Recent Comments

  • Bart Yee on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'IDC’s numbers are a little and a lot off depending on what they’re referencing: “Apple’s shipments are forecast to grow 6.1% YoY in 2025, up sharply from 3.9% in the last cycle.” “Apple is set to have a record year in 2025 with shipments forecast to cross 247 million units, thanks to the phenomenal success of its latest iPhone 17 series,” said Nabila Popal, senior research director with IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker.” For 2024, IDC estimated 232.1M, a preliminary estimate Jan 12, 2025. I have not found any correction to that. If iPhone sales grew 6.1%, that puts it at 246.3M, a little off from 247.4M. Either the growth rate is actually 6.6% or the 2024 number was revised by IDC internally to 233.2M. Small potatoes. This number is more egregious: “This calendar year will not only be a record period for Apple in terms of shipments but also in value, which is forecast to exceed $261 billion, with 7.2% YoY growth in 2025.” This bugged me a lot and should have raised some eyebrows at IDC and here. Why? As I had pointed out a few days ago, CY2024 iPhone revenue was $200.619B. That’s a long ways from $261B, because $261B would represent 30% YoY growth!!!, not 7.2%. When I had calculated potential forecasted CY2025 iPhone revenues, based on Q1 FY2026 quarter’s 10% iPhone revenue growth as guided by Apple CFO Parekh, I came up with $216.5B, a 7.9% YoY growth. If we instead sub 7.2% growth, we should get $215.1B. I believe the $261B figure is an erroneous typo that should actually be closer to $216B instead!! I’d certainly love to to see $261B in annual iPhone revenue someday but it’s not CY2025, maybe end of year 2027 because that would require only 10% YoY revenue growth in 2026 and then 2027. Another cross check was taking $261B divide that by projected sales of 247.4M, giving an ASP of $1055, an astounding 19% rise from 2024’s $888. Given current and past robust sales of base model iPhone 17 & 16’s in 2025, it’s just not likely yet. If IFolds became a huge hit, maybe that’s possible into 2026 & 2027. I’ve sent an email to IDC to inquire about this typo or maybe miscalculation possibility.'
  • Greg Bates on Apple's Amar Subramanya has his work cut out for him - 'Investment thesis: The people running the Magnificent Seven (and a bunch of other great companies not growing quite as fast) are smarter than the journos writing about them. So whom should we believe? The Mag 7 need profits (or sometimes zero profits and massive growth of the business–see Amazon’s earlier days, for example), while the journos need eyeballs. So the CEOs are running their companies, looking for opportunities and hyper vigilant for disruptive innovations that could kill them. And the journos are desperate for controversy; when there is little, they employ the chicken little sky-is-falling strategy: Apple is the next Blackberry! Nvidia is the next Intel! AI is the next Internet bubble! These headlines are better at grabbing attention than ones that might better reflect reality: Apple is the next Apple. Nvidia is the next Nvidia. AI is the next transformative opportunity and will have many winners. These headlines fail because everyone knows they are highly likely to be true–why read what you already know? Investment opportunity: buy and hold, tune out the noise. We’ve all seen those articles, “If you had invested $10k in __________ 30 years ago, today you’d have made millions. A more accurate headline would be: If you had tuned out the noise 30 years ago and just sat there, you’d have made millions. That’s why so few people actually invest $10k in one stock for 3 decades; they have trouble tuning out the noise generated by journos who can’t make a living unless there is controversy. Trust the smartest people, not the cleverest writers.'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'The PCMag article is from when Apple talked about the product. Their booth at the show today was showing it in action. See my latest post on Twitter for pix and comments. Search for @Graphex1'
  • Charles A. on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'https://www.pcmag.com/news/apple-thunderbolt-5-macs-ai-clusters-mlx'
  • Rodney Avilla on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Search for “ Apple demo’d a mini AI cluster” And it should pop up.'
