Steven Philips on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'You’re all set if there’s another pandemic! 🙂'
on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - 'Funny Ives refers to Musk as a “war-time CEO”. Maybe. But I’d put him on the Mussolini side of that “war-time leader” ledger, similarly made mostly of entitlement, threats, rage, vengeance, delusion, and dishonesty. Give me a leader like Tim Cook, during good times and bad.'
on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'It’s true that for narrowly focused applications an AI trained just on that task can be very effective. It is not clear how well this can be generalized or whether there is anyone willing to pay money for this. I strongly suspect that the rich Wall Street guys have already put a ton of money into this. If they can find a 0.1% advantage it is worth it to them.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Although the market is down as we enter the final trading hour on the final day of the year, I’m grateful for the successes so many of us have achieved as 2025 comes to a close. The S&P 500 is up over 16% this year and the Nasdaq Composite is up over 20%! Happy New Year to all Apple 3.0 subscribers! May 2026 be a year of continued success and a year of peace and prosperity for each of us and our families! Godspeed and full speed ahead!'
on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'Is this Huang just trying to change the tune on a focus on the race to Gen-AI that by all indicators is a black hole for cap-ex that isn’t going to be successful for those spending the money, to one saying, “Yeah, but the REAL advantage and value is the advance in computing that this all enables!”? Because while that story may work for Nvidia, which makes and sells computing hardware, it doesn’t work for the companies buying and building compute capacity in their race to Gen-AI. Especially when China’s probably going to start flooding the world (and the USA) in the next year with scaled down AI models that are approaching performance parity with the major LLMs and far more efficient from a computing perspective. It also doesn’t explain away Nvidia’s circular financing of AI companies’ purchases of that compute power and the risk that that represents to Nvidia shareholders. This strikes me as very similar to a hindsight view of the internet boom: obviously it changed the world and how we all function daily. But in 2009, there were a whole lot of companies spending the big bucks and attracting huge investment dollars that were shown to be nothing but balloons when the bubble burst. If/when the bubble bursts, there will be a vast computing capacity infrastructure that will suddenly be on the market and being sold for huge discounts during bankruptcy proceedings, which will then send out tsunamis in the market for computing power and the ROI for any company that’s been building datacenters. Some sectors and companies will certainly benefit from the incredible advances in computing, but that’s strictly a commercial target market for compute-sellers, and I’m betting that not all of today’s super-scalers and LLM-peddlers will be able to pivot without taking a huge hit. It’s why I like Apple more and more: they’ve been focusing on providing the main tool for the majority of humanity to access and use AI in their daily lives, whether or not they actually realize it (and preferably not). All while prioritizing user data security, and remaining relatively agnostic about which model is being relied on and largely immune to the financial risks of chasing and pushing in-house AI models.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'Michael: Spoken like a true market maven! I just noticed CLX is trading today at $101.58. Nice timing on the purchase! Although I’m bigly into P&G shares (and for many of our household products) – there’s nothing better than P&G personal products, in my view – when it comes to commercial cleaning products like the ones I purchase for my organization and its many buildings, it’s Clorox products at the top of my list! The disinfecting wipe dispensers are common in all of our common areas for cleaning. I have a position is CLX as well. That righteous dividend and dividends like it allow me to remain in Apple shares. Happy New Year to you as well! May it be a prosperous 2026 for us all!'
