Recent Comments

  • Daniel Epstein on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Hi Rodney, One of the things about Apple’s approach to investor capital return is they are currently very close to returning 100% of profits on an annual basis. And the ratio they are using heavily favors buybacks. The dividend payout this year is close to 15.5 Billion dollars. Buybacks for this year (the 4 quarters ending in Sept) was 89 Billion. A ratio of buybacks 5.74 to 1 Dividend. 104.5 billion for the year. This presumably leaves Apple with ways to adjust what they do for capital return while still retaining enough cash to run the business.. The buyback is easier to adjust without a major announcement compared to a dividend but it also does have unintended consequences. Some people look at the small % of the dividend and think Apple doesn’t return capital to shareholders. The PE ratio of the company is not as comparable over long periods as the decrease in share count changes the numbers over time. Apple earnings per share can grow faster than Apple gross revenue partially due to the share count reduction. Many people don’t understand that. Since the tax implications of the buyback are different than the tax implications of the dividend depending on what kind of account one holds the shares in there are different values to a buyback or dividend for different shareholders. All of which to say is Apple could change this situation if it decided there is an advantage to do so while still returning shareholders a significant amount of money over time whether they recognize it or not. 3% is not easily doable as you said but they could raise the dividend 100% from where it is now and cutback the buyback buy less than a quarter to keep the overall capital return numbers the same. They just favor an increasing stock price that they believe the buyback provides with less of a tax implication for many shareholders.'
  • Joseph Bland on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'You raise an interesting point, though, Rodney: If all these borrowed trillions of AI $ don’t create an ROI, who’s on the hook? Well, for one, the middle class taxpayer, since these expenses will presumably be “written off” to some degree as bad investments. But also impacted will be the long term stockholders, who won’t realize the ROIs for which these valuations are being driven up in expectation of. And as those valuations dry up, so will any hikes in dividends. And if the financial hit is serious enough, companies may have no choice but to suspend dividends and suffer the flack that will inevitably result. Apple doesn’t have to concern itself with any of that.'
  • Joseph Bland on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Hi, David. Crooks, Inc. comes to mind….'
  • Joseph Bland on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Hi, Rodney. Apple is not the one you should be looking at negatively vis-a-vis stock options, since they buy back FAR MORE shares than they grant out as stock options. Also, the case against stock options is countered by the reality that they are necessary to retain top talent. Finally, any arbitrary dividend number (like 3%) makes zero sense, because the valuation of a company ebbs and rises. You will just end up chasing 3% if the valuation goes up but don’t dare reduce dividends if the valuation shrinks. It literally only pays for a company where valuation changes little if at all – which will either slow or sink the stock price rise. I’d rather own a stock like Apple that keeps growing its stock price, at the small cost of seeing its dividends not grow in keeping with its growth in valuation. Others may choose to stick with those that slowly increase both. They probably shouldn’t own AAPL.'
  • David Emery on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Not based on Meta’s actions! Meta is reprogramming the money from VR/AR/metaverse to AI. Will the Zucker rename the company “AI-something-or-other” as a result of this new focus? (a challenge for the readers here: Suggest the best name for the new AI focused Zuckerberg company…)'
  • Rodney Avilla on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Apple has about 14.78B outstanding shares. A yearly dividend rate of 3% would cost Apple $124B (total income is about $112B). To get the share count down to 6.67B where Apple could afford a 3% dividend rate, they will need to buy back about 8.1B shares, which would cost $2.2 trillion dollars (8.1Bx$280). If they spend half their net income on buybacks ($56B/yr), it will take them (at today’s prices) 40 years to get to the place where they can afford a 3% dividend. That is what happens when you pay everyone and their cousin via stock options.'
  • Gregg Thurman on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'It’s a delightful rumor (glad to see the target is someone other than Apple), but it is at this time a rumor.'
  • Joseph Bland on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Morning, Gregg. “Has the bubble popped?” More like a surrender on the AR/VR front. Great news for Apple and Apple longs! I’m guessing Meta has pivoted to spending its cash on AI and ripping off folks’ personal info, and decided to leave the field of AR/VR to Apple.'
