Recent Comments

  • Bart Yee on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Neal, I agree with you, there is a lot of trial ballooning here from Altman’s side, floating the idea that he and OpenAI are disappointed with what Apple said they would do, contracted to do, and what did / didn’t happen. But IMO, Altman should understand that at the time this contract was signed, there was little to base consumer interest, monetization, and usage from any individual mobile users, IOS or Android, Windows, Chrime or Mac, and IMO, certainly no guarantees given as to revenue, subscriptions or usage patterns. Altman of all people should also realize that in 2024 thru today, AI and chatbots have been rapidly evolving, with many twists, turns, U-turns, abandonment, and competitive improvements so as to render any certainty rather speculative and in some cases, moot. I rather doubt there was any exclusivity clause, nor specific performance or revenue guarantees. And considering OpenAI’s financial condition and funding burn, IMO, Apple’s got more lawyers than they have solvency.'
  • Bart Yee on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Maybe what Trump can do is get Foxconn and Xi to agree on supporting and investing in building 3 major assembly plants in the US, 1 in the Midwest, 1 in the rust belt upper Midwest / North east and one in the South, with ancillary suppliers in West Virginia near coal mines, another in the Appalachians, any state, and a couple other states. Place them near population centers or with 1-2 hours driving distance or build on-site dormatories or company towns to house at least 100,000 workers per factory. All of the factories will assemble smartphones in the US but designed by Chinese manufacturers and partially sold in the US and for export. Minimum price for any US bound, US made smartphone must be above $300, no loss leaders here so as to prevent undercutting the current duopoly of Apple and Samsung. BOM for smartphone including labor adjusted for that reality. Labor laws and minimum wage laws may be waived so that worker wages can be harmonized with the cost of the products produced. Primary requirement for employment is that you are a US citizen and Caucasian, preferably of European descent. In fact, there may even be a compulsory draft of US citizens to fill the Patriot Assembly factories workforce, no matter what job you currently have. In exchange, you get wages comparable to Chinese workers plus their 8-10-12 hours workdays, not including driving distance, or communal living, and 2 small meals a day to combat obesity. No alcohol or smoking, and obviously no drug use tolerated. Since the unemployment rate has inched up past 4.3%, there should be no shortage of eligible unemployed and lottery chosen employed to be drafted into this vital workforce who should be proud to be engaged in bringing back manufacturing and assembly work to the US regardless of how little or how much you get paid. Oh, did I mention that since this a bipartisan effort, all congress critters, cabinet members, and presidential administration personnel including the President and his family members and their spouses and children (down to age 14) and their staffs will donate 4 days a month or one full week a month staffing the assembly lines as a show of solidarity and support to US workers. They will also be graded on their output and quality along with regular workers. If they are found deficient, they will undergo additional training and instruction (possibly in China) until their output levels improve, and be prevented from returning to their previous jobs in government due to inefficiency. (Monitored by DOGE). Failure to comply with these employment mandates (no free handouts) will mean jail time or reassignment to work in coal mines to support coal fired energy plants or work in Permian Basin oil fields to provide hydrocarbon based energy dedicated to the AI infrastructure. Considering how many eligible American Citizen workers are available, there should be absolutely no problem conscripting, er, recruiting workers for this important and patriotic duty, regardless of age, sex, or ability. Yes, disabled workers will be placed in supervisory roles. Join us in producing Proudly Made in America for export to other countries to reduce our trade deficits. At least 25-50% of output will be destined for China and Middle East, or distributed freely to impoverished nations. Once underway, additional production assembly can done for auto parts, furniture, hardware, prefab homes, etc. and agricultural farming including planting, growing and harvests, plus transport of said finished products.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'The DJIA back above 50K! The S&P 500 sets new records and closes above 7,500 for the first time! Apple takes a breather and closes down $0.66 at $298.21 after setting new records yesterday. In general, it was a good day for the markets and a good day for Americans that choose to invest in our nation’s financial systems!'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - '33 M AAPL shares traded today by 3:15 Pm PDT vs an average of 43.8 M. So yes, low volume day, and Max Pain consequently exerting it’s magnetic personality early.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Ben: At the end of Apple’s June quarter (FQ3) in 1997, according to the SEC 10-Q filing at the time, Apple had just over $1.2 billion in cash and equivalents on its balance sheet and net shareholders’ equity of about $1.2 billion. Apple wasn’t insolvent or near insolvency at the time. Microsoft didn’t save Apple from bankruptcy. That isn’t to say the company’s long-term survivability wasn’t being called into question. It’s my understanding the cash investment by Microsoft in Apple preferred stock was intended to be a public statement of Microsoft’s support for Apple along with the commitment to continue developing Office for Mac. The folks in Redmond really wanted an end to the litigation with Apple and the San Francisco Canyon Company ordeal was just another incident to address as quickly and as effectively as possible.'
