am wrote:Problem with these hot companies is that one slip up and they get clobbered. After a while, just meeting their earnings goal is not good enough for Wall Street. Remember Kodak, Xerox of the 70s how big they were?
And of course the amazing thing: Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) developed almost everything that mattered that distinguishes the personal computer as we know it from the minicomputers of the 1970s. Douglas Engelbart at Stanford Research Institute developed the mouse. But, everything else? BITBLT, overlapping windows, Ethernet, object-oriented programming, Paint, Draw, and last but certainly not least the GYPSY and BRAVO WYSIWYG editors and their "compound documents" (pictures in place with text). I don't know whether they deserve credit for the first use, but a very early use of the phrase "personal computer" occurred in the title of the 1979 paper, Alto: A Personal Computer).am wrote:Problem with these hot companies is that one slip up and they get clobbered. After a while, just meeting their earnings goal is not good enough for Wall Street. Remember Kodak, Xerox of the 70s how big they were?
airahcaz wrote:I suppose the same logic applied when it went from 250 to 500, and for that matter 125 to 250, 62 to 125, 30 to 60, 15 to 30, and when I owned the stock at 2 and sold at 3.
No one knows right?
Tue Dec 18, 2012 4:30 pm, airahcaz wrote:If not to post this, please delete, or let me know and I will delete.
What are folks thoughts on AAPL getting back to 700? and for that matter, 1000?
Shares of Apple Inc. (AAPL) fell 2.5% to $489.40, a day after the technology company's drop pushed two of the three benchmark indexes into the red as Apple lost nearly 4% on reports it had cut orders for iPhone 5 parts on weak demand -- that erased $17 billion from the stock market.

FNK wrote:AAPL $486
Ouch.
jdilla1107 wrote:AAPL is close to 4% of of total stock market index.![]()
So, we're all in this together.
bru wrote:jdilla1107 wrote:AAPL is close to 4% of of total stock market index.![]()
So, we're all in this together.
Exactly. So make sure to temper those gleeful comments about it's demise.
I'm still up 337% in 4.25 years. By the end of this week, who knows? My individual AAPL holding amounts to 1.5% of my total portfolio so I have no real reason to be concerned.
airahcaz wrote:We'll all know Jan 23rd right?
Tue Dec 18, 2012 4:30 pm, airahcaz wrote:If not to post this, please delete, or let me know and I will delete.
What are folks thoughts on AAPL getting back to 700? and for that matter, 1000?
airahcaz wrote:Yup
See thishttp://finance.yahoo.com/news/tom-demark-apples-stock-bottomed-141247142.html
DeMark uses a number of indicators for market timing, and he told CNBC they are all aligning strongly in Apple's favor:
This is something akin to the low we had December 4 on the Shanghai Index, when we turned positive at the exact low.
This looks like a very strong rally of at least 22 percent. We wouldn't be surprised tomorrow to see Apple gap up above $494 or $495, despite trading lower in the after-market today, and then just move forward right from there and be strong for the next couple of weeks and reach $600. We think the low is in...today or tomorrow.
indian86 wrote:bought some at 497 today. just about 4% of my port. 704 to 484 in two months for arguably the smartest company in the world on no material bad news is too quick, even for the fast changing tech world.
indian86 wrote:Besides, all my daughter wanted for xmas was a Iphone and she got it and she loves it!!!! I mean, we do trade AAPL now based on our daughters opinions right?
airahcaz wrote:Closed a very even, oddly, 500.
airahcaz wrote:Dam it Apple.
market timer wrote: There is definitely some contagion at work here, in that by having the stock occupy some mental bandwidth, you have already made some psychic investment. By not buying, you are emotionally short.
baw703916 wrote:If one if of a mind to pick individual stocks, my advice is to use the Boredom Screen. Companies that people react to with disdain or better yet, indifference, have the best chance of being undervalued.
BHCadet wrote:I've lots of Apple stocks.![]()
Based on the Portfolio X-Ray of my funds from Morningstar, I've $38,000 in Apple Inc.
But, I only have $4,500 with Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.
market timer wrote:baw703916 wrote:If one if of a mind to pick individual stocks, my advice is to use the Boredom Screen. Companies that people react to with disdain or better yet, indifference, have the best chance of being undervalued.
That's what I'm thinking as well. Probably leads to a small value tilt.
market timer wrote:I've long since given up buying individual stocks, so have been immune to the rise and fall of AAPL. However, it's striking to me how widely discussed this stock is. Virtually everyone I know who buys individual stocks owns it or has recently sold it.
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