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Share buybacks mean that Apple hasn’t actually reclaimed $1 trillion crown

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European Commission could get even tougher on tech in 2020
There's still a bit more that Apple needs to do.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Yesterday, numerous news outlets (including ourselves, based on data from Yahoo Finance) reported that Apple had reclaimed its $1 trillion crown.

However, a filing made late Wednesday reveals that Apple has not actually hit that milestone just yet. A company’s market cap is calculated by multiplying a company’s outstanding shares by the market price of one share. As a result of Apple’s continuing share buyback program, there are fewer outstanding shares available.

Apple is valued at $1 trillion once more

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Cash app with cash money
That sound you hear is glasses clinking in Cupertino!
Photo: Ian Fuchs/Cult of Mac

Apple has won back its hard-fought $1 trillion market cap, after share prices rose following yesterday’s earnings triumph.

AAPL is currently trading at $213.20, giving it a market cap of just over $1 trillion. Shares rose 6% in early morning trading. This is a particularly triumphant moment for Apple after its stock price temporarily tanked at the end of last year.

Buy! Buy! Gene Munster thinks Apple stock is poised to explode

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Tim Cook earnings apple
Investor thinks Apple stock will shoot up 70% in the next two years.
Illustration: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

If you’re anything like me, you perennially feel like you missed the best time to invest in Apple stock.

In fact, if Loup Ventures analyst and investor Gene Munster is correct, this may be the perfect time to invest all your worldly possessions in AAPL. According to Munster, Apple stock is poised to rocket up 70% in the next two years. That would make Apple a $1.5 trillion company.

Despite negative headlines, Apple shares just keep going up

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Apple waives developer fees for nonprofits, others in 8 additional countries
AAPL is up 43% this year.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Apple’s second quarter earnings are going to be down from the same quarter last year. But despite Apple continuing to bear the brunt of negative headlines, its stock price just keeps going up.

A new article from CNBC notes that Apple shares are up 43% since January. That’s pretty darn impressive for a company whose biggest product, the iPhone, may have seen the end of its major growth.

Apple expected to pass on some of its massive cash pile to investors

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Apple is worth more than the entire US energy sector combined
At least, according to Wells Fargo.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Analysts at Wells Fargo think that Apple’s going to start handing some of its massive cash pile to investors by increasing its dividend.

Ahead of Apple’s Q2 earnings later this month, Wells Fargo suggests that Apple will be looking to pass on some of the money that it’s accrued in the U.S. through repatriation. The firm also thinks that Apple is going to raise the number of shares that it buys back.

Pair of lawsuits claim Apple mislead investors on falling iPhone sales

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shares
iPhone stock took a plunge earlier this year.
Photo: Buster Hein/Cult of Mac

Did Apple mislead investors by not coming clean sooner about the drop in iPhone sales? That’s what a pair of new class action lawsuits suggest.

The suits were filed by City of Roseville employees’ retirement fund and the Schall Law Firm, a national shareholder rights litigation firm. They allege that Apple made false or misleading statements that failed to properly disclose its iPhone sales stumble. This could, they suggest, amount to securities fraud.

Apple stock could do something it’s not managed for 8 years

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apple stock price
Apple stock has had a whirlwind year!
Photo: Buster Hein/Cult of Mac

It can’t be said that Apple stock has had a boring last year. In twelve months, we’ve seen Apple hit $1 trillion in value. Then the stock tanked and AAPL entered the sinister-sounding “death cross.”

Now it’s rebounded and, if things continue to go well through today, it will achieve a feat it hasn’t managed since October 2010. That’s back when Steve Jobs was running Apple.

Apple’s ‘show time’ keynote leaves Wall Street cold

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Apple TV+ could have 26 million paying subs by 2025; 2.6 million currently
Apple's TV+ service has promise. But is it enough to excite investors?
Photo: Apple

Apple stock closed down 1.03 percent yesterday as Wall Street continues to show relative indifference to Monday’s “show time” event.

While AAPL share prices hit $190.57, it finished out the day at $186.79. This came after a 2 percent dip the day before. It follows a media event that was big on talk, but relatively small on detail.