  • ben luna on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Thank you for the history lesson RPL. I hadn’t heard of San Francisco Canyon Company before, which is especially funny since I worked on QuickTime for a few years. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Francisco_Canyon_Company Microsoft was so greasy back then.'
  • David Emery on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Probably the same argument the EU is using against Google for opening Android to other AI vendors. I commented on that in another thread. But of course, until we see the actual filing, who knows what “creative advocacy” OpenAI’s lawyers will extract from their nether regions.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'If you are Tim Cook and go, you get access and influence. If you don’t go, you incur the wrath of the current president, lose access and get on the naughty list which can mean further investigations by the Justice Department as well as other agencies. Seems like the right decision is to go in terms of protecting the company and its interests. Just because you go, doesn’t mean that Tim Cook has to agree with Trump. Sometimes, having access and maybe some influence may help Trump make a better decision. One can always hope.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Bart, Thanks for the link. There really isn’t enough information in the article to tell what this is really about so I wonder if this isn’t Altman’s way of trying to stay relevant and in the news. Although the title seems to say that they are possibly suing because not enough people signed up through Apple, I don’t really get a sense of what Apple was contractually obligated to provide and if they did or didn’t do anything to come up short of that.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Evercore raises Apple target $35 to $365 - 'This is my second post in response to Amit’s PT upgrade. In my first post I incorrectly based my comments on an incorrect reading of Amit’s upgrade. I used $335 vs the correct reading of $365. I think Amit’s new price is good, although i think it remains conservative. AAPL’s 16 year average growth rate has been ~25%. Amit’s target represents a gain of ~21%. AAPL has grown since April 1, 2025 (just before Trump’s attacks on US institutions, trading partners and allies began) by ~26%. This is consistent with AAPL’s historical growth rate of the past 16 years (~25%) despite all the negativity of WS and the media over Apple’s alleged lack of an “AI” strategy. Going into 2027 Apple has already introduced compelling new products (MacBook Neo, iPhone 17e) that are reshaping the competition environment with Windows and Android powered hardware in Apple’s favor. Apple’s “missing AI” strategy has emerged, with WS and the media stumbling all over themselves reversing their previous negativity, going so far as to declare Apple the winner of the “AI”. Also during the past year Apple has acquired all US streaming rights to FIA (Formula One racing), and released a highly successful F-1 movie, and won an Academy award. AppleTV is no longer a nuclear streaming movies provider, it is challenging the leaders for dominance. In the last 2 fiscal quarters Apple has reported sequential 22% YoY revenue growth results, and guided more of the same for the June quarter. The rate may slow in the December quarter, but, IMO, not by much. Despite me not seeing the utility in “AI”, the rest of the world does. Importantly, Apple is positioned in both hardware (silicon) and software (OSX and its offspring) to dominate. Then there is the continued move towards “AI” integration in Apple products with iPhone 18 and Macs (especially Mac Mini and Mac Studio). Last but not least I believe a major (and very promising) announcement regarding SpatialOS and Apple Vision Pro will occur at WWDC. Remember, the historic growth rate of AAPL is ~25%. There were lower growth periods, and higher growth periods. I believe the next year is going to be a higher growth period. A 30% growth period from today would take AAPL up to Ive’s $400 target. More importantly, I think Apple has begun a multi-year run. In two tears I see AAPL @ $500.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Volume looks to be lower today, but there’s still 10 minutes of trading left. Apple passed $300/share in the AM, but lower volume gives an “edge” to Max Pain pushing the close, and that M. P. of $280 ped shows indicates a meaningful negative magnet at play. AAPL could surprise me, but I’m expecting a fight to close over $300 for the week. Meanwhile, the Apple valuation is creeping closer to last year’s 40+ P/E ratio, which I happen to think Apple richly deserves!'
