Recent Comments

  • Steven Philips on Barron's technician sees Apple shares growing another 10% this summer - 'And then another 10% this Fall.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Barron's technician sees Apple shares growing another 10% this summer - 'It shouldn’t, but it does, amaze me how much analysis is generated using spreadsheet parameters that do not, cannot, analyze what a human can infer from a deep understanding of how all the parts of a company work together. This from Baron’s is a classic example of spreadsheet limitations.'
  • David Emery on In shrinking global PC market, Mac sales grew nearly 16% in the June quarter - 'Methings Consumers realize something Pundits have missed. EVERYONE is raising prices, but Apple’s raising prices a lot less. And as the lower end gets more expensive, at least some consumers are thinking about ‘better value’ rather than just ‘lowest price.’ But from the body openings of ANALysts, people buy computers based solely on price and benchmark specifications.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Barron's technician sees Apple shares growing another 10% this summer - 'With solid Neo revenues and good commentary on the post earnings call, that target is within reach.'
  • Gregg Thurman on In shrinking global PC market, Mac sales grew nearly 16% in the June quarter - 'IFF the next 12 months performs similarly to the last 12 months it’s possible that Apple surpasses DELL in shipments. Looking forward to continued development of the M Series processor, the Baltra ASIC and increased adoption of smaller AI models, I’d say it isn’t possible, but highly probable that Apple does surpass DELL the following year. So much for “selling it and giving the money back to investors”. I’m still not sure how AI can benefit consumers and the enterprise, but if Apple’s Private Cloud Compute strategy continues to evolve as it has, then I’d say HP has to be worried about its future beyond 2029/30. Funny how 2030 keeps coming up as a major inflection point. I’ve been forecasting that for a while, although the catalysts I used to forecast it have been very wrong. The breadth of Apple’s internal vision, and its ability to execute on it, is, quite frankly, astonishing.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Huawei is the big winner of China's 618 shopping festival - ' Heading for Joe Bland’s members-only dinner in Palo Alto Safe travels! See you there! 🙂'
  • Bart Yee on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Well, well, well that ends well. AAPL closed up $2.83 near its high of the day to $316.22, a new All Time Closing High (ATCH) by a dollar. Volume was moderate at 44M. AAPL has now fully recovered from two dips as deep as $275, -12.6% after WWDC, select product price increases, and continuing geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East w/US and Iran. AAPL’s intraday high of $316.53 fell short of the $317.40 set on June 8, 2026, and $316.94 on June 3, 2026, day after WWDC keynote. But I suspect AAPL will get there and then some. Of note there is still considerable short interest out there, plus Q3 FY2026 earnings coming up in precisely 3 weeks, and new products to be introduced in 2 months, 1 week, at least the first wave. Cheers to the longs!'
  • David Emery on Huawei is the big winner of China's 618 shopping festival - 'a 1% gain in share is exceptionally large. And Apple’s gain was almost twice that 🙂 🙂'
  • Gregg Thurman on Premarket: Apple is red - '”Many businesses are looking at this as a way to use AI while keeping all of their proprietary data and other information on-site.” “MANY”? I would think every firm developing something that competes with others would be very interested in localized on site/on device AI capabilities. Suddenly privacy is a concern. Enter Apple’s Private Cloud Compute, Apple silicon (A, M and Baltra series), and all OSX derivative operating systems.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Huawei is the big winner of China's 618 shopping festival - '”Omdia just reported Apple grew share in WW PCs from 9.2% to 11.1% Q2 ’25 to Q2 ’26”. Given the size of the market for PCs, a 1% gain in share is exceptionally large.'
  • Daniel Epstein on Premarket: Apple is red - 'So for those who are checking Apple Stock price this afternoon. Quote from CNBC site. 07/09/2026. 2:12PM Apple Stock 314.52 quote price arrow up+1.13 (+0.36%)'
  • John Konopka on Premarket: Apple is red - 'There is a story posted in the Apple stock app about a company that has a way to run an LLM on an iPhone. https (colon) //stocks.apple (dot) com/AeKp0tXt7S9-YFUPNE9-n1g This is interesting for a couple of reasons. One is that they are focused on doing this with an iPhone and not needing a data center. It speaks to the capability of Apple hardware. Where Apple has been beefing up the M series hardware to better run AI models, this technology provides different mathematics that can run a powerful LLM with much less memory. According to the article this is a commercialization of something developed at CalTech. It’s a little curious that they are focused on the iPhone. Certainly a larger addressable market, but I would guess this would run even better on a Mac Studio with more RAM. Many businesses are looking at this as a way to use AI while keeping all of their proprietary data and other information on-site.'
