Joseph Bland on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'So here’s what I have so far: Palo Alto Apple 3.0 gathering June/July, 2026 Definitely interested and available: Joe Bland Ron Fredrick Robert Stack Fred Stein Michael Gabrys Jerry Doyle Kenny Kruger Interested if available: Michael Goldfeder David Baraff Possible attendees Philip Elmer-DeWitt(!) No emails from them yet, but expressed interest: Rodney Avilla John Konopka'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'Anyone missing the contra arguments of Tommo yet?'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'Reading this thread makes me think there must be another doubling – for just this new stuff – over the next 5 years. Super exciting times ahead!'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - '” Maybe the screen technology is not there yet, but with sensors could they develop a lens that “auto focuses”?” I’d buy a pair, maybe two. Since my cataract surgery all the Apple glasses would have to adjust would be the focal point. Add a hearing aid option and these fly off the shelves. VA may not pay for them, but I would. Come to think about it, the biggest problem I have with my hearing aids is that they magnify EVERYTHING. EQUALLY. How about having the hearing aids amplify sounds based on their distance to the aids? The further away, the less amplification applied to that sound. I’m tired of conversations from tables 10 feet away drowning out conversations at my table.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'David: A report out of CBS dated in April suggests the reason why the so-called middle class is shrinking is because the upper middle class now makes up about 31% of American households. According to the story, that’s a three-fold increase since 1979. The “rich” have increased from 0.3% of the population in 1979 to 3.7% today. The core middle class has fallen from 35.5% of the population in 1979 to 30.8% due primarily to more households entering the upper middle class. Because the upper middle class has grown so large in size, spending from that group has become more significant to overall economic growth. This has helped to shape the so-called K-shaped economy. What I believe has contributed to the disparity between the “haves” and “have nots” has less to do with tax policy and more to do with participation in the nation’s economic systems. For the vast majority of Americans it would be impossible to save sufficiently for retirement by earning simple interest on their retirement assets. In my view, most everyone needs to invest in equities and/or other risk assets to earn sufficient returns to cover eventual retirement expenses. If I hadn’t started investing at an early age, for example, there’s no way I could retire today in Southern California.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'Yeah, I have to acknowledge that I flip-flopped my math on the “youngest” portion and thought of the “earliest” Boomers, so I see now what you are saying about the 65 year-old cohort. I turned the eldest/earliest int the youngest in my head. Interestingly, I think the youngest (if properly understood) of the Boomers are among the last to see pension programs. As I was joining my current employer in 2000, the pension program had been phased out. Five or maybe ten years earlier, there would have been an option to choose between a pension or a flexible 401k benefit. (Flexible meaning you could port your X dollars into your 401k, which I of course will do.) It’s an interesting phenomenon, and Joe is not wrong in observing that tax policies have greatly benefited the wealthy over the last forty years. I was opposed to that then, and I am opposed to that now, even though it would be to my “direct” financial detriment. Since the rabbit hole has been pierced, I will simply say that, in my opinion, if the middle and lower classes had more money, they would spend every penny of it, which I think would be more beneficial to the economy than having the wealthy horde their wealth.'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'I am not sure what the go is in US and other countries but most health insurance companies here give their customers about AUD$200 a year to buy new corrective glasses/sunglasses. At about USD$140 that’s a nice subsidy at retail and much easier to qualify for than the few insurance schemes out there for Apple Watches. Probably less than half of people use their annual entitlement so with a bit of marketing many might be early adopters, rather than let another entitlement lapse. Think of what smartphone computational photography did to cameras and now I am thinking of what computational corrective lenses could do. For example my latest short sighted prescription is strong enough that looking at my phone from about 2 feet means the retina screen is now blurry. Maybe the screen technology is not there yet, but with sensors could they develop a lens that “auto focuses”?'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'Broadcom jumped $20.19 or 4.73% on Friday while setting new highs and closing at $446.77. Overnight the shares are up $12.08 at $458.85. The company’s market cap at Friday’s closing price is $2.12 trillion. The shares are up 29.09% year-to-date and 84.64% over the past year. The company reports on Wednesday. I’ll be following the results…'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'We know now that MU has been very good to PED and Roger has been forecasting its run to a $1 trillion market cap. Anyone else have a Micron success story?'
