Apple
Apple CEO Steve Jobs Says Board Has Granted Him Medical Leave Of Absence
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/17/2011 08:45 -0500Jobs also says that he will continue as CEO and be involved in major strategic decisions for the company. As a reminder Apple accounts for about 20% of the Nasdaq. As a further reminder, the last time it was even rumored the COO was leaving, the stock tumbled $20 in the span of a few milliseconds. German listed Apple shares fall 1.8% following the news.
Apple Asked Blackstone Finance Chief To Be Its CFO
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2011 14:11 -0500Some more trouble in Borg paradise? After Steve Jobs' health issues two years ago resulted in one of the biggest selloffs in Apple stock in recent history, is the trouble shifting to the CFO post, currently filled by Peter Oppenheimer? Bloomberg reports: "Apple Inc. approached Blackstone Group LP Chief Financial Officer Laurence Tosi to become its finance chief, three people with knowledge of the matter said." But why? "Steve Dowling, a spokesman for Apple, said the company is “not conducting a CFO search.” Current CFO Peter Oppenheimer “loves the company and is extremely happy in his role,” Dowling said." So someone is not telling the whole story. And that is something Apple fans certainly do not like.
Apple Is Now Held By 190 Hedge Funds, And Other Groupthink Observations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2011 13:39 -0500Perusing the latest hedge fund trend monitor from Goldman Sachs, we find that the world's biggest groupthink stock and hedge fund hotel, Apple has just been upgraded from 5 stars to 6 stars. Compared to our last update, when we uncovered that a whopping 181 funds were long the name, this number has subsequently risen even more, and most recently 190 hedge funds (not including mutual funds) were long the name. Should the company, which is priced beyond perfection, have some unpleasant news to report ever in its future, just hedge funds will need at least 2 straight days to liquidate their holdings in the name.
Reggie Middleton Takes The Challenge To Goldman Sach’s Apple Proclamation One Step Farther, Apple’s Closed System Risks Failure!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 12/17/2010 11:22 -0500Reggie Middleton vs Goldman Sachs' marketing department for investment banking, brokerage and trading (otherwise known as their sell side analysts), round 4. Who has been the most accurate in the past?
Reggie Middleton Takes The Challenge To Goldman Sach’s Apple Proclamation One Step Farther, Apple’s Closed System Risks Failure!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 12/15/2010 10:55 -0500It appears as if I wrinkled a few feathers of the birds that are doing God’s work with my missive “Goldman’s $430 Target, Screaming Buy On Apple At Its All Time High Is In Direct Contravention To Reggie Middleton’s Logic – Who’s Right? Well, Who Has Been More Right In The Past?“. This is a good thing! A little creative destruction and anarchy is positive for the complacent masses. I say we take this up a notch, pull down our pants and see who is truly the most intellectually endowed...
Goldman’s $430 Target, Screaming Buy On Apple At Its All Time High Is In Direct Contravention To Reggie Middleton’s Logic – Who’s Right? Well, Who Has Been More Right In The Past?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 12/14/2010 10:01 -0500It's Reggie Middleton vs Goldman again. This time on Apple. Who has the better track record? Let's delve into the logic of an Apple buy and realize who is making the recommendation and why...
Goldman Conviction List Update: 53 Buys, 1 Sell, Apple Added Today As Goldman Top Ticks Stock
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2010 17:52 -0500One needs look no further than the recent update of the Goldman conviction list (Americas) to get a sense of how Goldman is positioning its clients: with 53 Buys, and just 1 Sell, the list is the most skewed it has ever been. That said, we are confident that going long Lockheed (the only Sell on the list) will outperform a basket of all the longs that Goldman is pitching, among which most notably Apple, which in a last ditch attempt to retain the momentum was added to the Conviction Buy list late last night, which is the most definitive factor that the stock has now topped.
Simon Black On Apple As A Symbol Of "Peak Empire"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2010 13:35 -0500"Sovereign Man" Simon Black's daily musing comes today from the Franz Josef glacier in New Zealand where he contemplates the present and future of a civilization in which the biggest company in the world (soon enough) will be one that creates a la carte fads and focuses on one-time mindless gratification. "We live in rather interesting times, though; the technology sector’s
engineering brilliance goes where demand and financial incentives are
the greatest… and for now, that seems to be designing devices that can
mimic flatulence or geolocate the nearest pizzeria. This will change eventually as the problems worsen and society’s
priorities shift… but for now, I think that Apple’s soaring profits and
society’s evangelical devotion to its products may be a social
reflection of the final days of Rome." If Apple is a sign of the end of empire, we would be even more curious with Simon's take on Netflix' symbology (which continues trading at such ludicrous forward multiples that excel goes straight to the BSOD when any modeling is attempted).
Apple, Google, NewsCorp and the Future of Content: Interview with Michael Whalen
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/07/2010 21:47 -0500Thought we'd make an evergreen on zero hedge out of this discussion about the future of content with my composer brother Michael Whalen that we published today in The IRA. Happy, safe and prosperous New Year to all. Oh, and to my friends in Japan: "Tora! Tora!,Tora!"
