Recent Comments

  • Hap Allen on How Apple's buybacks work - 'I would assume that Apple spaces out its buybacks so as not to move the market, if that’s likely. I’ve often wondered in the case of these purchases who gets the commission? Or is there some other way the shares get traded without serious fees attached?'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's App Tracking Transparency eludes Italy's competition authority - 'everyone tracks. Apple just has good PR.” The GOOD PR comes from the Android cartel. How else do you explain people still buying it?'
  • Gregg Thurman on How Apple's buybacks work - 'At what point do you think an offset was – or will be – reached? It’ll take a knot more data than I have access to to answer that.'
  • John Konopka on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'From last August: “ Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev says investing for a living could replace labor in a post-AI world” We’ll all become day traders. What could go wrong?'
  • John Konopka on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'AAPL closed up slightly on extremely low volume, ~21M. Probably a holiday market with most people on vacation already.'
  • Rodney Avilla on How Apple's buybacks work - 'One point in the video is that the value of an investor’s wealth can increase even when a company ceases to grow. That’s an important insight. On paper that may be true, as revenue/share does increase. The problem is, for a company that is not growing Wall Street does not like buybacks and will usually value the company with a lowered PE ratio, and the stock price will go down, despite a greater revenue/share. Their retort is usually that a company should not be able to buy a higher stock price by buybacks, and that an increase in stock price should only occur with growth. Of course value stocks are different, but moot to Apple’s stock story.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Christmas special: Apple offers free 2-hour delivery in selected U.S. cities - 'My take: Couriers, start your e-bikes! Twice a year we visit our son in Brooklyn. We do lots of walking about. We have never come close to being struck by a car. E-bikes on the other hand…. My son laughs at our naivety as he tries to explain for our safety that a green light to walk is NOT the same as saying it is safe to walk, especially around high delivery times (lunch and dinner).'
  • Michael Goldfeder on How Apple's buybacks work - 'The safety net that allows everyone to have peace of mind and sleep well when the price of Apple goes lower.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Apple's App Tracking Transparency eludes Italy's competition authority - '“everyone tracks. Apple just has good PR.” I hear that comment ALL. THE. TIME.'
  • Joseph Bland on How Apple's buybacks work - 'It would have been funnier if it were slices of apple pie. That’s said, it’s nice to see an acknowledgement of one way Apple’s buybacks advantage long term stockholders. Left out is the cumulative effect: Apple has been simultaneously growing the company. I.e., fewer split-adjusted slices own a growing company. Also left out, those early years of extremely undervalued AAPL create an average buyback that’s now far below today’s price. Also, buybacks.have a huge tax advantage. Bottom line: There are very sound reasons the Apple valuation is (grudgingly) going up. Ten years ago, 30+ trailing P/E would have been unthinkable. Now, a 40+ trailing P/E is looking increasingly possible….'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Christmas special: Apple offers free 2-hour delivery in selected U.S. cities - 'I just love holiday procrastinators. This should really bump up those 1Q revenues and earnings numbers when they’re reported at the end of January.'
  • Steven Philips on The EU praises Apple - 'Beat me to it, Bill. Almost exactly what I was going to post. Thanks! But in some ways the EU post sounds almost Trumpian.'
  • Steven Philips on How Apple's buybacks work - 'Improved in this way? Pizza… “growth, expressed as a percent of the body, will naturally slow in relation to that ever increasing body size. But grow it will nonetheless.” 🙂'
  • Greg Lippert on The EU praises Apple - 'sure sounds self-congratulatory to me. that’s an EU move for sure.'
  • Steven Philips on How Apple's buybacks work - 'Gregg, I never thought of that. At what point do you think an offset was – or will be – reached?'
  • Steven Philips on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'I’m guessing that the bigger problem is that that suspicion will continue AFTER this Administration is gone. It will take something spectacular for any future admin. to gain back public trust.'
  • Steven Philips on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'I’m OK with the Tesla part! 🙂'
  • Bill Fouche on The EU praises Apple - 'I interpret this not as the “EU praising Apple,” but as the EU praising itself and its regulators armed with the DMA. In fact, the clear implication of the “only those in the EU will gain this benefit” statement is that, left to its own devices, Apple does not do the right thing.'
  • Rodney Avilla on The EU praises Apple - 'My take: I’m a little surprised Apple made the changes EU-only. In my experience, that’s not how unions work. When the Writers Guild won benefits for its members, Time Inc. gave them to all its employees. I’m not sure your example is how unions work, but more example of how Time Inc worked. Of course I am assuming that it was Time Inc that made that decision to give benefits to all its members (maybe to keep them from forming more unions), and assuming that the Writers Guild has no control over nonunion wages. So, why did Apple not apply EU demands for everyone? That is an interesting question, and I assume it is because Apple does not feel EU’s demands are the final say in this matter, or at least there are more details to be worked out.'
  • Jonny T on Apple's App Tracking Transparency eludes Italy's competition authority - 'The EU are a bunch of amateurs. Just look at the introduction of biometric passport controls. Four hours of delays and chaos at Geneva airport because the technology is crap.. and this is the third time of trying. They are useless AND they make monstrous demands on tech companies like Apple. They deserve to be fined 10% of EU GDP.'
