Rick Landsman on YouTube on the Apple Vision Pro is a game-changer (video) - 'Huge!'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Streven: In my reading the market is getting skittish about the increasing capex commitments of the hyperscalers such as Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon and Meta . Also, there are concerns about the near-term revenue and earnings growth prospects for several of the mega cap tech enterprises from their investments in AI due to stretched balance sheets and the acquisition of debt. Singular to Apple are concerns the company continues to fumble on the AI-related services promised at WWDC 2024. There is fierce completion in the market today for investor dollars and enterprises, even the biggest tech companies, need to deliver attractive results for shareholders.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Walmart, which recently crossed over the $1 trillion market cap marker, will report results on Thursday. The shares have been hitting new all-time highs and the post-earnings conference call will feature the company’s new CEO, John Furner. Former CEO Doug McMillon recently retired. We don’t know which way the shares will trade following results, but Mr. Furner should be able to provide us with insights on the health of the US consumer and the latest trends in consumer spending. Not only is Walmart the biggest US retailer, the company is also the nation’s largest grocery retailer.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Hi, Darren, I would like to have seen Microsoft broaden out their approach to computing more towards devices and less towards Cloud, but that’s part of the reason I prefer Apple long term. I also think that, unlike Apple, they locked themselves into dividends for disposing of their net cash flow to reward long term investment, where Apple’s buyback approach is both just as rewarding, keeps the returned investment “locked in” and helping Apple as opposed to potentially houng to help Apple competitors, etceteta. Finally, I personally think that Apple is much more intrinsically a moral company, which I believe is being significantly undervalued at the present time. That said, I think both companies are in a “trip to the future” that is going to be particularly fruitful for long term investors.'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'Hi, David. Upvoted with one small nit-pick: I’d have used another word than “liberals”, because it’s a limiter. I’d have used the word “intelligentsia”.'
on 'Tim Cook is the one who pisses me off the most' - '“Let’s not blame this on the previous administration…” Thanks for acknowledging that something’s going wrong, Steven. And let’s avoid the typical “Communist!” – “Fascist!” banter and be the adults in the room. I’m all for rational problem-solving our way out of this mess. That will, however, require some compromise and some acknowledgement of some hard truths. Are you up for trying to find common ground? Let’s start by saying that the true fiscal conservatives are being very poorly served by what’s been going on. Can we agree to that?'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Darren: At this moment I’m looking at price targets on MSFT of $640, $600 and $550 per share. Even Morningstar has a 5-star rating on the stock. My regret was not getting past my visceral dislike for the company the moment Steve Ballmer retired. The shares are now trading at prices first reached in January 2024. I expect a big comeback.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'David: Looking at the numbers and the performances of mega cap tech stocks since the first of the year, the market is moving on and losing a bit of patience with the massive capex spends. Compounding Apple’s challenges is the apparent difficulty delivering on promises made at WWDC 2024 which was her over 20 months ago. When Apple announces the delivery of its long-promised major update to Siri, the public’s response will be seen immediately in the share price, in my view.'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'Upvoted. Before X and DOGE, I was seriously considering a Tesla. But after all that, not so much. Somehow, I think Elon didn’t get the message that many of his auto customers were liberals. At least I made some table scratch on my investment before getting out. I “lost” some value from then to now, but I’d rather not be invested in a company whose management I don’t like.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Bought my first ever MSFT last week at $405 and $399. Will buy some more if it steps down another 5%.'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'Actually, Musk’s behavior seriously damaged Tesla. But Tesla committed suicide when it dropped its 2 most popular models. https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/28/tesla-ending-model-s-x-production.html (Once again, I’m reminded of That Scene in ‘Blazing Saddles’….)'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'The depth of the price decline without visible reason?'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'The stock swings are all about the “Apple News bias” noise about punishing Apple if they don’t start pushing out more MAGA good news. “This too shall pass.” Mainly because it’s not a real issue.'
on Google, Meta and Reddit identified anti-ICE protestors for the Trump administration - 'Unreal. “We’re going to give DHS all your private information for saying mean things about ICE on social media, despite that we don’t have to at all because that’s constitutionally protected behaviour. But hey, if you want to take on the DHS and this DOJ in court, let us know how that works out and if it goes your way within 10 days we’ll hold back from telling them everything about you. Oh, and good luck not getting snatched off the streets before you can get to a court decision.” Tell me again how Tim Cook is the worst tech CEO?'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'I chalk it up to Elon’s habit of always being at least a couple of years ahead in his promises than the real engineers at Tesla are able to deliver on. If I recall, by now there were also supposed to be more than a million of his job-killing, life- and wealth-enriching robots wandering around the USA. Of course, for FSD, I think we’re now at 11 years and counting… That said, CarPlay isn’t going to rescue Tesla as an EV company. Because Elon has destroyed that part of its business with his uncontrolled and apparently uncontrollable social media, political, and real-world behaviour. Apparently the Board’s long-held belief that Musk could lead Tesla to outcompete the rest of the world’s EV makers while working only ~1-2 days a week for Tesla was ill-conceived.'