Even Steve Wozniak, the Co-Founder of Apple, Made a Freudian Slip Extolling the Virtues and Inevitable Dominance of Android!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 11/19/2010 06:41 -0500Steve Wozniack, Apple's cofounder, was actually quite accurate in his rather stark admission that Android will overcome Apple in the mobile phone market just as Windows overcame Apple. Lest anyone forget, Bill Gates and crew nearly put Apple out of business due to margin compression and the commoditization of Apple's high end - and eventually overpriced products. Android is doing the same, simply on a very compressed time horizon.
Was Standard Oil The First Apple "Elastic Demand"-Type Monopoly?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/13/2010 12:29 -0500
While reading 13D.com's latest newsletter (one of the best, but Kiril you have a mistake in point 1 w/r/t QE2 - the POMO 17-30 schedule is not 9%, it is 4%), we stumbled across this terrific excerpt from "Memoirs of David Rockefeller", which highlights the exploits of John D. Rockefeller, Sr., the man who out of nothing went on to create the world's biggest and most important company in the history of the world - Standard Oil, and in doing so effectively created the US corporation in its modern form, as well as defining the concept of the monopoly. That he is also the patriarch of the Rockefeller legacy, which has since shaped the face of modern capitalism, is secondary. It is no surprise that during his time, he was viewed in diametrical opposites by the general public - he was either loved or hated, pretty much like all men of relevance. While we will ignore any ethical claims, what we find most fascinating from the below excerpt, is the purported approach which Rockefeller took when creating the Standard Oil monopoly, one which was premised upon "elastic demand" or the same razor-razorblade model of vertical integration that is exhibited best by none other than the company which comes closest to an Std Oil type of monopoly-presence: Apple (and just so there is no confusion, we refer of course to the distributed content, commission-based revenue stream model). Which leads us to a few tangential thoughts, chief among them - is Apple planting the seeds of its own destruction courtesy of its unmitigated success? The 1911 decision to break up the Standard Oil monopoly was as much driven out of economic principles, as one of populist retaliation. It is no wonder that Apple is now the second largest company in the US by market cap... just behind Standard Oil offspring Exxon.
Groupthink: $18 Billion In Losses For The Top Apple/Cisco Holders In Past Two Days
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 13:50 -0500There is a reason why groupthink is often the most dangerous concept in the financial industry. When it works: it makes everybody richer. When it fails, it results in the premature end of many asset managers. Nowhere is this better seen today than in the top holders of Apple stock, which according to CapIQ, is held by 1,933 institutions that have at least one share holding in the name, and 402, which have at least 100,000 shares. Cross-referencing the top 100 holders of AAPL stock with the top 100 holders of a recent tech casualty, Cisco, shows that the of the top 100 Apple holders (one of them being Steve Jobs), 93 are also present in Cisco. And a result of the past two-days' drubbing in these two names, these massively cross-correlated top holders in the two stocks have seen over $18 billion worth of P&L losses in the past two days alone. Now many will respond that these firms have also experienced massive profits on the upside, which of course would be correct. However, what many will also conveniently ignore, is that these very firms will all too often leverage unrealized profits and use these as margin to purchase additional stocks, in essence re-creating a new cost basis with every single remargining of the stock. Therefore, should there be a sell of in Cisco, or heaven forbid, Apple, it will pull the rug from the entire market. It also explains why mysterious buying will often materialize: the last thing the market can afford is a massive domino-style sell off due to the plunge in one single name. So far today, Apple dodged the bullet. Cisco still has not. At some point these mutual and hedge funds, however, will receive margin calls to fund over $18 billion in cash collateral, especially since mutual free fund cash is currently at all time lows just over 3%. When that happens, not even Brian Sack will save the market.
Big Money Starts to Dump Apple - A Rational Move As I Warned of Margin Compression on CNBC Hours Before Apple Announced Compression
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 11/12/2010 13:36 -0500On Apple and Heebner cleaning house, whether he did it for liquidity reasons or not, the writing is on the Wall for Apple and the days of no competition high margin iPhone sales are over. Android is in town and has already taken over the lead. Add to that the fact that the equity markets are rather iffy to begin with, people are still heavily indebted and Apple caters to those who pay premiums, and the Apple sale was a no-brainer. Of course, I explained this in detail a month ago, but I guess it took time for the filings to come to light.
Abandon Apple Ship? Ken Heebner Dumps Almost Entire Apple Stake
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 12:16 -0500
Is the game theory defection dump of the world's biggest hedge fund hotel starting? In a just released 13F filing, Ken Heebner's Capital Growth Management has disclosed that he has reduced his holdings in Apple almost to zero. After holding 1.15 million AAPL shares as of June 30 (which made him holder #100 in the name sorted by size), Ken Heebner who is a regular guest on CNBC courtesy of his bullish tendencies, sold virtually his entire stake, leaving him with just 111,000 shares. One can only speculate about the causes, although it is notable that the last time Heebner did a comparable dump was in late 2008, when after the Lehman bankruptcy he liquidated half his million share stake. Is Heebner sensing something comparable to what happened in late 2008 on the horizon? Or was he satisfying margin calls? Or, most innocently, did he just sell what is probably his most profitable position, "just because" - inquiring minds want to know. We will keep an eye out on who else dumped Apple as the barrage of Q3 13F issuance begins today and ends on Monday.
The Apple Event Horizon
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 10/31/2010 03:34 -0500The fact that robots are POMO juicing AAPL's shares and Google also has grand designs on the mobile/smart phone space, shouldn't detract from one simple fact, Apple designs and manufactures great products many of which happen to be game changers.





