Recent Comments

  • Rodney Avilla on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'My concern is that China may change that scenario.'
  • Greg Bates on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'I find this exciting. The only reason not to do buybacks is because you have something better to do with the money. That’s the implicit promise Ternus is making: I can deploy the cash to make Apple bigger, better, stronger, to do more for its customers and to earn more for its shareholders. Or to put it another way, let’s make a bigger dent in the universe. Given all that Apple has already accomplished, that stance is bold (or, if it turns out to be wrong, dangerous). Given the track record, I have a lot of faith that this alternative deployment, to grow the business before growing investors’ wallets, will turn out well for everyone. Well, for their competitors maybe not so much.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'The worst performing equity among the Terrific 10 names measured by share price performance year-to-date is Microsoft. The shares are down over the period by 14.36%. This includes Friday’s $6.17 gain to $414.20. CFRA just reiterated a strong buy rating on the stock and raised its price target to $480. Morningstar has a 5-star rating on MSFT with a Fair Value Estimate of $600.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - '” move away from using TSMC.” I think that would be a mistake. TSMC is indisputably best in class. It would take a long time to replace a vendor that doesn’t need replacing.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'At the close of trading on Friday, all of Apple’s year-to-date share price appreciation of 3.05% occurred on Friday. The shares rose $8.79 or 3.24% on Friday to finish at $280.14. The current all-time high of $288.62 was set on December 3rd.'
  • Jim Fonda on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'My suspicion is that Apple plans to build its own semiconductor fabrication plants in the US, and move away from using TSMC.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'The year-to-date (YTD) share price performances of the Terrific Ten equities ranked by percentage gains in share prices over this time and the percentage gains in the major stock indexes over the same period. With a gain of 3.05% year-to-date, including Friday’s share price gains, Apple places 7th out of the 11 stocks listed. Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) up 32.74% Alphabet (GOOG) up 22.12% Broadcom (AVGO) – up 21.72% Walmart (WMT) up 18.12% Amazon (AMZN) up 16.22% Russell 2000 – up 12.49% NASDAQ Composite – up 8.06% NVIDIA (NVDA) up 6.41% S&P 500 – up 5.62%
Apple (AAPL) – up 3.05% DJIA – up 2.99%
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) – down (5.90%) Meta Platforms (META) down (7.78%) Tesla (TSLA) down (13.10%) Microsoft (MSFT) down (14.30%)'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'Entering this week’s trading, below is the market cap scoreboard of the Terrific Ten. These are the ten most valuable enterprises traded on US exchanges. This is a look at the numbers as we approach the end of earnings season following the March quarter. For now Walmart has replaced Berkshire in the #10 spot on the list. Berkshire maintains a trillion dollar market cap. NVIDIA (NVDA) $4.82 trillion Alphabet (GOOG) $4.67 trillion Apple (AAPL) $4.11 trillion Microsoft (MSFT) $3.08 trillion Amazon (AMZN) $2.88 trillion Broadcom (AVGO) $ 1.99 trillion Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) $1.75 trillion Meta Platforms (META) $1.55 trillion Tesla (TSLA) $1.47 trillion Walmart (WMT) $1.05 trillion Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) $1.02 trillion'
  • Bart Yee on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'If and when those AI servers need to be retired in 3-4 years, wonder who might reharvest all of the memory chips for reuse or resale?'
  • Rodney Avilla on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - '“engineers who think shareholders don’t deserve to be rewarded” The 2 sides will never agree completely, as people tend to be self-centered, and usually find it hard to be objective when personal gain is at stake. Management needs to play that objective role.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Asymco's Horace Dediu: Services is the foundation - 'I believe Services is definitely headed in that direction, but to say it’s there now may be a little premature. How soon it will get there? The sooner the better. In the past, whenever iPhone revenue missed predictions, the stock would take a hit, even if Apple’s total revenue was higher. This quarter, as per my memory, iPhone revenue missed, but aapl did not suffer (at least so far). I thought this was a very good sign that the transition of dependency on the iPhone is indeed changing. Although people normally buy an iPhone before they buy services, services is what keeps them, especially as new changes in the iPhone become less over time (product maturity). Even so, a 10% reduction in iPhone sells would probably still have a greater effect on aapl than a 10% reduction in services. But, it won’t be long before that will not be true.'