  • Bart Yee on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Bloomberg & Gurman report via Yahoo Finance https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/stocks/articles/apple-openai-alliance-frays-setting-165740314.html'
  • Bart Yee on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Open AI considers legal action vs Apple on unfulfilled expectations of revenue and engagement from its partnership. More from the Bloomberg article. “Apple’s (AAPL.O) ​two-year-old partnership with OpenAI ‌has become strained, with the AI startup failing to ​see the expected benefits ​from the deal and now ⁠preparing possible legal action, ​Bloomberg News reported on ​Thursday. OpenAI lawyers are actively working with an outside legal firm on ​a range of options, ​including potentially sending the iPhone maker ‌a ⁠notice alleging breach of contract without necessarily filing a full lawsuit at the ​outset, ​the ⁠report said, citing people familiar with the ​matter. Apple and OpenAI did ​not ⁠immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment. Reuters ⁠could ​not independently verify ​the report.” Excerpt From “OpenAI explores legal options against Apple, Bloomberg News reports” Reuters https://apple.news/AqO7EtPcFRy62YRj07WxnCg This material may be protected by copyright.'
  • David Emery on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'I personally differentiate “Cook with Trump in China” from “Cook with Trump at the White House”. The former is legitimate and I’d argue in the national interest. The latter is much more likely sucking up. That’s particularly true when Cook is at an event that is not directly coupled to Apple’s lines of business.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Right on! Thx!'
  • Joseph Bland on Evercore raises Apple target $35 to $365 - 'Morning, Bill. That would explain why Apple is suddenly hoarding cash and dropping its net cash zero approach: They need to fund a major increase in Mac production capacity, and they need to do it STAT….'
  • John Konopka on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Now that Ternus is taking over day to day operations this is exactly where Tim needs to be, if only to do damage control. When I worked in Asia I recall that lieutenants on both sides were always on edge during meetings like these. No telling what trouble the high level guys could cause.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Speaking of our favorite fruit company flowing out sweet liquid gold, Apple quarterly dividends are finding their way into shareholder account coffers today!'
  • Joseph Bland on Evercore raises Apple target $35 to $365 - 'Morning, Gregg. “….I did not cherry pick 2025’s low of the year as a starting point.” Thumbs up! I look at the 10 year chart and the lifetime chart to read my long term tea leaves, and the 5 year chart to read the short term.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Another sunny bull market day! Apple is now up $0.13 at $299 even after setting new all-time highs yesterday. All four major indexes are in the green with DJIA and the NASDAQ Composite index up a full percentage point or more and with the S&P 500 not far behind! Cisco is ahead $14.59 or 14.32% at $116.46 after reporting strong results and forward guidance. Broadcom is up $19.08 or 4.58% at $435.87. Over 70% of S&P 500 components are higher on the day. Take-Two Interactive is on the leaderboard today. The shares are up $14.06 or 6.19% at $241.05. Earlier this month the company reported out very attractive forward guidance. Let’s see what afternoon trading delivers for us eager investors!'
  • Anice Hassim on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'I am uncomfortable with Tim’s appearance at Trump events. It’s queasy. Especially when he appears to obligingly do the “Trump Thumbs” in photo-shoots etc, as he did with the other CEO’s yesterday. It makes it look complicit and not distanced. So he appears hypocritical. What I do know, is that we don’t know jack. And what is for sure, is that often, he is on that plane or in that room because “the other side” wants him there. So Tim Apple may have been there because the Chinese trust him. Not because Trump trusts him. Jensen joined at the last minute after attempting to bail, but was on AF1 and in the photo-op like everyone else. He was there because everyone is concerned that Trump will sell the farm to Xi (and rat out South Korea) for some exchange he benefits from but which is disaster to the businesses and the regions stability, So maybe people from the Global side wanted these guys in the room to modulate issues. And he will extract concessions and favorable trading terms and conditions from both sides… he’s there to do business, not politics after all. But it don’t look nice. Not one bit. And a lot of people are rightly furious and questioning it. I have no issue with that.'
