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#76 | |
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Analysts makes far more educated guesses, but at the end of the day itīs just exactly that guesses. :-) I would point out though, that on a personal level I donīt think there is a genuine correlation between the share price drop, and Apples current moment. There is nothing that would indicate for me that Apple has lost its way, that their products suck more now than a year ago, or that customers have stopped buying Apple products. For me Apple seem as strong as ever, and that they are just getting started. Bring on the competition. |
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#77 | |
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I discount short-term stock price moves (anything less than a few months in my book) and believe in looking for trends, which tend to be reflected in PE. A compressing PE signals a market consensus that earnings growth rates are slowing down. This is actually the longline trend for AAPL going back over five years and more. So when the PE jumps as it did last year I figure the market is probably getting ahead of earnings, unless some new trend is taking hold, which I doubt. I believe that Apple is facing the strongest competitive headwinds they've experienced in some time; this doesn't spell gloom and doom, but it does mean we probably aren't going to see as many blowout earning reports. Expectations need to be more realistic. They'd become unrealistic last year.
__________________
*The season starts too early and finishes too late and there are too many games in between. Bill Veeck
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#78 |
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For what it's worth, per StreetInsider, the average 1-week change in AAPL stock price following earnings call is (+)2.9%. (I believe this is based on past 8 calls.) Granted, you should never base buying decisions with a week-long time frame, but it sort of calls into question the idea that AAPL goes down after earnings.
The only way AAPL's currently depressed P/E makes any sense is if you feel that earnings are going to go down by a good 20 or 30 percent - which seems extraordinarily unlikely. What's particularly funny about the current angst over AAPL earnings is that you could read posts from a year ago at this time and find exactly the same concerns - right before the earnings results beat consensus predictions by nearly 40%. |
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#79 |
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#80 | |
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Thanks for adding the statistic, but you can't kill that persistent myth with a tire iron.
__________________
*The season starts too early and finishes too late and there are too many games in between. Bill Veeck
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#81 |
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__________________
www.charlieegan3.com |
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#82 |
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Probably a $17-18 billion EBITA figure, blowing last year's out of the water which blew the previous one out of the water and so on. Apple's exponential growth knows no bounds. Onwards to $200 billion cash!
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#83 |
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No doubt! Apple has truly shown how to build a company - quality, simplicity and service. I don't think they will get to the trillion mark, but I'm sure they will remain one of the most valuable company's in the World.
__________________
"Twenty seconds of insane courage" iMac 27"| iPad 32GB | Canon 400D, 24-105mm f/4L & 50mm f/1.8
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#84 |
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Some sort of inverse straddle?
I note that almost no one here thinks the stock price will flat-line at the current level. Way up, way down, up then down, down then up, whatever. If I were a gambler, I think this might mean I should bet on the volatility by buying both puts and calls, and letting investors go epileptic over however the AAPL results turn out compared to the analyst delusions.
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#85 | |
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Talk like this reminds me of the classic story about JP Morgan and the shoeshine boy.
__________________
*The season starts too early and finishes too late and there are too many games in between. Bill Veeck
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#86 |
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#87 |
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#88 |
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Thought Iīd post my 2013 estimate prior to Q1 ER. Currently the share price is at $502USD. Here are my estimates:
Revenue: 202B. Profit: 90.6B Cash: $174B EPS: 60 Share price will probably be around $780USD by the end of the year. Up a bit from todays $502 :-) Total IOS devices sold 2013: 313.6mill iPhones: 2013: 187million 50% increase from 2012 125million up 73% from 72mil 2011 iPad: 2013: 98.6million 70% increase from 2012 58million up 80% from 32 2011 iPod: 2013: 28million -20% decrease from 2012: 35mil down 17% from 42mil 2011 |
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#89 | |
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#90 |
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Apple should in NO way help bail out the United States....
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#91 |
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Apple is sure to have had a blow out holiday quarter with the refreshed products lines. Preliminary numbers from Gartner are encouraging, showing a 5.4% US growth in a declining PC segment, even though IDC is claiming a slight decline (less than the overall market decline).
Of course, we're coming off the iPhone 5 launch quarter, so numbers there will be strong, no matter what people think. I think there won't be major surprises as far as earnings go for Q1 '13 (the holiday quarter Oct-Dec for Apple). What will be interesting in this call is what they see moving forward for Q213, whether their cut back on parts order is true and if it is, if the motivitation is really due to sagging demand (I doubt it) or really just a precaution to not repeat the earning's miss of Q312 due to channel inventory not being depleted from Q212.
__________________
"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#92 | |
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Either way I'm happy I just bought more stock. It's going up guaranteed! |
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