  • Daniel Epstein on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - '““Steve Jobs was famously opposed to paying dividends or buying back stock, arguing that the money was better spent on making the next big thing,” he told MarketWatch.” While Laskin is accurately expressing Steve Job’s viewpoint when Apple was a smaller Market Cap company I think he is missing the point about Apple today. Something that even Steve Job’s would likely recognize. Apple is not strapped for cash and is still well prepared for some kind of large issue that could slow down the profit generating monster it has become. So Apple’s strategy of investor return is likely something that Steve Job’s would approve as long as the “next big thing” can still easily be explored and funded. He may have quibbled with the amounts but not the overall concept. And likely would dislike criticism of the company by using Job’s thoughts in isolation. Job’s might have more trouble with how broad the product lines have become but again he had different problems to deal with and wanted to focus on big issues not distractions. He probably would be more disappointed in how the Imac has been treated lately but he did want the company to be like Wayne Gretzky and skate to where the puck is going to be product wise. But again I hesitate to use what I believe Job’s supposed preferences would be as a way to critic the company today.'
  • Gregg Thurman on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'https://www.forbes.com/sites/kirkogunrinde/2025/12/04/meta-shares-rise-4-amid-news-it-will-cut-metaverse-spending/ “The proposed cuts would likely include layoffs, according to Bloomberg, which said the cuts were part of budget planning for 2026. The cuts will likely hit the company’s virtual reality group.” “The budget cuts could be as high as 30% for the unit and would likely include layoffs, the news outlet reported.” Has the bubble popped?'
  • Joseph Bland on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Thanks for the shout-out, PED. Apple could have gone the way of “burning” excess cash through more acquisitions or steadily increasing dividends, but chose buybacks for a very good reason, stemming from its vulnerability to options plays following the massive institutional selloff of AAPL during and following the Great Recession. That in turn stemmed from the need to grow (i.e. dilute) the float just to survive prior to and following the return of Steve Jobs. BTW, Apple buybacks have been going on for closer to a dozen years than a decade, so the amount of shares bought back since its peak split-adjusted float is considerably more than the 34.6% mentioned in the article. In regards to the issue of future shifts away from buybacks, note that it’s far more palatable to long term investors to cut back on buybacks than it is on dividends, which is the unenviable position of stocks like Microsoft. Buybacks should therefore be considered dry powder stored for just such occasions as a major retooling effort. But, as should be clear to most everyone by now, the original purpose of buybacks, i.e. to counter the abysmally stupid periods of deeply undervaluing AAPL by literally buying back Apple’s own stock, thus leveraging a virtual tsunami of free cash flow which the market had discounted as basically low-earning net cash, has allowed Apple, over the last four to five years to “pocket” a massive amount of undervalued AAPL. That is to say, over the last four years, the genius of Apple’s buyback jiu jitsu move has once again paid “dividends”, not in literal dividends, but in reducing the outstanding number of split-adjusted shares in its float, in a reverse-dilution of shares, at bargain prices. Thus, each remaining share owns a bigger percentage of a company whose net income is still growing. Advantage, Apple and long-term AAPL investors.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on John Gruber: At Apple, Steven Lemay replacing Alan Dye is cause for rejoicing - 'David, If I had to guess, it would be just profit taking. If I didn’t have my basket full of capital gains this year, I would be selling some here. I will probably sell some Apple around the start of the year.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - '“Max pain stays at $280…” And just coincidentally (/s), Apple sees a low today, Thursday just under $280…. By now, anyone who trades is perfectly aware of the Max Pain phenomenon, i.e., that tomorrow the options houses balance their trades by buying and selling stock they had earlier bought or sold to “back” all those options trades. Max Pain is simply the number that optimizes their profit. iOW, this “selloff” should not come as a surprise.'
  • David Wilson on John Gruber: At Apple, Steven Lemay replacing Alan Dye is cause for rejoicing - 'The full article is an interesting read, and I come away even more glad at the change. Though there was a whole lot more of more substance than this, I loved this quote at the end: “My favorite reaction to today’s news is this one-liner from a guy on Twitter/X: ‘The average IQ of both companies has increased.'”'