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'What a thoughtful idea! Best wishes for a mutually beneficial event for all those that attend and a fun time for all who gather together! Go Apple! Go Apple 3.0!'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'That’s a fabulous idea Bart – I’m pleased to be your first upvote! '
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'No reason folks from that area can’t do the same thing, David. I still have good memories of when we met for an Apple stockholder’s meeting, lo those many years ago….'
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'Hi, Fred.That’s Great! I’m trying to whittle down to the date when most folks can make it. That’s why I started with the wide window. Folks, let me know ASAP the days in this window you can’t or might not be available. Numbers are building….'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'I’m about 60% stocks, mostly in an S&P 500 index. That’s substantially Overweight for Big Tech, but my limited retirement plan choices don’t give me a compelling alternative. So if the markets Take A Big Suck Pill (or we enter prolonged stagflation, which I’m old enough to remember…) I have enough outside the stock funds to sit it out for a couple of years.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'Philip: How good has Micron been to you? In other words, have you stepped knee-deep into the shares?'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'Steven: Good point. IIRC, Mike Wilson at Morgan Stanley has suggested the current bull market may have another 2 years to 3 years to run. Corporate profits are being boosted by industrial development while most consumers admit to sensing cost pressures. This has been good for Walmart and, of course, for Costco as well. I’m expecting another nice extraordinary dividend from the wholesale club operator. As higher income households continue to visit Walmart and Costco more frequently than in the past, I’m bullish on the two enterprises. I’m not so bullish on traditional supermarkets at this time. I believe Walmart has become the nation’s largest grocer by dollar volume. It’s reported Walmart has a 23.6% share of the grocery market while Costco comes in at 9.20%. Beyond that, the huge infusion of cash into AI development across the spectrum of products and services needed is rewarding investors big time. Micron is just one example. NVIDIA is another. I also like Corning and Cisco as AI beneficiaries as well. That’s just a few names on my list. I’m looking forward to what Apple delivers at WWDC 2026 which opens with the keynote one week from tomorrow!'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - '“What I’ve always wondered is why Apple has never sold branded merchandise. Like t-shirts. Sweatshirts, hats etc. A billion customers at $10+ each item in profit?“ Because if branded clothing became a “thing”, cheap knockoffs and copies from all over the world would pop out of the woodwork and flood the market with cheap imitations, some of which would be pretty hard to discern, and certainly easy to pass to unsuspecting customers and users looking “for a bargain”. While I don’t disagree branded clothing could be a big seller, it also becomes a big copyright headache, a ton more SKU’s to track, and inevitable imitations. Now if Apple came out with high tech casual, exercise, and health wear with sensors that can do stuff with and for you and your health, now we’re talking!'
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'Great idea. Thanks Joe, LMK the date. Taking my wife to Bob Dylan on the 13th at Greek Theatre.'
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'I’ve never managed any of the old WWDC meetups and it would probably be interesting but I currently have too many irons in the fire with a new house project. And I suspect that unfortunately there are many who have infirmities beyond age that would proscribe travel. But go ahead and eat something in my name! 🙂 or better yet, DRINK something! A toast to all who attend.'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'Actually, the more I see accurate information the more I find it. It’s a technological marvel. Whether it’s driving is Ferrari worthy is another question.'
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'I’d be interested in a Northeast US meet-up… (I can’t travel much these days.)'