  • Robert Stack on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Robert: One of the things I appreciate about your commentary is that it is apolitical, and yet at the same time I agree with David (and many others here) and am one of those people who frankly just doesn’t trust any of the data emanating from the current administration. I’m a scientist by training, and I know first-hand that health and climate data in particular are patently false and deliberately altered to fit this Administration’s radical agenda. Ergo how can I trust the economic data? I do agree with you though that whether accurate or not, intentionally altered or just inaccurate due to sourcing, such data does move markets.'
  • Bill Donahue on How Apple's buybacks work - 'Apple and pizza. The two non-human things that have probably improved the quality of my life more than anything else!'
  • Bill Donahue on The EU praises Apple - 'Is this actually accurate? My iPhones have always paired seamlessly and automatically with 3rd-party speakers and headphones, without even any tapping. Just identify and select it once in the bluetooth menu, then never think about it again. While I don’t have any other non-Apple accessories, it seems odd to me that 3rd-party speakers and headphones work that way with iOS but in-ear speakers have been actively excluded by Apple for some reason.'
  • Bill Donahue on Andy Serwer on Apple, Walmart and Berkshire Hathaway getting new management - 'I always find it interesting when people talk about “selling too soon”, especially when it involves someone like Warren Buffet. It ignores that people who invest and trade according to a rational process built on assessing financial and market fundamentals for a company, with clear guidelines, make their investment decisions for real reasons, both when buying and selling. Berkshire-Hathaway bought a boatload of Apple for specific reasons, held onto it for quite a while, and then started selling and booking vast profits, again for very specific reasons and no doubt with a lot of very focused discussions and decisions. Talking after the fact about it being “too soon” is as informative and valuable as saying “If only I’d known the winning numbers for the lottery, I would have bought a ticket!” Especially when it’s coming from someone on the sidelines who has nowhere near the history, record, and reputation for long-term investing success as the gang at BRK. I’ve never met anyone who moans about missing “the big score” whose investment “strategy” isn’t focused on hitting “the big score”. And whose record on investing isn’t a losing one.'
  • Gregg Thurman on The EU praises Apple - 'The EU has just negated the legal power of Brussels. Any legal action that threatens Apple will also threaten EU companies that rely on Apple technologies. The voice in opposition to Brussels just got louder (order of magnitude?). How loud does the political voice of those manufacturers need to get, before the EU Parliament reins in its regulators. I’ll bet this was Apple’s ultimate goal, it just wasn’t going to give in easily, lest the EU feel they should have sought more.'
  • Gregg Thurman on The EU praises Apple - 'All those 3rd party manufacturers still require an Apple Master to sync with, relegating them to second class status. The DMA has done nothing to encourage EU companies to compete with Apple’s core products and Services. In essence they have subjugated their domestic industries to Apple’s dominance and control (you can only do what we do). Privacy has just won the day.'
  • Stephen Gordon on The EU praises Apple - 'Maybe the EU should look into preventing member nations from suing Apple individually, since Brussels is already taking action for the collective.'
  • Gregg Thurman on How Apple's buybacks work - ' That’s true–no company can grow to infinite size; That’s true, but only with qualifiers. First among them is that the company only has one product. If Apple had remained a manufacturer of computers, a one product company, it not only would have stopped growing (as it did), it probably wouldn’t exist today. Second, Apple remained a US focused manufacturer. When everybody in the US that wants one, has one, growth stopped. Since introducing the Macintosh computer, today’s gold standard, Apple has introduced the iPod, iPhone, iPad, AirPod, Apple Watch, Services, pseudo Banking Services, Apple Intelligence and Apple Vision Pro, among other lesser and/or discontinued products. Some of the newly introduced products have spawned 3rd party products that are then sold through Apple’s Stores (physical and online). They are essentially proxies of Apple, developing/manufacturing products Apple doesn’t want to bother with. Some, like the Apple Vision Pro, will spawn a whole new industry, in an untapped market of immersive 3D experiences, both live and replayable. Neither of the two conditions above apply today. Apple has developed multiple revenue streams it sells world wide. While some of its products are sold into markets that are saturated, those products have become aspirational causing customers of competing products to switch to Apple products. The reverse is not true, at least to the extent the reverse does not negate the growth caused by switchers to the Apple brand. As long as Apple continues to create new products that address the desires of a world market it will continue to grow. The rate of that growth, expressed as a percent of the body, will naturally slow in relation to that ever increasing body size. But grow it will nonetheless.'
  • David Emery on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'The problem with this administration is that any good economic news will be subject to suspicions of manipulation…'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Robert: Thank you for asking! My mention of the Commerce Department’s report is solely and wholly in the context of its impact on trading and market sentiment. I remain blissfully apolitical and consider the markets (as well as the study of economics in general) to be a social science. Over the past five decades that I’ve been studying the markets (my interest in the markets began in grade school) I remain fascinated by the influence of human sentiment and emotion on the market’s near-term movements. As to the numbers released today – having worked many, many moons ago in a presidential administration and at one point tasked with preparing a daily economic brief for a cabinet secretary and an assistant secretary, I understand the imperfect sources and often times antiquated means deployed to compile reports and economic statistics. From an economic standpoint I’m more interested in revealed trends over time than the relevance of any one period or data point. Due to delays and the spotty reporting involved in compiling 3rd calendar quarter reports due in part to the government shutdown, I do expect material adjustments and revisions to today’s numbers. What won’t change in the future is how traders and investors respond to today’s report and its impact on prices during this session and for the remainder of the holiday-shortened trading week.'