  • David Wilson on John Gruber: At Apple, Steven Lemay replacing Alan Dye is cause for rejoicing - 'Is this why Apple is taking such a pounding today, at least early on? I’m with Gruber, Dye’s time was past its expiration date. I’m ready for some different design savvy.'
  • David Emery on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'And when the AI Bubble bursts, those hyperscalers are left with billions of non-performing/under-performing assets, and Apple owns more of Apple, will some pundit figure out that maybe “Apple was investing in the right place all along?” It”s clear the current investment in AI has no path to ROI. There have been multiple stories documenting how much revenue a company like OpenAI would need to make to pay for their building binge. (And it’s also clear that the gateway to much of those AI datacenters flows from the Mk 1 Eyeball through an Apple device to the AI cloud.) (Now if I was going to sell some of my AAPL, I think I’d buy some defense stocks. There’s a potential growth industry, looking at Russia & China. This won’t provide the same return as Big Tech. But it’ll make me feel safer, as well as surviving the next Tech Bubble…)'
  • David Emery on John Gruber: At Apple, Steven Lemay replacing Alan Dye is cause for rejoicing - 'I reiterate: To anyone who would move to Meta: “Don’t let the door hit you on the way out!”'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Index futures are mixed at close to 9am in the east. In pre-market activity Apple is off $0.48 at $283.67. Amazon is up $0.07 at $232.46 ahead of the bell after dropping $2.04 in Wednesday trading. Oppenheimer just raised its price target on the shares to $305.'
  • Bart Yee on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Every pundit, academic, and analyst wants to spend Apple’s money in their own way, having little knowledge of what it actually buys, creates, or eventually receives for that expenditure. And like a lot of acquisitions, personnel and new businesses, does it actually mesh with what your core business is, what you do best, and how well you run your company? When you try to reinvent yourself, does it always work, or does it cause a lot of disruption?'
  • Mordechai Beizer on What hyperscalers spend on AI infrastructure, Apple spends on buybacks - 'Took a look at Laskin’s CV, he’s a spinmeister with no real experience actually doing anything. Why should his comments on the optics of Apples business mean anything?'
  • Steven Philips on Premarket: Apple is red - '“Challenger, Gray & Christmas”??? Thats a bit ominous for a jobs related company Especially EOY 🙁'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Walmart hit a new all-time high today of $114.89 and reached an intra-day market cap of $0.90 trillion. Over the past year the shares have gained 22.35%.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Apple did mint a new all-time high today of $288.61 soon after the opening bell before falling back on the day to finish off $2.04 at $284.15.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Microsoft dropped $2.50 to end the day at $477.73. The shares have recovered $1.28 overnight. There was pressure on the shares following speculation Microsoft missed its internal targets for AI-related sales.and was reducing quotas. The company denied the claim. Over the past month the shares have dropped in price 7.60%. The current all-time high of $555.45 was set on July 31st.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Alex Kantrowitz: A Gemini-powered Siri is 'OK for now' - 'Bussiness Insider: “Google LLC is the largest and primary subsidiary under Alphabet’s umbrella. It retains control over all of the well-known internet-related businesses, including Google Search, Android, YouTube, Gmail, Google Maps, and Google Chrome.” I believe Google is alive and well.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Hi, Bart. “ Today’s decline…might have been Apple buying back..” AFAIK, the stock drops when sellers outweigh buyers, and vice versa. Please correct me if I’m wrong!'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - '“Max pain rises…to $280 … “ Ergo, today’s selloff at 13 M share trades below the average volume of 51.3 M trades. Apple shorters trying to save their shorts yet again. “RSI rises to 75.18…(Above 70 is overbought…” (Horshit!) Sorry. Had to sneeze….'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple resists, India caves - 'If only the EU could understand the foolishness of their ways…. smh'
  • Steven Philips on Apple's 'lacks juristiction' defense fails in Luxembourg - 'Deja Vu all over again!'
  • Steven Philips on Mr. Market bought the Intel-fabricating-Apple-M-chips 'rumor' on Tuesday - 'Intel Inside??? No stickers please. 🙂'