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'Actually, PED already gave y’all my email, so even less complicated….'
on Who's interested in an Apple 3.0 face-to-face in Palo Alto? - 'Thanks, PED! That should get the ball well and truly rolling! So far, folks, we’ve got Ron Fredrick, Robert “Bob” Stack, me, and our wives committed. We’re waiting on deciding the venue to see how many folks might attend, and also waiting on those with dates between, say, June 20th and July 11th, if they would like to attend but can’t on certain days within that window. That will lock down the day and the venue. Also, you can let me know here, and ask PED to give you my email address as the contact person. I’ll answer your emails and put you on the email list so we can all decide collectively where and when. Donna and I, btw, will be staying overnight in the area on the night of the dinner. If others are doing so, maybe we can get rooms at the same hotel…. Joe'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'Roger: I’m in this with you! As a recent retiree I’m well aware of the “sequence of return risk” of a major downturn early in one’s retirement years. I’m no johnny-come-lately to Apple and was investing in Apple with the scant dollars I had years before Steve Jobs returned to the company. In other words I was like a young kid walking into a bank and reaching up to the counter to put his crumpled few dollars in the bank with dreams much bigger than the small size of his account. I really do expect Apple to deliver at WWDC 2026 and at least modestly beat already high expectations. Apple has come through for us before and I expect the company to deliver again! In other words, I expect the announcements at WWDC 2026 to be so big and so bold they will be like the brightest of lighthouses of yore along the rocky New England coast that for generations lit the way for weary sailors battling stormy seas to find their way home! Go Apple! Bring it home for Apple customers around the world and for the steadfast shareholders that have remained with the company during uncertain times!'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'Jony Ive’s Ferrari Design: https://www.cnet.com/cars/ferraris-first-ev-gets-pope-leos-blessing-but-everyone-else-hates-it'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/1-6/5/26) - 'David: Yes. The youngest of the Boomers (my brother’s birth year of 1964) is turning 62 this year. The youngest members of that cohort are in late-stage retirement planning or retirement now. The Boomer cohort contains those born from January 1, 1946 through December 31, 1964. This year Boomers range in age from 80 years of age (born 1946) to 62 years of age (born 1964). Yes. There is a definite concentration of wealth in this generation. In fact much has been written about the trillions that will be passed from Boomers to their heirs through 2045. Wikipedia, in an entry titled, “Great Wealth Transfer” estimates the number at $84.40 trillion in assets with $72.6 trillion distributed to heirs. Understanding the size and wealth of the Boomer generation has underpinned my investment approach for the past 25 years. Back in 2001 I understood the oldest members of the cohort were turning 55. Among the older Boomers there was higher incidence of employer-provided defined benefit pension program coverage and heavy inflows into 401(k) accounts as more of the cohort reached their peak earning years. There’s also the wealth dynamic of long-term marriage that greatly benefited the generation and fueled greater wealth accumulation. None of this is politics and little of it relates to economic policies. It’s just today’s economic reality. I had great confidence in investing in equities over the past 25 years because of the heavy inflows of the Boomer cohort into retirement accounts through the early years of this century. The wealth of the Boomer generation is just massive, in part due to its size. The Silent Generation (1928 to 1945), mostly comprised of Depression-era children, such as my parents, is smaller in size due in part to the severity of conditions during the period and smaller birth numbers during WWII.'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'Fred, I actually think he’s on to something. Apple could *also* be targeting the prescription glasses market. That’s a market that’s ready for disruption. Could Apple be looking at something like active vision correction? Glasses give you what they give you but they’re not actively “smart.” To be fair, AI summarized this for me: “While prescription glasses excel at correcting refractive errors (like nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism), they cannot solve all vision challenges. Their structural and optical limitations can leave people struggling with peripheral distortion, specific lighting needs, and uncorrectable eye diseases.” This is an area where Apple could completely disrupt the current market. Current iterations of smart glasses seem to have solutions for problems that don’t exist and/or unimportant gimmicks. Apple could really move the needle with a game changing device. They’ve long been rumored to be studying eye issues and even a contact lens type product. This would be a more logical first step. And potentially an extremely lucrative one.'
on Mark Gurman: Look for Apple-branded smart glasses by Dec. 2027 - 'At least that’s not a recommendation to buy Space/X at the bargain price it should command once the scale of Musk’s “financial engineering” is realized.'


