to raise prices at all. Quarterlies may take a hit but market share would certainly rise. That of course might draw the ire of the DoJ Anti-Trust division'
  • Greg Lippert on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Filed under insane by Bernie Sanders about as nutty as anything Trump says (which is saying a lot) From DF – Bernie Sanders, posting on Twitter/X Thursday: “Corporate greed is Tim Cook, the billionaire Apple CEO, claiming that hiking prices on Apple products by over $200 is “unavoidable” after it made $112 billion in profits last year & spent $310 billion on stock buybacks. These price hikes aren’t unavoidable. They’re unacceptable.” WTF?'
  • Michael Goldfeder on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - '@Joseph: Thank you for the kind comments. This Apple 3.0 get together ought to be a memorable event. Very much appreciative for pulling this all together and handling the dining arrangements. You too Romeo for those great looking shirts! @Joseph: BTW, since the $17 hit to Apple last week, is it too late to transfer this event to the local Costco and change everyone’s dining order to the $1.50 hot dog and unlimited beverage?'
  • Joseph Bland on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Upvoted, Fred! BTW, I’m in the camp that wants to see Apple start manufacturing their own RAM, and thus hellp break the backs of the monopolistic cadre making obscene profits off of this. (Does it remind anyone else of the oil cartels and the original Arab oil embargo?) Cut out the middleman and pocket the difference, Apple; it’s a win-win. And forget about a shot across their bows. They don’t deserve the curtesy.'
  • Joseph Bland on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'BTW, I absolutely LOVE thar Apple gets to buy back this ridiculously inexpensive AAPL hand over fist! And we, as Apple-only investors that can only sell (being on fixed income) don’t have to lift a finger to see a very good ROI…. Very much /s…'
  • Joseph Bland on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'And yes, to beat a dead horse, that’s because of Apple’s genius buyback jiu jitsu move. Yet again IMO.'
  • Joseph Bland on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'IMHO, since the major large institutional selloff of AAPL during the Great Recession that never regained that lost ground (and the more recent Berkshire Hathaway selloff), the percentage of individual long term investors versus traders has dramatically reversed, creating a much more stable AAPL investment platform with continually-dampening hysteresis. That’s why we no longer see the really deep selloffs in AAPL (the Apple slingshot) that we saw for years following the Great Recession. Again, IMO.'
  • Joseph Bland on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Hah! Once again, Michael, we see why you are the Apple 3.0 champion of acerbic wit! Upvoted! Looking forward to meeting you in person at the Version 2.0 Apple 3.0 Bay Area Meetup in a couple of weeks! (BTW, there’s still room for a few more if you’re interested. 26 of us are scheduled to meet for a 5:30 PM dinner on July 11th at Cafe Pro Bono in Palo Alto, CA. Ask PED for my email.) Joe Bland, aka Sacto Joe'
  • Joseph Bland on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'The chart PED shows is very short term but is still useful as it indicates that stocks in general are retrenching. Yes, short term knee-jerk investors bailed, but these are the weak hands who are more nervous about preserving capital than growing it (which is a longer term process). I was very impressed by the EOD “battle” which IMO was “won” by the investor cohort and “lost” by the trader cohort, boding well for the continuance of long term AAPL appreciation.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'She says a $500.00 increase in some cases? Wrong. I haven’t seen anyone this gleeful about a hit to Apple for a long time. I’m wondering if she gets this excited about Meta taking a hit after losing their court case in LA with a jury saying they contributed to mental health issues for kids? Or perhaps popping the cork on a bottle of champagne after the Highest Court in the EU upheld that ridiculous $14 Billion tax ruling with the Irish tax code case? She seems even more eager hoping for an increase to the iPhone that she might pass out from sheer joy when that announcement is made by Apple. Is she related to Lina Khan?'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Fred: I know you to be a smart, savvy and thoughtful gentleman. As bullish as I am on Apple at this time, how do you see the company starting a 10-year super cycle with Apple AI?'
  • David Drinkwater on Daniel Ives: Apple held off as long as they could (video) - 'Working within the semiconductor integrated supply chain function, I think I have some analogies to share. We make silicon die and “sell them”, 99% within our own company, the remaining 1% direct to external customers. As such, we are “suppliers”. But we are also customers. We buy raw silicon. We buy chemicals that we use to clean and etch our wafers. We buy chemicals and services to “implant” into our wafers.’ Nowadays, lots of our vendors squeeze us. “We’re discontinuing this chemical.” (Isopropyl alcohol FFS! OK, find another vendor: not a huge deal, because the IPA does not go *into* the silicon. BBr3: oops, that’s a big deal, because that is one of the chemicals/dopants we use to make the transistors and electrical interconnects in our devices.) Some of these new source qualifications (verifications of goodness) require 1000 hours of stress cycling. That takes 6 weeks no matter what, but it really takes closer to ten because of back and forth transactions. And we had to get the Die built into packages, typically a 6 weeks cycle. And make the wafers with the intentional change injected at the right point in the process, probably 12 weeks minimum. So very quickly, that takes half a year, and some customers, even if we shipped their part internal to my company before they ever got shipped to the end customer, then want to do their *own* verifications, which can add another 6 months. And god forbid you have two different vendor changes to qualify. Customers sometimes force you to wait until you can coordinate both – strictly for their convenience. Based solely on my professional experience at the bottom end of the supply chain, I give Apple a lot of credit for not putting out price increases log ago.'