  • Charles A. on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'I couldn’t find a link for that, either.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'I looked up neurlPS Roger is there a link to the demo? I couldn’t find one. With what you saw, does the demo make you think Apple is working on a rack mount server?'
  • Gregg Thurman on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'Thank you David. I’ve been hanging with the wrong dummies. In 2010, when I first started tracking Apple’s Earnings reports (and started developing my own theories about “PE”). I’ve asked different forums about PEG. Nobody could give me an answer that satisfied. There was a result, but what did it mean? So, is there a range? If so, what’s the mean result? Where are the danger points in the calculation? Is there a historical PEG chart? Essentially I need some context in order to gauge what I’m looking at. Thanking you in advance.'
  • Cy on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Evening Darren, seems that way . . . good luck to you! I’ve got perhaps three more years to wind down my AAPL concentration to 25%. If I weren’t in a bind with state tax credits for a house restoration in a high tax state that can be clawed back if I become a non-resident, I’d have set up residency elsewhere, unloaded, and been happy paying the Fed max rate. When AAPL releases the iTime Machine, top of the list is to go back and tweak my tax planning strategies.'
  • David Drinkwater on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'Gregg, keep it simple. There is a metric called the PEG or price to earnings to growth ratio. This metric expresses what the market thinks the stock may do. Small numbers for PEG are better. finance.yahoo reports the statistics under “Statistics”, so they are readily available. Hope this helps.'
  • Darren DMW on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'I wish it was me … I have an outstanding sell order at $289.80 … but it didn’t convert in AH which is always a bit of a lottery compared to normal market hours. 🙁'
  • Darren DMW on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Cy … we seem to be tracking very similar. I started buying in 2007 and I have been taking very, very small amounts off for the last 2 years. I also got caught out on earnings day. I got some away at $283.50 and then raised my sell prices to $285+ and never got hit at that level until today.'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Apple demo’d a mini AI cluster today at NeurIPS with 4 Mac Studio’s (M3 Ultra and 512GB unified memory each) running a full 1TB parameter AI model via MLX. $300/share might come before year end if the nerds and press talk this up.'
  • Cy on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'G’day Gregg . . . wasn’t me! Didn’t watch after-hours today. Believe AAPL could hit $300+ before year-end but I could take $290 and be well pleased.'
  • Roger Schutte on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'Gregg, thanks for the replies. I’d love to see AVP take off, too (I want to watch my Celtics!) but I see other items contributing more in the near future – continued growth in active users + devices, iPhone sales hitting on all cylinders, continuation of the steady growth in Services revenue + profits, continued margin expansion, and finally seeing App developers adding functional AI features for users by utilizing app intents with processing in three AI environments (on device, Private Cloud Compute or ChatGPT/Gemini). I agree, things look good near and long term. And one more thing…share count reduction by 2.5%/year definitely doesn’t hurt EPS.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - ' Got one more block to sell this year and think time may be near. Cy, was that you at about 5:45 Eastern that successfully sold a block for about $290.50?'
  • Cy on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Got one more block to sell this year and think time may be near. Was regretting not getting the remainder of my 2025 sales done in after-hours on earnings day where I got $283.20, but good to see AAPL back to these levels. Makes it easier to sell. Planned to make all my 2026 sales in early Jan, but with the sentiment shift I may break it down again. Was at 90%+ of my portfolio in AAPL and after 3 years of aggressive (but tax rationale being in a high-tax state) selling on my taxable investments and unloading on the non-taxable side have finally made it below 50%. Not sad to see the volatility of my investments greatly reduced. Thinking back to 2008, I was optimistic about AAPL but never thought I’d sell at these prices!'