  • Stephen Gordon on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'So Apple’s capex is a fraction of hyperscaler spend cause they aren’t going gangbusters for memory chips that are now more expensive due to hyperscaler demand. And what happens when that hardware depreciates during the next upgrade cycle? Will the hyperscalers have to float more debt? Or will AI run so efficiently that they will soon be regurgitat in profit? We know, however, that Apple’s profit potential will increase over the coming years, in spite of all this. Just thinking out loud.'
  • David Gleason on Asymco's Horace Dediu: Services is the foundation - 'I’d love to see a forecast of these sales as Apple customers start utilizing applications that include features provided by the Foundation Models Framework for on-device services that don’t require cloud-based access.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'The YouTube link didn’t take me anywhere specific. Was that the parable about running and walking? Great story.'
  • Fred Stein on $185 billion later, Warren Buffett asks Tim Cook to take a bow (video) - 'Good answer Greg. It seems that Laura latched on to the story that Apple lost AI to the CAPEX intensive hyperscalars. We may find that foundation models, like the fiber build-out which was also CAPEX intensive, commoditize. We learned from that boom/bubble/bust/recovery cycle that the winners were those who built on top of the infra, not the suppliers of infra.'
  • Fred Stein on $185 billion later, Warren Buffett asks Tim Cook to take a bow (video) - 'OMG. Thanks so much, and thanks to your Son-in-law. I’ve struggled to understand how Apple could leverage the potential of the SoC architecture and ROI advantage of selling chips in the 100’s of B’s annually. This takes an intellect and knowledge way beyond me. We can also ponder culture changes needed to build and sell high-end products. Might Apple agentic computing open a market comprising individuals and small teams much like the creatives that sustained Apple in its tough times.'
  • David Drinkwater on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'After Thursday’s report, I am more bulllish today than I was on Wednesday. Fundamentally reasons: 1) supply constrained Mac Mini and MacBook Neo (and it seems like Mac Studio as well, but I haven’t gotten to that article yet)imply good continuing sales into the June Quarter. 2) a “smarter” (but how smart?) Siri will be good for overall sales, iPhone in particular, but also potentially this rumored “home” device. 3) only 30% of iPhones being upgraded (I take this to mean that ther are still 70% of them out there waiting for an upgrade (I know mine is ready). 4) With WWDC yet to come in June, I think the September quarter could get a bump (extending beyond June quarter). 5) December quarter yet to be reckoned, but I think it will be really good. I think Martin is coming to very incorrect conclusions.'
  • Greg Lippert on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'She could star in the reboot of Clueless.'
  • Greg Lippert on $185 billion later, Warren Buffett asks Tim Cook to take a bow (video) - 'Laura is just one of the Lamealysts who don’t get the Apple story.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - '” put meaningful privacy controls on cloud-based AI” Now that’s a strategy I could buy into, especially if Apple used its own silicon. “M-7” with TurboQuant enhanced unified memory anybody? Private label Gemini and put an Apple (SIRI) interface on it. No need to gobble up a couple of farms, or need a small nuclear power station, or the Mississippi River to keep it cool. And no push back from the citizenry where it is located. Maybe even design the building to look like a flying saucer in the middle of a tree filled park with community walking trails and a duck pond. : ) Now if that isn’t the pin that pricks the “AI” balloon, I don’t know what is.'