on Button is a Hold on Apple - '**I’ve included below, the first part of my response to A.J. Button’s article at Seeking Alpha. “A.J. Button: “Apple (AAPL) is one of the few U.S. big tech stocks that has not performed well in 2025. Up 8.5% for the year, it has lagged behind the S&P 500 by a considerable margin.” **Yes, 2025 has not been a stellar year for AAPL/Apple. Fortunately, as long-term *investors*, my wife and I have held a 100% AAPL portfolio since 2000 and have experienced a 102,949% gain. How has the S&P 500 fared over that same time period?” In the article, he states that AAPL is a “Hold”…which is much closer to being correct than “Sell” AAPL. However, my wife and I have been buying AAPL with the quarterly AAPL dividends in our IRA’s since 2012 and the, split-adjusted, cost basis of those new AAPL shares is $55.78/share. So, even though A.J. Button’s advice to “Hold” AAPL may be appropriate for those who already own AAPL, IMO, “Hold” AAPL and buy more AAPL when possible is *also* appropriate for long-term investors.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - '@Robert: Just wanted to let you know that I got into CLX near its low last week when it dropped below $98 to $97 and some change. People will always be using bleach so I pulled the trigger on CLX as opposed to LW. A very nice dividend as well currently yielding around 5%. Just a small position thanks to my Apple dividends. Happy New Year and great health in 2026 to you, PED, and every subscriber on Apple 3.0 for all of their ongoing informative posts and experiences'
on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'SHOW ME THE APPLICATIONS. I am NOT convinced at all! Special purpose hardware solves specific problems, using custom software, where there is a return on the investment for that specific HW/SW. “generalized parallelization” is a grail that has been discussed for 50 years, and I don’t think suddenly it’ll emerge and make the previous 80 years of computing suddenly obsolete. Furthermore, parallelization (hardware and software) generates a much larger moat than anything Apple has ever conceived of. NVIDIA has this moat for LLM AI, it would be too expensive to develop for a different platform and way too expensive to move to an alternate platform, once established on NVIDIA. But economics here are likely to win out; the cost of the NVIDIA monopoly will encourage others to compete. When webservers suddenly pop up running on NVIDIA data centers, I might be more willing to believe in this shift.'
on Button is a Hold on Apple - 'A pretty big strawman, criticizing Apple because a $1 billion ARR product launch moves the needle a huge amount for a company with $10 million in sales, versus what it does for Apple. Okay, A.J. Button, then which small company with $10 million in revenues are you talking about that we should all buy stock in that is going to do that? Actual investing is just a bit more than “Does Company X do better than a completely meaningless hypothetical comparison?” The only real questions are whether an investor believes the “market” perceptions on Apple he refers to accurately reflect what is to come, and what timeline one looks at when investing. For me, for the last 20+ years I’ve always focused on trying to identify potential downsides in the next 6-12 months, and potential upsides in the next 1-2 years. The big S&P return in the last year has been largely driven by the AI bet and the vast cap-ex being dumped into it by most of the “magnificent 7”, which thus far has failed to deliver comparable or even acceptable or sustainable returns. Yesterday, I heard someone proposing that OpenAI is looking more and more like the Netscape of 2026, which is the best description of it that I’ve come across and the closest to what I think of it (and Sam Altman). And if that plays out, then the S&P’s returns will be negative because of the hammering that most of the Mag-7 will take, and possibly by a lot. Approaching investing by looking in the rear-view mirror at what happened this year and assuming it’s going to continue – which is basically what Mr. Button’s position – is what most people seem to do, pros and amateurs alike, and it’s almost guaranteed to result in below-average returns. I’d rather channel Warren Buffet’s, “Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.”'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'Bart – please let us know what you think about the Mini, once you’ve used it for a while. I’ve never used PCs for work, having moved to Macs more than 30 years ago when I went to grad school. Since then, the only times I’ve ever used PC was when I had to to run specific big PC-based ecosystem models or when a PC was defaulted to me when I went into government for a few years, and the amount of time that was wasted daily by hardware/software conflicts and non-functioning absolutely blew my mind. Then add in the huge IT per-machine costs for any business or institution running PCs, versus Macs. I’ve never been able to understanding how anyone could possibly tolerate any of that even twice, let alone routinely.'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'Re Greg’s prediction of the impending death of the iPad, because of a foldable iPhone: It’ll never happen, if the foldables cost the predicted 2-3x what an iPad costs. And the iPad screen will always be a lot larger than any foldable smartphone that I’d be willing to carry around all the time – not to mention the mandatory external keyboard I’d need for the smartphone. Consequently, I’d never rely on a foldable smartphone to do work-related tasks, or anything that involves similar tasks. And I’m guessing I’m far from alone in that.'