  • Gregg Thurman on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - ' Are my growth percentages reasonable or too low? I think they are reasonable given the maturity of today’s products. Mature products don’t grow as fast as new products. The market for new technologies is much larger and the competition is far lower (no copycats). This is why I support Apple’s Vision Pro effort so strongly. The only competition in this arena is META, but Zuck has put the cart before the horse. He has developed a product and paid little attention to what it’s good for. On the other hand, Apple is simultaneously developing a Vision OS ecosystem, that augments its existing AppleTV product, that involves video playback and live content. Apple bought North American MLS (most popular sport worldwide) broadcast rights when nobody else knew what to do with it. It bought North American broadcast rights to F1 racing (most popular racing events worldwide) when all other North American attempts failed. It is experimenting with Major League Baseball and the NBA. It is working with Real Madrid to rig its stadium with and broadcast matches in Vision OS format. When Apple fixes its screen supply problem we will see a consumer grade Apple Vision Pro, at a lower price, and it’ll have the content available to justify the purchase. When those content contracts come up for renewal who’s going to bid against Apple? I think the timing of the F1 distribution contract may be a strong indicator of when the Apple Vision Pro v2 may be announced. When that happens WS will have something they can model for future revenue and earnings forecasts (initial data provided by Apple). Revenue and earnings forecasts will expand dramatically (with no credible competition on the horizon), investors buy the future, future sentiment (expressed as a multiple) will expand as institutional demand for AAPL increases. In my opinion Apple has at least a 10 year lead in 3D technology. Any potential competitor has committed its future to, and is overly invested in, an AI albatross and may never catch up. They don’t have the resources to pay for both their AI commitment, and mount a legitimate assault on Apple’s 3D lead. There may be a need for all those AI data centers, although not what the builders imagined, as Vision OS servers. Frankly I don’t see that, that functionality will be handled by Apple developed data centers, equipped with Apple constructed servers from its Houston plant, and powered by Apple developed CPU/GPUs. Apple will control every aspect of the Vision stack. Does Apple need AI? Not as WS and the media envision it. There will be plenty of candidates slobbering over the prospect of Apple as a licensee. This is the basis for my oft stated belief that Apple’s leadership future is set for at least the next 5 to 10 years.'
  • Steven Philips on Apple honors students with disabilities (music video) - 'He’d find a reason to deport them all!'
  • Gregg Thurman on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - ' Dividing the next 4 quarters of forward earnings ($8.56) into today’s stock price ($286) yields 33.4 ISM. Roger you are a sweetheart. That’s exactly how earnings multiples should be calculated. A 33.4 ISM conveys to me that WS remains luke warm to Apple’s earnings power, which may explain why institutions are under weight AAPL. The hard part for investors is trying to forecast future earnings sentiment (described as a multiple). I think this may explain how PE multiples evolved to use trailing earnings vs future earnings. It’s simply easier, and results in concepts of good or bad. Different industries have historically different rates of revenue and earnings stability and growth. Growth rates in the auto industry are limited to replacements and very modest growth. The technology sector is constantly creating new product categories with rapid adoption (growth rates) until market saturation sets in. About that time new technologies create new capabilities and the cycle starts all over again. Tesla is following the cycle of a technology company. It has a high multiple because the market for EVs is immense, while the market for ICE’s is declining. Regardless of the sentiment towards Musk, Tesla is the world’s leader in EVs. It is the dominant player. Properly managed it will remain dominant until market saturation, warranting high multiples. The only threat to Tesla is the limited availability of battery rare earths, which is controlled by China. Rare earths aren’t really that rare. Processing plants for these materials are. Instead of subsidizing EV sales, we should be subsidizing rare earth processing plant construction. Bring the cost of batteries down and the cost of the vehicle will follow. But that’s a whole other topic. Good for you Roger. You get it.'