  • Stephen Gordon on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'Ternus will tune his harp to the strengths of the company, leveraging his expertise along the way. Cook did it, Jobs II did it, and the company will evolve accordingly, albeit not radically or recklessly. Reminds me of this parable about the two bulls… youtu.be/mxNXp86gFnw?si=UlOvj5_MUuNsh2PW'
  • Greg Lippert on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'You wrote my post for me. They will have the cash needed to do what’s in the best interests of Apple in the ever-changing tech/AI/political/world landscape.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on $185 billion later, Warren Buffett asks Tim Cook to take a bow (video) - 'Does anyone else find it odd that Laura Martin from Needham with her profound bear outlook on Apple wasn’t able to deter Berkshire from their heavy investment in Apple? Or is it just me? Or possibly, Berkshire listened to Laura and sold out of half of their Apple position at prices in the $160 to $185 range. At any rate, a toast to the “Farmers” on Apple 3.0 who truly understand Apple better than anyone else outside of the “C” Suite and ignore the noise from the uninformed talking heads and other assorted Wall Street Analysts who proffer continuous doom and gloom for Apple quarter by quarter..'
  • Michael Goldfeder on This week's Apple trading strategies (5/4-5/8/26) - 'Needham’s Laura Martin is the new face for those folks who shorted Apple. I expect her to join the ranks of Rod Hall and Tony S. very soon as irrelevant analysts.'
  • David Emery on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'Each of (Alphabet, Apple) have been the target of regulators. Closer integration or joint ventures by these two would ring really loud alarm bells in antitrust departments everywhere. Lobbyists from the other Big Tech companies would be parked in regulator/legislature offices. Apple is absolutely the victim of its success. We can decry both the motivations (“all big tech is evil”) and the actions (“Other companies should have access to Apple’s customers”), but ignoring the risk puts our heads in the sand (which leaves our asses hanging in the air…) I’m particularly disgusted that “Big Regulation” (my neologism for the set of bureaucrats and politicians who have targeted Apple….) sees NO Value for consumers/the general public from Apple’s unique emphasis on privacy.'
  • Joseph Bland on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'Also, Fred, since buybacks, something like $800-900 B in free cash flow has been generated by Apple. For comparison, less than $150 B has been generated by Nvidia over the same time period, although lately they’ve finally matched Apple’s quarterly free cash flow. And as a result, every AAPL share that was bought and held from pre-buybacks 12 years ago now owns approaching twice as much of a much bigger and still growing Apple Inc. I agree that Apple buybacks won’t be going away anytime soon. But I do think the handwriting’s on the wall for that cash going elsewhere as the years roll by.'
  • Fred Stein on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'Maybe it’s too early to make big inferences. Perspective: Apple increased the buyback allocation for the next 12 months. Apple cut buybacks in half, but only for one quarter. Apple’s Market Cap has increased about 8X since buyback started. Today, net cash is about 1% of Market Cap. The increase in net cash is about 1/3 of 1%.'
  • Joseph Bland on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'BTW, Horace, I definitely think building out what I call AiCloud is a way to sidestep the stumbling block of acquisitions. It could start with Apple literally returning to the server hardware arena, but basically dedicating those M-based servers to iCloud/AiCloud. They literally have the cash reserves and burgeoning cash flow to build those without borrowing a cent, unlike even Microsoft. And a safe, secure AiCloud mated with a safe, secure Siri would only stampede customers to Apple products. Would Alphabet play a role in this? Only if they join Apple in making safety and security for the user Job #1, and not pirating user personal information. I will never forget the game the played with Apple over Google Maps….'
  • Joseph Bland on Mark Gurman: What no more net-cash-zero means for John Ternus - 'On the money, Horace. I don’t mean to sound like I’m dissing Tim Cook, because I think he has been masterful (what I consider his political missteps aside). But the times require a fresh evaluation of where best to spend this cash, and between them, Mr. Ternus and Mr. Srouji have got a real alternative vision of the future of Apple that is now being unfettered. I always looked at buybacks as a good use of excess cash. But when there’s a better use, that’s where it needs to go.'