on Button is a Hold on Apple - 'My take: This is just the latest version of Apple is doomed by the same old “law” of large numbers fake meme. You’d think these folks would have learned by now…. “Now, however, the stock is trading at a valuation that implies growth, even though the company is no longer growing rapidly.” Wrong. “Rapidly” is a relative term. He meant “as rapidly as in the past”, which is certainly true, but doesn’t take into account the many, many years when it was seriously undervalued and Apple was just as seriously reducing the float. Look: Way back in early November of 2020, AAPL went over a trailing P/E of 40, at a price of about $120/share. At the beginning of this quarter, with an ATH of &288/share, Apple once more surpassed a trailing P/E of 40. That’s a gain of about $160/share or 133% ( not factoring in inflation) over a bit more than 5 years, and on a par with MSFT. And if you look at a 10 year chart for Apple, it looks like it’s set to at least add about the same over the next five years. True, that would reduce the gain (not factoring in inflation) to (160/272=) about 60%, but (a) that ain’t hay and (b) that’s a very conservative estimate. So what he really means is that Apple didn’t benefit from the huge AI “gold rush” that many others did. But is that a fair comparison, considering just how limited the amount of “gold” appears to be actually “panning out”? Bottom line: Going forward, Apple will almost certainly be “digging out” some nice AI “nuggets”, which may well be more than some of the present high-flying AI stocks will manage to do….'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'David, Rosetta 2 is so good that I’d bet your old Intel version of Excel (and other Intel applications) will run just fine on an Apple Silicon Mac.'
on Button is a Hold on Apple - ' His summary is accurate and hard to disagree with. I disagree. The time to buy is when equity value hasn’t adjusted to account for future potential. In C2026 I see Apple Intelligence (led by improved SIRI) leading to Google like placement deals. Apple Vision Pro was announced June 5, 2023. During the last Conference Call Cook addressed Summer of 2026 as when these improvements will be addressed. By WWDC 2026 that’ll be 3 years for developers to create Vision Pro Apps and, and Apple to sign Vision Pro streaming content agreements. A seriously upgraded Apple Vision Pro (made possible by greatly increased screen supply), Services expansion with FIA, MLS, NBA, streaming content enhanced by Vision Pro subscription offerings with AppleTV. Apple may delay charging for Vision Pro subscriptions until FY2028 to get users hooked on the technology. In the meantime I expect a deal with Real Madrid for entry into Premier League Football. F1: The Movie will be re-released as a Vision Pro product. The sum of these offerings may not move Apple’s revenue (percent wise) in the near term that much, but will signal future revenue growth to investors that buy the future at today’s discounted prices. I’m looking for significant equity growth beginning in June and continuing thereafter as Apple announces more and more Vision Pro content deals with content providers. This is 2+ years after my first equity expansion forecast, as I greatly underestimated the complexity of establishing Vision Pro infrastructure to support an effective ecosystem, and ecosystems drive hardware revenue.'
on Premarket: Apple was red, turned green - 'The major indexes are in the red on the last trading day of what has been a very green and prosperous year for equity investors. I’m busy doing some bargain shopping in the market this morning. Apple is currently off $0.86 at $272.22. In general, REITs are under pressure today with Digital Realty off $1.41 at $154.99. Nike is bucking the downtrend today. The shares are higher by $1.99 or 3.25% at $63.18. Roughly 90% of S&P 500 components are lower on the day. Lamb Western Holdings, recently mentioned by Apple 3.0 market maven Michael Goldfeder is up 1.41% at $42.54. Microsoft is down $2.19 or 0.45% this morning at $485.30.'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'My upgrade occurred last March when I dropped mu iPad and my daughter (Family Plan administrator) told us we were moving to ATT for the free iPhone 16 Plus. As a family we bought 3 iPhone 16 Pluses and one iPad A-16. I didn’t bother with the M series because the A-16 performed as well as the M-1 and I don’t do anything that would benefit from newer M Series processors. I saved ~$300 on the iPad by getting the A-16.'
