Recent Comments

  • Bill Donahue on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - 'Obviously one has to ignore all the circular financing that Nvidia’s involved in to decide it’s the best company of the future. And that Nvidia’s sales will quake if OpenAI craters, or the AI-investor world wakes up to the fact that there’s no proprietary advantage to any of the mega-scaler LLMs out there (and therefore no business or investment moat), and they are all floating on a buildout of data-centers that have an operational lifespan of 3 or 4 years before they become technologically obsolete and unprofitable. Where will Nvidia be in 10 years? I’d say it’s impossible to tell. But I’m betting heavily that there will be a full-blown shakeout among the big AI stock-plays long before that.'
  • David Emery on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - 'Here’s an IEEE Spectrum article on ‘small AI models’. Think of these as great iOS Apple Intelligence enabled applications. https://spectrum.ieee.org/small-language-models-ai-pharmaceuticals'
  • David Thall on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - 'Hap, very interesting. Thanks for posting. “The conversation has now changed” is significant. Watching that video commentary is reassuring, because it reminds me that Apple is addressing A.I. very soberly and carefully. As the consumer’s preeminent gatekeeper who actually gives a damn about user’s privacy – they are taking their time to apply it appropriately, and will come out ahead as a result – as will Apple investors like us. MY TAKE Nobody was asking for AI. There are maybe 7 guys in Silicon Valley who’ve been shoving AI down the world’s throat. Half of them act like, or are sociopaths, some are ‘on the spectrum’ – while several are both. I mean, Sam, Alex , Thiel, Mark and Elon are bonafide – with a lack of empathy that could rival Vladimir’s. The daily hyperventilating by the financial media and the drooling by the casino-ologists on Wall Street (Yes, I made that word up) is more hyperbolic than a super-pac of hungry hyenas with too much of other people’s money to chew on. If I was a conspiracy nut, I’d say there are AI aliens from the great beyond remotely manipulating the human race to replace itself and evolve into AIs … just like them. Even if not true, it could make a cool sci-fi movie. Just sayin’'
  • Fred Stein on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'Look forward to hearing your impressions.'
  • Steven Philips on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - 'I’m too old to vote for something that I won’t be able to have the satisfaction of proving myself right! 🙂'
  • Steven Philips on Still no Siri AI for EU, despite Tim Cook's efforts - 'I prefer Big Green Apples to small potatoes! 🙂'
  • Steven Philips on Still no Siri AI for EU, despite Tim Cook's efforts - 'This all makes me wonder – which is worse, Artificial Intelligence or Actual Stupidity? Maybe AI can’t come soon enough to the EU.'
  • Daniel Epstein on Premarket: Apple is red - 'As Joseph said Apple is up solidly today. The Monday morning “Premarket: Apple is red” trading often seems to change later after the market opens. And I have an impression it really coincides with the closing of the European market. Of course it is not a perfect pattern and I wouldn’t try and trade on it with serious money. Given Thursday’s rise it wouldn’t be unreasonable for the stock to consolidate its recent gains. But apparently we still have some momentum. Just recovering to the ATH is nice but I wouldn’t be surprised if we go a bit further on the ATH.'
  • Daniel Epstein on The iPhone 17's near-record run won't last much longer - 'Roger, It is interesting that older iPhone models are still being sold by Verizon and others. It has not always been true that Apple made and sold all the older models in an attempt to meet the consumer at every price point. Some of the old phones couldn’t run the latest system so Apple has a choice when introducing the new ones which ones they continue to sell and for how long. Found this on a web search “Apple has officially discontinued the iPhone 16 Pro, iPhone 16 Pro Max, iPhone 15, and the iPhone 15 Plus, along with several other older models. What does this massive catalog overhaul mean for you?Apr 30, 2026” I expect this year with the ram shortage and Apple introducing a foldable along with its other models that they will manage inventory more closely than usual so they can try and keep enough inventory in hand. Of course carriers may have their own stock pile of devices as well. This is going to be a tricky year for Apple as far as introduction and production wise.'