  • Gregg Thurman on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - ' Is there such a thing as future ISM? Yes, there is. ISM is my term for PE. Semantics matter. I think PE definition and use thereof distorts the reality of what it purports to convey. I think ISM more correctly describes the result of the calculation. It changes investors mindset of how to use the calculation result. For instance, there is no such thing as a good or bad ISM, it is what it is, measuring Investor Sentiment regarding an equity’s past performance and future prospects given trailing EPS numbers. A more accurate measure would be based on future earnings, but that number is rarely discussed, leaving us with the inferior trailing results. This leads to much higher multiples for firms with excellent future prospects, which is only natural. Multiples of 100, or more, are not unreasonable if future earnings can support it. Alternatively, low multiples are warranted if investors believe future earnings are going to be depressed. Multiples are not assigned by an unknown arbiter of value. They are awarded based on investors’ perception of future growth. By and large I think multiples, if using the conceptual definition of Investor Sentiment Multiple (ISM), is a reasonable depiction of value, provided you abandon the concept of good or bad.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'In the market cap race NVIDIA is at $4.41 trillion. Apple is closing in on the top spot at $4.23 trillion and Alphabet is approaching the $4 trillion club at $3.81 trillion. Gemini 3 has given the share price quite a boost and looking at today’s headlines OpenAI is feeling the heat from Alphabet’s success. The company spiked to new all-time highs on Friday. Is Alphabet delivering a better AI product?'
  • Joseph Bland on Loop Capital raises its Apple target $10 to $325 - 'Hi, Daniel. That certainly is the reason for the precipitous drop in late March, but was Apple all that vulnerable? The US market would hardly have been touched, and China owes a lot of its existing strength to Apple’s perennial presence there. I.e., it was always an overblown reaction at best. And Apple had begun dropping 3 months sooner, having retraced back almost to $200/share by mid-March. People conveniently forget the previous ~$260/share ATH hit in December, ‘24, which is almost exactly a mere 10% growth over that number almost a year later. Same company, the only difference being the underlying profitability is no longer masked like it was for the last year. At 80+, we don’t buy but only sell, so we have an excuse for not moving in that incredible buying opportunity. What’s everyone else’s?'
  • john brooks on Apple honors students with disabilities (music video) - 'Trump should watch this!'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Suddenly, the Street doesn't care about Apple AI - 'Yeah. What Rodney just said! Yesterday’s announcement on changes in the leadership team gave many of us (shareholders) confidence Apple will deliver soon on its promises made at WWDC to 2024 to developers, Apple product owners and shareholders. The iPhone 17 Pro Max in my pocket is the best iPhone ever and Apple deserves every bit of credit for delivering this fine piece of engineering to the world. In my view, the only reason the share price isn’t already over $300 is the delay in delivering a much anticipated (and long overdue!) upgrade to Siri.'
  • Hap Allen on Suddenly, the Street doesn't care about Apple AI - 'Yes: “Ducks in a row.” Great expression.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple at $286.19: Another day, another record close - 'Apple up $3.09 or 1.09% to close Tuesday trading at $286.19 with even more all-time highs! What a way to rock the day!'
  • Roger Schutte on IDC: Apple's iPhone shipments are setting records left and right - 'Gregg, I posted this to one of your comments from Nov…Gregg, questions on your post on 11/22 regarding ISM. Using 18% EPS growth for this quarter and 13% for the following 3 quarters, gets me to $8.56 EPS reported in Jan 27. Dividing the next 4 quarters of forward earnings ($8.56) into today’s stock price ($286) yields 33.4 ISM. This doesn’t seem right to me given today’s PE is about 38.2. As in it seems there should be a bigger gap. Am I doing this right? Are my growth percentages reasonable or too low? Yahoo Finance has a forward PE of 34.13 or a forward eps of $8.37. Re-reading your post above – you mention current ISM. Is there such a thing as future ISM? Thanks in advance!'
  • Roger Schutte on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Is this in a retirement account and for withdrawal this year or in a taxable investment account? asking as there are year end tax consequences in withdrawal or cap gains timing. Without knowing those answers…you could do half at both prices if these monies are not urgent or time critical. 60 days likely reaches out to after earnings release.'