Apple within striking distance of reclaiming $1 trillion crown

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European Commission could get even tougher on tech in 2020
Apple could once again recapture its $1 trillion valuation.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

As excitement builds around Apple’s Monday event, the company is edging closer to reclaiming its $1 trillion market cap.

Apple stock enjoyed its biggest rally since January on Thursday. It closed at $195.09 per share, making its ninth positive day in the past 10 trading days. Having added $33 billion to its market cap on Thursday alone, Apple is currently valued at $919.9 billion.

Warren Buffett isn’t rushing to stock up on Apple shares

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Buffett
Warren Buffett has been a massive Apple cheerleader.
Photo: CNBC

Warren Buffett has been one of Apple’s biggest investor cheerleaders. However, the 88-year-old super investor says that he’s not going to be adding to his holdings unless prices go down.

“If it were cheaper, we’d be buying it. We aren’t buying it here,” Buffett told CNBC‘s “Squawk Box.”Apple: I don’t see myself selling – the lower it goes, the better, I like it, obviously.”

Apple shares stumble as Warren Buffett’s firm trims holdings

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Buffett
Warren Buffett has been a massive Apple cheerleader.
Photo: CNBC

In good times, the “Warren Buffett effect” has caused Apple shares to soar — by showing everyone that the world’s most famous investor believes in Apple. However, the opposite is also true: An apparent second thought on the part of Buffett’s firm Berkshire Hathaway can cause shares to fall.

That’s what happened this week, when Berkshire Hathaway was revealed to have slightly reduced its Apple holdings. Responding to the news, Apple shares fell 0.5 percent in pre-market trading.

Apple briefly regains place as most valuable public company

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Tim Cook talks diversity, sustainability, and coming out as gay
Apple was back at the top of the mountain yesterday!
Photo: Apple

For a long time, Apple stock was predictable in the way that 1980s Mike Tyson was predictable: steamrolling through challengers as it firmly held onto its status as all-conquering champion.

That changed last year as Apple’s market cap fell behind Amazon, Google, and even old rival Microsoft. But yesterday, for a few moments, it climbed back to the top of the mountain as the world’s most valuable company once again. For a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment, that is!

Apple passed on share buybacks while they were cheap

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European Commission could get even tougher on tech in 2020
Apple stock tumbled at the end of last year. Apple didn't buy low, though.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

During good times, Apple’s record-breaking share buyback has been credited with helping with a stock market boom.

Something weird happened in December, however. When Apple’s stock price was tumbling from its record high, Apple stopped buying back shares. Clearly the whole “buy low, sell high” thing doesn’t always apply!

Disappointing holiday earnings don’t stop Apple shares from rebounding

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Cash app with cash money
Apple's on its way back up.
Photo: Ian Fuchs/Cult of Mac

Apple may have suffered a few bruising months, but it seems that investors aren’t ready to lose faith in the Cupertino giant.

Despite Apple announcing disappointing holiday earnings, shares in the company rebounded today. Having performed strongly in pre-market trading, they are currently valued at — time of writing –$161.44. That’s the highest AAPL has been since the middle of December.

Another analyst thinks Apple shares are going cheap

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money
If you're looking to invest in Apple, this might be the time!
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Another analyst has declared that Apple stock is currently undervalued following on from yesterday’s earnings call.

“The stock is cheap, I mean, it’s selling at low multiples,” King Lip, chief strategist at Baker Avenue Asset Management, told CNBC’s Squawk Box on Wednesday. However, Lip said that Apple is going to have to prove itself with a “killer app or killer product” sometime in the next 12 months.

Shark Tank star thinks it could be the right time to invest in Apple

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O'Leary
Kevin O'Leary previously sold off his AAPL shares due to iPhone concerns.
Photo: CNBC

Apple stock is down right now — and if you’re a potential investor looking to dive in, that’s good news.

At least, that’s according to Shark Tank star and chairman of O’Shares ETF Investments, Kevin O’Leary. In a new interview, O’Leary notes how, “Apple is getting cheap again.” Despite previously selling off his Apple stock due to the iPhone decline, O’Leary now says he’s tempted to invest again.