on Button is a Hold on Apple - 'His summary is accurate and hard to disagree with. The one thing that I would add is that Apple offers lower risk now. Your money is safely invested with Apple. Compared to other big tech companies who are all racing to use “AI” – whatever that means – by throwing an absurd amount of cash at it, their stock prices can get clobbered by increased volatility the millisecond something competitive (better) pops up at any given moment. Which seems to be the case, particularly for a technology so new. It’s been said that AI is akin to giving birth to a new species. And it’s become increasingly clear, that there’s less that it’s creators know about what the side effects of an all powerful self-generating AI will be, than we can possibly imagine. By taking their time, and partnering as they go, it now appears Apple doesn’t have that AI stock volatility problem after all. Because…. as I’ve stated before, Apple is the consumer’s favorite gateway for everything that everybody else wants to offer online. Apple’s road map seems pretty clear. Siri on steroids will eventually become everybody’s favorite personal assistant. Maybe not as soon as all of the day-traders, peanut-gallerists and impatient armchair-experts would like, but soon enough. I mean, it’s not as if consumers have stopped buying iPhones. Pardon me if I repeat myself, but – there is no deadline.'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'I think my MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2016, Four Thunderbolt 3 Ports) is ready for an upgrade. I’ve been sorta watching and waiting. Even not knowing what might be coming in 2027, I think 2026 has to be the year that I pull the trigger, because I am stuck on macOS Monterey 12.7.6, and that is also holding em captive on Microsoft® Excel for Mac Version 16.89.1 (24091630). I’m fairly confident that Mail Version 16.0 (3696.120.41.1.10) is also delivering an experience way below what the current version of Mail has to offer. So a MacBook in 2026 for sure. Most likely an iPhone as well. I like the iPhone 15 Pro Max, and iOS 26.2 seems fine, but I am sure there will be at least one offering in 2026 that makes a valid upgrade. Then I’ll probably get suckered into an XX whenever that comes around. There are chances in iPad Land, but I’m not in a hurry. If I get a bigger TV, then a newer Apple TV might make sense. But that’s really all I can see for 2026 (not that it isn’t enough IMNSHO). The new Airpods Pro 3 are awesome. Highly recommended.'
on Button is a Hold on Apple - 'I don’t have any problem with this. Apple is a value play with growth potential in a period of global uncertainty. What’s not to like?'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'Agreed. As a better Apple analyst then many of the pros. I thought you would be knee deep in their ecosystem. Our Apple Christmas was nonexistent, but then again we had an Apple fall – new 12” M5 iPadPro, iPhone ProMax, two iPhone 17 upgrades and a MacBook Air for a new freshman entering HS.'
on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - 'Joe gets on my last nerve. Still cannot believe he has a job.'
on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - 'To be fair, though, that can happen a bit with Dan Ives, too! lol'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'Bart – shocking! Not what you purchased, but what you put up with for so long! 🙂'
on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'I bought a 15″ Air to use as a second laptop, replacing the ’14 MB Pro that still works, but was getting a bit long in the tooth. Wife still hasn’t decided which iPhone 17 she wants.'
on Three motivational New Year's resolution videos from Apple - 'Steven: Thanks for sharing your numbers! I’m at 1,245 consecutive days of reaching my move goal. Prior to that I had 1,099 consecutive days into late March 2022 before a nasty couple of days of a stomach flu and then in August of the same year I lost five days to Covid. Glad to see you are working the numbers for your benefit! I’m averaging 157 minutes of exercise a day in 2025. I just received an AirPods Max headset for Christmas. I’ll be the using the headset for podcasts while I exercise. In my view, the Apple Watch Ultra is a “game changer.” Prior to getting an Ultra I was swapping out my watches twice a day as I burned through the batteries on an Apple Watch 6 and Apple Watch 9 each day. The larger display on the Utra makes it easier to view stats while exercising such as miles traveled and pace of movement.'
on Three motivational New Year's resolution videos from Apple - 'I’m watching the video’s heroes all running, and I think: yeah right. I haven’t ran since leaving the police department back in 1976. I didn’t need to. My weight didn’t fluctuate that much until COVID. That changed everything. Between it and the onset of arthritis in my knees, today I can hardly walk. My weight zoomed to 292 lbs (now 269 thanks to Semaglutide compounding). Knee replacement in February. Just walking (important element in recovery) will be “fun” for a few months. Running will be out of the question. I wish I hadn’t put off the surgery until February. I wanted to miss snow season, and now it looks like we aren’t going to get ANY this year. Average highs so far, and projected through February, are 20 – 25 degrees warmer than usual.'
on Why Daniel Ives included Apple in his top five AI stocks for 2026 - 'On the interview with Dan Ives, I agree with the colorfully dressed man from Wedbush. Apple’s poised to rock it out in 2026. In my view, once Apple reveals the ways in which the company will facilitate the monetization of AI through its products and services for OpenAI, Alphabet and others and introduces AI-enhanced versions of Siri promised at WWDC 2024 the shares will move significantly higher in price.'


