Apple 2.0

Mac news from outside the reality distortion field

The day Tim Cook calmed the waters


Adam Lashinsky's fascinating profile of Tim Cook in the new issue of Fortune reminds me of the day last February when Apple's (AAPL) chief operating officer single-handedly reversed a slide in the company's share price that had been going for two months.

Here's what I wrote the next day:

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It’s perhaps a measure of how badly Apple investors needed to hear from someone  – anyone – high up at the company, that all it took to move the stock nearly 4% in after-hours trading on Wednesday was for COO Tim Cook to answer a few questions.

The stock had fallen more than 80 points since December and has been getting pummeled in recent weeks by rumors of falling component orders and reports from bearish analysts – chief among them Bernstein Research’s Toni Sacconaghi, who estimated last week that Apple would miss its 2008 target of 10 million iPhones by more than 2 million units. With nobody from Apple stepping up to speak to these issues, the stock had nowhere to go but down.

But yesterday afternoon Cook talked for 45 minutes before at packed house at the Goldman Sachs Technology Investment Symposium, answering the questions that had been piling up – about inventory levels, iPod sales, unlocked iPhones, the timing of price cuts and the growth potential of the Mac.

There wasn’t much news – for the most part, he reiterated the company line – but for investors there was clearly something reassuring about hearing Apple’s strategy laid out clearly, calmly and for the most part without hype. That is to say, by someone other than Steve Jobs.

The main news to come out of the session was Cook’s repeated assurances that Apple is committed to hitting that 10 million iPhone target in 2008 and will do whatever it takes to make it – even if it means offering the iPhone to multiple carriers in some countries and selling unlocked phones. “We’re not married to any business model,” Cook said.

He also described the surprisingly large number of hacked iPhones turning up around the world as a good problem to have. When users are “stepping over each other” to get to a device, it’s a sign of pent-up worldwide demand.

He touched on most of the hot topics, saying among other things …

  • There is “huge headroom” in the Macintosh market
  • Apple TV is still a “nichey” product but has “enormous opportunity”
  • iPod shuffle sales were down 17% globally last Q, thus the price cut
  • 40% of iPod sales in U.S. are to new customers; that doesn’t feel like a saturated market to him
  • The iPod touch is the beginning of a new mobile platform
  • The $200 iPhone price cut last September was in part to grow the user base and attract developers
  • No more detail about the SDK until next week to keep “the element of surprise”

Nothing terribly surprising there. But for some investors tuning in to the webcast, what he had to say was less important than how he said it.

“I was just impressed as I could be,” wrote one listener on TMO’s influential Apple Finance Board. “I am always haunted by the vulnerability of Apple’s shareholders like myself if something should happen to Steve Jobs. For the first time, listening yesterday to Tim Cook made me feel confident that in him was a person who could ably step in if Jobs fell off the earth.” (link)

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We've asked Apple Investor Relations if they could repost their recording of Cook's comments, which was available at Apple.com last February as a QuickTime file.

Meanwhile, I highly recommend Lashinsky's piece in Fortune. It's the best profile of Tim Cook I've ever read. See Apple: The genius behind Steve.

Recessions don't last forever. And Apple's recent quarter profits were strong. It's a good time to buy, if you plan on holding more than a year.

Posted By TomB: November 10, 2008 8:45 PM

At a price/earnings ratio of about 18, Apple is selling WAY below where it should be. Is this about some nascent fear over Steve Jobs' health? I don't think so. It's fear all right, in all its unreasoning glory. But it's the other "jobs" that've got people worried.

People are starting to realize just how precarious things are. Jobs are getting scarce. And suddenly you realize that if you lose your job, you might not be able to find a new one. And then you realize that without a job, you can't pay your mortgage, and you can't afford health care.

When a Titanic sinks, it pulls down a whole lot with it, including things that normally would float – like Apple Computer. That's the bad news. The good news is that eventually people will come to their senses and realize that it's better to be hanging onto something that's going to float to the surface – like Apple Computer.

I agree with Cramer. I believe that Apple is a "tell" for this market. I believe that you'll know when the market truly hits bottom when Apple finally starts on that long journey back up to the top.

Posted By Sacto Joe, Sacramento, CA: November 10, 2008 4:09 PM
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Philip Elmer-DeWitt

Philip Elmer-DeWitt
Steve Jobs, goes the old joke at Apple, is surrounded by a reality distortion field; get too close and you believe what he's saying. Apple has made believers out of millions of customers — and made a lot of investors rich — but Philip Elmer-DeWitt believes that an ounce of skepticism never hurts when writing about the company. He should know. He's been covering Apple – and watching Steve Jobs operate — since 1982.
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