  • Rick Povich on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'I’ll be buying an 18 Pro but I’d be delighted if both the Pro and folding iPhone sell like hotcakes'
  • Hap Allen on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - 'I continue to follow Errol Brandt at kiraa.ai. In a recent post he claims that companies will tire of 1) the expense of AI, and 2) the loss of privacy when their data is run through the cloud. If Brand’s approach gets some traction, that could be of great benefit to Apple. “Did Alex Karp Just Agree With Me?”: https://youtu.be/fVC-z4ptOlk'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - '“Premarket: Apple is red” Um, Apple is not only solidly green, it’s gotten within $3.20 of its ATH. IMO, he selloffs following the WWDC are two of the dumbest selloffs ever – and apparently Mr. Market agrees with me….'
  • David Thall on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - '“The Wall Street Journal just ranked Nvidia the top “company of the future,”” I think this “list” says more about the Wall Street Journal than it does about Nvidia. I have nothing against Nvidia, it’s a fine company and clearly a good investment. However, maybe a more useful report would be, how exactly the current editors of the Wall Street Journal do their calculations to determine what a company will be in 10 years? In other words, who and what criteria is being used to make the list? Many years ago, when I first started investing in the market, I noticed that the mantra from all brokers was the same: ‘past performance does not guarantee future performance’. And yet their entire forecasting approach is built on looking in the rearview mirror. Maybe it’s just me, but I always found that ironical, if not obvious. I mean, obviously a company’s track record is really important. Same goes for hearing every broker giving the exact same advice, to “diversify”. Which I learned from real world experience does not save you when the entire market crashes. My personal experience when I was younger and listened to brokers, can be summed up by what Cramer has famously shouted: “they know nothing!” My personal investment philosophy is, I’d rather be an expert in one excellent company, our favorite fruit – that even Cramer has called maybe the best company in America – rather than investing based on having just a general knowledge of a whole bunch of companies – AKA: diversification. For me, proof is in the results. Apple has one of the world‘s greatest business models, which is still perfectly intact, and they have a vision and a philosophy that, despite the tsunami of economic, political, and misinformation out there – still astonishingly makes it consistently successful long-term. I’ve done exceedingly well by ignoring the broker’s knee jerk mantra, and instead by focusing on the best of breed, I’ve never lost a dime since. In my opinion, diversification is for people who are very busy and don’t have the time to educate themselves much less follow what a specific company stands for, much less separate all the rumors and gossip from the “news”. The Wall Street Journal is in the business of reporting facts and ostensibly even giving their opinions. That doesn’t mean we should believe everything they report, much less agree with their opinions. I mean, it’s owned by fucking Rupert Murdoch. Making a list of the best companies for the next decade is easy. All it takes is an opinion. I suggest making your own. I don’t think I need to tell you which one would be at the top of mine.'
  • Fred Stein on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'Fair enough. I don’t have the tools for predictions and certainly no precision, just perspective.'
  • David Emery on Still no Siri AI for EU, despite Tim Cook's efforts - 'Apple (and Google) aren’t the only companies having problems with EU regulations that mandate reengineering of products: https://www.engadget.com/2208587/nintendo-will-stop-selling-the-switch-1-in-europe-in-2027/ (Nintendo wills top selling Switch-1 due to EU replaceable battery regulations)'
  • Greg Bates on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - 'Is Horace right? He implies that Nvidia can’t be the best over, say, the next 50 years and will certainly not do as well as Apple? (I wish the WSJ had specified the length of time they meant by “future” but they didn’t; I pick 50 years arbitrarily.) It’s easy to agree with Horace that ranking Apple, one of only three companies with a CAGR of 20% + on average over 30 years (the other two being Berkshire which did it for 55 years, and Microsoft) at #12 seems silly. 11 other companies will do better than Apple? Possible, but the WSJ claims to know which 11 companies those are, which I am sure they don’t. But picking the top company is tricky. Any company can suffer a bad CEO transition (Apple’s been there, done that), failure to pivot fast enough (looking at you, Intel), or suffer any of a range of calamities that could knock it out of the running for the top spot. Similarly, can a company that got lucky (in phones or chips, for example) extend that win over half a century? And if so, which one will be the winner? I am less sanguine that anyone can know for sure, even as we can agree that Apple (and I would add Nvidia) will be in the top 5. Apple stands at the intersection of consumers and technology, as Horace points out, a great place to be. But we can’t know whether some other company might elbow its way into that spot and nudge Apple aside. Nvidia is already working on PCs, SpaceX is already working on phones, for example. In any case, I am conducting a survey. I’d be interested in other people’s answers to that question: what company will have the best return/CAGR over the next half century?'