  • Fred Stein on Huawei is the big winner of China's 618 shopping festival - 'Omdia just reported Apple grew share in WW PCs from 9.2% to 11.1% Q2 ’25 to Q2 ’26.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Approaching 1pm in New York and the four major indexes are now in the green with the Russell 2000 small cap index up 1.23% followed by the NASDAQ Composite which is up 0.93%. Apple is now up $1.27 or 0.41% at $314.66. The shares have been as high as $315.50 today in early afternoon trading. Cisco Systems is up $3.87 today at $117.69. The all-time high for the shares of $130.37 was set on June 4th. Goldman Sachs is countering a recent downturn in the share price with a $31.78 gain so far today as the shares trade at $1061.42. Morgan Stanley is ahead $5.41 at $223.48. PNC Financial is also up today. The shares are trading up $3.95 at $259.48. It’s a good day for the financial sector.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - '“Max pain moves down $2.50 to $302.50…” Ah, options: Always an AAPL downer. But less so year by year. And look at that present valuation: 37.6! As they say in the wine country, not too chablis! Quarter by quarter, Apple will build its EPS, partly by actually growing its earnings, and partly by using excess cash to decrease its float. For those, like yours truly, who are heavily invested in AAPL, and planning on being heavily invested in AAPL for the foreseeable future, both approaches to growing EPS are positive. Yes, there are ways to get richer quicker, but for folks on fixed income, investing in AAPL is both profitable and relatively safe. Which, IMO, is why AAPL is getting these high valuations in the first place. It’s a nail-biting world out there….'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Markets are open, indexes are mixed and Apple is off $2.97 or 0.95% at $310.42. Apple supplier Broadcom is up again this morning $11.92 or 3.07% at $400.61 while Apple supplier Corning begins a partial recovery from a recent sell-off. The shares reached a new all-time high of $271.78 on June 30th and are trading up this morning $14.08 at $198.11. It’s already a remarkable few minutes of trading less than a half-hour from today’s opening bell.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Apple ended the day up $2.73 at $313.39 as investors cheered the announcement of the multi-year, $30+ billion component contract with Broadcom which provides Apple with a dependable partner for the manufacture of important product components over the next five years. Broadcom jumped $17.91 or 4.83% to close at $388.69. Apple’s all-time high of $317.40 set on June 8th is now in striking distance.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Evercore views Apple's Broadcom deal as 'strategically positive' - 'Yes. This is deal is a big positive for Apple and a very big positive for Broadcom. Through this deal Apple is making good on its promises to invest heavily in US-based enterprises. Additionally, the company has a safe and secure partner for the manufacture of key product components. For Broadcom it provides a multi-year agreement valued in the tens of billions. Apple is approaching new all-time highs on the news while Broadcom added nearly 5% on the day to close at $388.69 and is up nearly $5 in overnight activity.'
  • Aaron Belich on Wedbush's Daniel Ives has become a merchant bank - 'Weird comparison given baseball is falling further and further out of favor in sports these days.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Apple scores a 'staggering' 87 Emmy nominations - 'Slow Horses is awesome. Apple’s productions are first rate across the board.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on EU Court: Yes, Virginia. Apple is a gatekeeper - 'This is what happens when you don’t have AC in the EU’s General Court.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Josh Brown drinks the Apple Kool-Aid (video) - 'Still lots of shorts that need to cover: Short interest was (138.782) Million as of May 15, 2026. 2.744 Short interest was (155.886) Million as of May 29, 2026. 3.384 Short interest was (144.248) Million as of June 15, 2026. 2.755'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: What Apple needs from Broadcom and vice versa - '” knowledge I had seen” Should read, “knowledge I hadn’t seen”'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: What Apple needs from Broadcom and vice versa - 'Upvoted Bart. I’m starting to envision proprietary AI data bases that are centric to companies, using a Baltra-like server that protects privacy and IP that can scale.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: What Apple needs from Broadcom and vice versa - '” My take: Gurman is acting like such a know-it-all these days.” In this case Gurman displayed a depth of knowledge I had seen from him before. It would be nice if he could monetize his knowledge of technology and its future, and who is working on what, vs spreading manure for clicks. I would pay handsomely for more of this level of reporting.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: What Apple needs from Broadcom and vice versa - '” More on this to come!” I hope so. I wrote a response to Gurman’s missives this morning, and neglected to hit send before I answered an incoming call. Goodbye response. Gurman surprised me with his broad knowledge of technology not derived from “knowledgeable” sources. He should spend more time posting on observations gleaned from reading between the lines. He appears good at that. His knowledge regarding Broadcom’s history working with Apple was especially good. Obviously several years ago Apple felt Broadcom’s benefit to Apple was in something other than RF filters. Apple took filters away from Broadcom, but threw them a much bigger ASIC bone that was much more valuable to Apple’s roadmap. That’s a great way to manage relationships. My take away is that Apple has been quietly developing a comprehensive on device strategy that goes far beyond the iPhone for a very long time (10 years). I’m talking about localized agentic AI servers (Baltra?) with data security and user privacy built in. That brings up a question. Who owns the response generated by a paid query to an external data center? Could those responses become a “learned” part of an on-site AI server’s data base, and used in future localized queries without compensating the original LLM again for the same response? Wouldn’t an onsite AI be continually learning from onsite usage? Once a user learns something can they be made to unlearn it?'
  • Gregg Thurman on EU Court: Yes, Virginia. Apple is a gatekeeper - '” That goes beyond the EU’s boundaries.” Yes, but not across financial interest boundaries. Assessing fines based on global revenue would be a tax against the US. If that were to come to a head I’m sure the telephone lines between the EU and the US would light up to a fiery red.'
  • Darren DMW on Apple scores a 'staggering' 87 Emmy nominations - 'Nice to see Michael J Fox get a guest actor nomination for Shrinking. Such a shame that Parkinson’s has robbed him (and us) of so much. The Apple TV biography doco on his journey is also well worth watching.'
  • Gregg Thurman on EU Court: Yes, Virginia. Apple is a gatekeeper - 'Stop selling new iPhones in the EU and within 6 months the consumer backlash would destroy a lot of political careers, and the DMA. Apple consumer demand is not perishable. When sales are resumed massive pent up EU demand will convert to massive revenue gains. I believe that aspirational Apple demand is greater than voter allegiance to any candidate. Ask any politician that voted to reduce Social Security benefits and why politicians refer to SSI as the third rail.'
  • Darren DMW on Apple scores a 'staggering' 87 Emmy nominations - 'Just finished Widow’s Bay last night. Excellent production and gripping storyline. If you like Stephen King books/movies then this adds long form storytelling with some great humour thrown in. I think fans of the genre will be well rewarded.'