FAANG stocks are bouncing back — except Apple

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apple earnings
"I think what Tessa’s saying is that you haven’t bounced back."
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

FAANG stocks suffered a massive dip before the holidays, wiping out $1 trillion in combined value. Now they’re bouncing back — with one notable Apple-shaped exception.

While Facebook, Google, Netflix and Amazon have all gained between 10.7 percent and a massive 50 percent since Christmas Eve, Apple is severely lagging. It’s up just 5.5 percent over the same period.

Apple market cap falls behind Amazon, Microsoft and Google

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money
Apple's had a rough few months.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Apple shares suffered their worst day since January 2013 yesterday, declining almost 10 percent in a single day. Since its valuation peak of $1.1 trillion in 2018, Apple has lost approximately $450 billion of its market cap.

Having been the world’s most valuable public company, Apple now sits behind Microsoft, Amazon and Google parent company Alphabet among the top-valued tech giants.

Apple shares plummet following Tim Cook letter

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Tim Cook earnings apple
AAPL shares declined in after-hours trading.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

AAPL shares fell steeply in after-hours trading on Wednesday, after Tim Cook acknowledged that Apple’s earnings would underperform its own guidance for Q4 2018.

Shares fell by more than 7.4 percent, declining as low as $146.22. That’s the lowest that Apple has hit since July 12, 2017. It means that Apple has lost a massive 35.5 percent of its value in just three months.

AAPL experiences massive share price rise

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apple stock price
Gene Munster predicts big things for Apple in 2019.
Photo: Buster Hein/Cult of Mac

Apple got a late Christmas gift on Wednesday, when its AAPL stock experienced the stock’s biggest rise in five years.

While AAPL is still down considerably from the $1 trillion+ high point it hit earlier in 2018, it’s a strong positive move. And one analyst thinks that Apple’s set to be the top-performing FAANG stock in 2019, too.

Apple stock falls to $155, entering a ‘death cross’

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Death cross
It's not been a great few months for Apple.
Screenshot: CNBC

I didn’t know what a “death cross” was when it comes to stocks, but it certainly doesn’t sound like the kind of thing investors clink glasses to celebrate.

In fact, it’s the point at which a stock’s 50-day moving average crosses below its 200-day moving average. It can reportedly be an accurate predictor of a bear market, a steep downward trend in the stock market. And Apple apparently is one of multiple stocks headed that way.

Microsoft and Amazon have both overtaken Apple in market cap

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Apple is worth more than the entire US energy sector combined
Apple is now behind where it was at the start of the year.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Apple has done a whole lot in 2018 but, from a stock price perspective, none of it matters. That’s because Apple’s declining stock price means that the company has now officially lost money this year.

AAPL finished 2017 at $169.23. At time of writing, it is trading at $164.48. Overall, it’s now down around 1 percent year-on-year. In the process, it’s fallen behind some major rivals.

If you picked Apple’s IPO over Microsoft’s, you can start crying now

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Microsoft Windows
Apple may be the cooler company, but Microsoft's where the money is.
Photo: Microsoft

If you’d had the foresight to invest in Apple and Microsoft back when they first went public, it’s no secret that you’d be sitting on a big old pile of cash today.

But which company would have made you more money? CNBC recently crunched the numbers and, well, the results are somewhat surprising.

Apple and suppliers suffer a bruising day on stock market

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money
AAPL is having a tough time right now. At least comparatively.
Photo illustration: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Apple stock took another plunge yesterday, finishing down 4.4 percent. The reason for the fall is continuing concerns about the iPhone, which have caused numerous analysts to downgrade their price targets for AAPL.

It’s not just Apple that’s being affected, either. The company’s suppliers have also been hit by fears about the future of iPhone sales. Multiple suppliers associated with Apple have seen their stock prices decline by up to 5 percent as a result.

5 reasons Apple’s stock price is tanking right now

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Several factors are driving down the Apple stock price.
Apple has lost 20 percent of its value this month.
Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac

Struggling to understand how Apple stock erased more value in the last six weeks than it made in its first quarter-century?

It’s bloody complicated, but these five reasons help explain Apple’s plunging stock price.