  • David Drinkwater on Counterpoint: Customers pay more for book-type foldables - 'Clamshell: think “long flips longer”, like a Motorola flip phone form the 90s. Looks kinda like a stock ticker when open. Book: think “wide flips wider”. Short and wide. It’s a more square-like rectangle, like a … book.'
  • David Drinkwater on Counterpoint: Customers pay more for book-type foldables - 'You solve the “running shorts” problem by wearing a Watch. I just recently (and far belatedly) updated my relationship with AT&T Wireless to: 1) a new, lower cost plan (my legacy plan was way overpriced) and to eliminate all wireless users except for my iPhone and my Apple Watch. Saving about $100/month. Simultaneously, I also updated my relationships with AT&T U-verse to a new Internet Plan and plan change from UVerse TV to DirectTV. That should save me between $100 and $200 a month. Fool me: I didn’t update my legacy services regularly. But having my Watch on Wireless Broadband is basically non-negotiable, and my iPhone, of course, also. I can Hotspot to other devices from my phone if I really need to. Or use venue WiFi, which is pretty much everywhere nowadays. Anyway, long story short, a Watch will not drag on your running shorts.'
  • Gregg Thurman on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'I was completely wrong about a Vision Pro announcement, but I continue to believe it is going to be a huge success, just as soon as they fix its screen constraint. Where before I was certain Apple had done it, I have no thoughts about it now.'
  • Fred Stein on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Agree Gregg, ignore the noise. AI created the memory supply / demand imbalance impacting device makers and hyperscalars. So who hurts the least? Apple can pass the cost to its price-insensitive demographic, with no need to borrow nor impact cash flow or rack up CAPEX (subject future write down.) Even if unit sales drop for a bit, as Katy Huberty said; “Demand is not perishable”.'
  • Fred Stein on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'What’s all the fuss about? Apple closed at $275, which it crossed for the first time only 2 month ago. If Apple releases a fold, it will rock, while Apple AI just starts a 10 year super cycle.'
  • Steven Philips on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Not a good sign but good for you.'
  • Steven Philips on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'Wow! Gosh, I feel so educated now.'
  • Gregg Thurman on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/29-7/3/26) - 'The iMac I ordered is being delivered three weeks earlier than I was told when I ordered it. “ Shipped Delivers Jul 01, 2026 by Standard Delivery”'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple vs. Russia - 'Welcome home David'
  • David Gleason on Apple vs. Russia - 'I managed the creation of the very first Russian version of the Mac OS — 6.0.5, never released. I lived in Moscow and worked with a team of free-lance engineers in a brick office building that had been converted from a church. I brought two of them to Cupertino to finalize the build in 1991.Most Soviet software engineers had heard of Apple, some had even seen an Apple II, but no one had every owned a Macintosh computer, except for one automobile plant in Moscow (the Macs came from Germany). I also had to find Russian language fonts, which came from Stepan Patchikov, the late creator of Evernote and key software for the original Newton. Russia then was truly greenfield, so this was a chance to open the world’s largest country to the world of Apple. I was forced to leave Moscow before any Apple product was available; I believe a MacBook was used to introduce a Russian language version to the Russian market a year or two later. Doing business in Russia is never easy, and often a story of overcoming countless roadblocks and handicaps. Today it’s even worse, with a hot war that is worse than during the Cold war.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Saturday Apple video: What motivated Steve Jobs - 'Jobs distrust of much of modern science killed him. In that, he isn’t all that different from today’s religious conservatives. Be careful in what you want in today’s leaders.'
  • Steven Philips on Saturday Apple video: What motivated Steve Jobs - 'Yes, but remember that even through medical protocols pancreatic cancer had very low survival rates at that time. It’s better now but still one of the lowest. On a different note, that picture shows so much joy. Contrast it to Zuck and Chan or Bezo and what’s her name. Jobs rules!'
  • Richard Gayle on Saturday Apple video: What motivated Steve Jobs - 'I loved this, but it angers me that Jobs ignored his doctor’s advice for pancreatic cancer and followed a pseudoscientific diet until it was too late. Imagine the impact his inspirational leadership could have today. Compare his commencement speech to the ones many tech bros gave this year. We desperately need leaders like him. We’ll find them, but he would have helped that happen sooner. No one like him in my lifetime. Sorry, Need to blow my nose. Inspirational leadership got stuck in my eye. 🙂'
  • Gregg Thurman on Premarket: Apple is green - '”Yesterday’s overreaction IMO was just an excuse to help shorts cover:” It sure saved a lot of asses.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Apple ended Friday trading up $8.63 or 3.14% at $283.78. The shares opened on Monday morning at $297.31 and closed on Friday the week prior at $298.01. From Friday to Friday yesterday’s closing price is a loss $14.23 per share on the week.'
  • Ted Kluger on Saturday Apple video: What motivated Steve Jobs - 'Inspiring! It’s very cool that he shared so much of his personal journey with the world – to our benefit!'