  • Joseph Bland on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'I will never, ever forget that Tim Cook toadied up to Candidate Trump in public just a couple of weeks before on of the closest and most monumental Presidential elections in US history. That was the first step down this slippery slope.'
  • Miguel Ancira on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'I completely agree. Well put. Although I hate the fact that he is there with the president, he has no choice but to go, for the good of his company and shareholders. American politicians should be ashamed of themselves for squandering the lead they had and for not thinking of the good of the country.'
  • Joseph Bland on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Pretty disappointing, Mr. Reich, especially the overt and completely unfair equivalency between Elon Musk and Tim Cook. That said, folks here know my position: Apple should never have gone down this path (I say Apple because we don’t know it wasn’t the Apple Board that made the choice). And since even the massively pro-Trump Supreme Court scuttled the Trump Tariff scare tactic, we know that it was always an empty threat. Apple could have chosen to be above the fray and not get tarnished like this, with the resulting negative impact on the Apple brand by a whole class of voters. And don’t try to tell me there isn’t a price for taking political stands: Tesla’s sales should be object lesson enough that there very much is. As investors that have backed Apple 100% for many years, I am thoroughly disappointed in Apple losing their footing on this issue.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'I don’t know anything about this “squirting” stuff. I’ve been squeezing this sweet fruit of a company for luscious liquid gold gains since before Steve Jobs and Tim Cook took the proverbial reins. Anyone remember Michael Spindler, Gil Amelio and before them the infamous John Sculley? I sure do. Times are definitely much better today that yesterday! It’s been a long, strange and winding road to success indeed! Cheers to the longs and gratitude for our favorite fruit company!'
  • Gregg Thurman on Evercore raises Apple target $35 to $365 - 'I’m sure Eric does, but there are voices on Apple 3.0 just as good, maybe better, than most of those originating on WS.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'I didn’t see Reich doing anything to bring jobs back to the US when he served on the cabinet. Hypocrite.'
  • David Emery on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'A lot of what passes for “dialog” these days is the demand for political orthodoxy. It’s true on both wings. Reich should know better. In particular Reich should know that the Chinese workforce is nothing like the US workforce, and it’s a stupidly false equivalence to argue that the US could have provided 30m workers to assemble iPhones. Tim Cook has strong business and probably personal connections in China. It’s entirely appropriate he be in this entourage, he can provide experience on negotiating with China that is generally lacking (particularly in this administration, but judging by Reich’s ignorant comments, missing from prior administrations, too. Reich ain’t dumb, but too often he lets his politics override his sense.).'
  • Darren DMW on Apple at $300: Why now? - 'Yes – I did a small sale at $298.80 on Wed while I was sleeping. Was pleasantly surprised when I awoke and saw the price had spiked os quickly'
  • Bill Donahue on Blowback from Tim Cook's presence in Trump's China entourage - 'Yawn. It looks and reads like a cut-and-paste from any of the other “Apple and Tim Cook are the worst!!” opinion pieces over the last few years, rehashing the same tired points and ignoring of course the massive false equivalence in the behaviour of Tim Cook vs Elon Musk and the rest of the gang that hovers around Trump. That an ex Cabinet member, who obviously has a grasp of who Trump is and how he operates, refuses to acknowledge that it’s a command attendance for someone like Cook to attend events says it all. It’s completely laughable that someone who is as objectively intelligent as Robert Reich insists on pretending that Tim Cook and Apple are responsible for building China’s tech capacity, without at the very least pointing to successive generations of American political leaders from the local to the federal level completely squandering their lead and opportunity by doing all they could to dumb down public education and crush STEM training and opportunities. On the other hand, China’s leadership made it all a very long-term priority, decades ago, and continues to push as hard and fast on supporting and expanding it. Simply put, US leadership completely screwed up. And continues to. As have most of the other western nations. And the current guy in the White House is doing more damage more quickly than anyone before him.'