  • Greg Boyd on Wedbush's Daniel Ives has become a merchant bank - 'Sigmund Warburg would be proud. Prediction, disaster incoming.'
  • Greg Boyd on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'Think I’ll buy two, use one, and give the other one to my children to sell in thirty years or so.'
  • David Emery on Still no Siri AI for EU, despite Tim Cook's efforts - 'Me too, and I say that as a (small potatoes) shareholder. I’m willing to forego the revenue to maintain the integrity of the platform.'
  • Bill Fouche on Still no Siri AI for EU, despite Tim Cook's efforts - 'I want to see Apple stand firm on this, stare them down. I want some European pols to lose elections over this. What EU regulators (and some past U.S. regulators) fail to understand is that, on safety and privacy and matters, most Apple customers trust Apple primarily, more than we trust any government or competing enterprise. We want Apple to protect us FROM these other actors, not the other way around. The EU seems to believe they are promoting free choice here, when what they are doing will end up being the opposite of that.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'I’m going to upgrade to an iPhone 18 Plus and continue using an iPad for content consumption. This combination extends battery life with a larger screen, and won’t cost near as much as a foldable. Oh, I received my new iMac on Thursday.'
  • David Emery on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'Fred, put REAL NUMBERS out, please. What is your prediction for demand and for supply? Otherwise, you’re guilty of the same hyperbole that we collectively castigate ANALysts for… (“Sell out on Day 1” strongly implies Apple itself can’t predict supply and plan accordingly.)'
  • Gregg Thurman on Horace Dediu: Where is Nvidia in a decade? - 'I’ve been saying it for a while. I don’t think Nvidia’s bubble is going to last that long.'
  • Roger Schutte on The iPhone 17's near-record run won't last much longer - 'The iPhone 17 is a very solid phone and will continue to be sold by the carriers long after 18 starts shipping. I did a check at Verizon.com this weekend and customers can get new iPhones all the way back to iPhone 13.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Still no Siri AI for EU, despite Tim Cook's efforts - '”Apple will win this.” Traffic across the channel is going to increase. iPhone sales in Great Britain are going to explode. EU consumers are going to flip their middle finger at Brussels.'
  • Roger Schutte on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'I’ll likely buy one for investment research purposes like I did with series 1 Apple Watch. I went on a flyer on a pile of Liquidmetal stock early last year so I have an interest in the hinge mechanism.'
  • Fred Stein on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'This will be THE phone to own, worldwide, regardless of the high price. Simple arithmetic. Only a few percent of an IB over 1.25B easily swamps supply.'
  • David Emery on Ming-Chi Quo: The foldable iPhone will sell out on Day 1 - 'STUPID. In order to make a claim of “Will sell out on Day 1”, you have to have a solid prediction of both DEMAND and SUPPLY. “Will sell out on Day 1” is classic click-bait, not backed up with any serious analysis.'
  • Gregg Thurman on The iPhone 17's near-record run won't last much longer - '“ it was inevitable that the ‌iPhone 17‌ lineup’s remarkably strong run would come to an end eventually. ‘Tis better to remain silent and have the world think you a fool, than to open your mouth and prove it. Every iPhone model, excepting the iPhone 4, had leading production numbers come to an end after one year.'
  • Joseph Bland on Still no Siri AI for EU, despite Tim Cook's efforts - 'Hi, Gary. AI is a very dangerous tool, and the EU is playing with fire. Also, its citizenry is mostly using Android, which s like pouring gasoline on a fire. Good luck with that.'