on 'Tim Cook is the one who pisses me off the most' - 'Rodney, in the words of William F. Buckley, I would agree with you if you were correct. However… The Media Research Center made its case for discrimination by citing specific stories they claimed should have been in Top Stories. They recognized that simply saying “Fox and NY Post are conservative, and you never cite them, therefore you are biased,” will not be persuasive. They cited specific stories that were headlined in Fox and NY Post, but not included in Top News. To begin the analysis, it is my understanding that Top News is curated by people. The rest of Apple News runs on algorithms, where you get what you want. I’ll limit my response to the most cited example, the reporting on the murder of Renee Good by Jonathan Ross. Specifically, they claimed Apple failed to present Noem’s claim that Ross shot in self-defense, and that he had to be hospitalized for internal bleeding. Of course, Ross did not shoot in self-defense, and he was not hospitalized for internal bleeding. He was not injured at all. So, their number one example was Apple News curators failed to promote their lies. One further point—their position is only remotely tenable if you accept the claim that the Wall Street Journal is not a conservative newspaper.'
on 'Tim Cook is the one who pisses me off the most' - 'Let’s not blame this on the previous administration that allowed a mass flow of illegal immigrants to invade the country all while saying there was no issue at the border. 10+ million fighting age men with no vetting. Just let them all come in. Then when you try to fix the catastrophe created by gross incompetence, make up lies about “due processes” and everything under the sun to get the foot soldiers to do the dirty work. Rules for Radicals (a Communist play book to destroy society) is in full swing by the DNC.'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'Morning, David. “ If Gurman gets paid to manipulate markets…” Hah! Straight out of “Casablanca”. “I am shocked!” And yes, markets are manipulated. Especially bellwether stocks. The handwriting was on the wall for AAPL to be dumped when I saw the downdraft happening to MSFT. The same thing happened in January of ‘22….'
on Google, Meta and Reddit identified anti-ICE protestors for the Trump administration - 'BTW, Gizmodo picked up the story this AM on Apple News. So the facts are slowly trickling out. Of course, that just makes NYT, Gizmodo, and Apple 3.0 “fellow travelers” to some….'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'On the article itself, it’s classic Gurman FUD. First, it’s impossible to verify. Second, it starts with bad news about Apple. (We’ve had discussions on IOS 26 adoption rates as reported in the Commentariat.) Third, the idea that ‘iOS 26 adoption rate’ is preventing Tesla from releasing this feature is bizarre, particularly when you consider that Tesla needs all the incentives for new purchases it can get. But of course, this sets up the next article on CarPlay for Tesla that would potentially produce a stock boost for both companies. If Gurman gets paid to manipulate markets, that would be a win.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'David: At this time I’m seeing Microsoft and Amazon at much better buy points and as greater value propositions than Apple at current pricing levels for all three equities.'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'That balance sheet is gonna be a mess when SpaceX acquires Tesla.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Fred: The challenge is there are many high quality equities also priced at very good entry points. This is among the reasons both you and me have interests in other equities. Apple doesn’t trade in a vacuum and competes with other equities for investor dollars.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Due to last week’s volatility, I’m revisiting 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. I am adding information about Walmart to this week’s list because it may soon eclipse Berkshire for the #10 spot. Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) up 22.29% Walmart (WMT) – up 20.18% Russell 2000 – up 5.84% DJIA – up 5.68% S&P 500 – down (0.14%) Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) – down (1.01%) NVIDIA (NVDA) – down (1.98%) Alphabet (GOOG) – down (2.48%) NASDAQ Composite – down (2.99%) Meta Platforms (META) – down (3.09%) Apple (AAPL) – down (5.91%) Broadcom (AVGO) – down (6.05%) Tesla (TSLA) – down (7.18%) Amazon (AMZN) – down (13.88%) Microsoft (MSFT) – down (17.02%) Since the first of the year only two equities in this week’s list have outperformed all four major indexes – TSM and Walmart and the two have done so handily. Market sentiment may have turned on mega cap tech, at least for now. At this time, Amazon and Microsoft are the bottom dwellers in performance and are for the moment decidedly out of favor with investors.'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'Greg, There are rumors that Musk is thinking about merging Tesla and Space X'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'Entering this week’s trading, below is the market cap scoreboard of the Terrific Ten. These are the 10 largest enterprises ranked by this metric. Last week was a tumultuous week for mega cap tech and the markets in general. For this week I’m adding information about Walmart. It may soon eclipse Berkshire for the #10 spot on the list. NVIDIA (NVDA) $4.44 trillion Apple (AAPL) $3.76 trillion Alphabet (GOOG) $3.70 trillion Microsoft (MSFT) $2.98 trillion Amazon (AMZN) $2.13 trillion Meta Platforms (META) $1.62 trillion Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) $1.58 trillion Tesla (TSLA) $1.57 trillion Broadcom (AVGO) $ 1.54 trillion Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) $1.08 trillion Walmart (WMT) $1.07 trillion'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (2/16-2/20/26) - 'AAPL, now at the low end its valuation range (as of the last 2 years), is a great entry point.'
on Mark Gurman: Why there's still no Apple CarPlay for Teslas - 'Elon has lost interest in Tesla. He wants to space travel and develop robots. So how long before he decides to sell Tesla? But who would buy it?'


