How high will AAPL fly?
Wall Street, caught flat footed by Apple's latest earnings, issues a slew of new price targets
Having scrambled to catch up to Apple's (AAPL) rising share price in advance of the company's quarterly earnings report, analysts fell over themselves the next day issuing price targets to reflect the buying orgy that took the stock over $202 a share in after-hours trading Monday.
According to the running list maintained at AAPLinvestors.net, 23 analysts raised their targets on Tuesday, to prices that ranged from $210 (Goldman Sach's David Bailey) to $280 (UBS' Maynard Ums).
The AAPLinvestor list, maintained as a labor of love by a former adman (and Apple shareholder) named Terry Gregory, is copied below the fold. [Note Gregory does not include Jim Cramer's price target; you can draw your own conclusions.]
See also:
- Apple earnings set new record; shares explode in after-hours trading
- Apple earnings: How the analysts got it so wrong
- Rethinking Apple's price targets
- Apple analysts scramble to catch up
[Follow Philip Elmer-DeWitt on Twitter @philiped]
Apple daytrading: How to cash in on the Macworld keynote effect
The buzz among Apple (AAPL) traders today is a thought experiment that Matt Haughey worked up at A Whole Lotta Nothing. He writes
A few months ago I was thinking about Apple’s rise in value after the iPhone and how Steve Jobs does a great keynote every year, and naturally I thought “I wonder if there’s a way to make money off quick investments around the keynotes?” Then I thought “What if you did this every year, for just a day or two of investment?”
Haughey worked the numbers and the result is the chart above, which he calls the Keynote Index Fund (click chart to view full size). His conclusion: if you had invested in his hypothetical fund for the past two years, you would have realized a healthy 7.3% profit over 24 hours and 11.9% over 48 hours. The longer term results are not quite so impressive. Over the past decade, the fund gained 1.2% over 24 hours and 2.2% over 48.
Of course, long-term Apple investors have done considerably better. Haughey points out that if you had bought $10,000 worth of Apple stock in 1997 and held it the whole time, it would be worth $525,187 today.
Haughey's methodology has been raked over the coals rather thoroughly at MetaTalk, where it has been pointed out in several ways that hindsight is enormously seductive but not much help in picking stocks.
Curiously, Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster performed a thought experiment similar to Haughey's last month and arrived at the opposite conclusion. Reviewing Apple share prices in the month before and the month after Macworld over the past three years, he noted that the stock tends to rise in advance of the keynote and to fall afterward — or at least it did two years out of three (see chart at right). His analysis suggests the old Wall Street adage: buy on the buzz, sell on the news.
UPDATE: Speaking for the bulls at The Mac Observer's Apple Finance Board, reader Tommo_UK looks beyond the Macworld effect to offer this sensible advice:
The "clever" trade for early 2008 was to buy sub-$200 and sell in the run-up to Macworld, and then buy the "sell the news reaction" afterwards for a run-up into earnings, but this strategy has now become so well-discussed and widespread that its pretty much a given and is probably itself going to be the subject of predatory manipulation by larger players. Perhaps the alternative trade is simply to recognise that the earnings growth machine is only just revving up, courtesy of the Mac market share increase and iPhone deferred revenue/subscriber revenue sharing and step aside from being whipsawed by these crooks, and simply hold as large a position as you can comfortably achieve which won't result in you being whipsawed/liquidated by wild 10-20% swings. (link)
Red flags and roadblocks for Apple investors
There's a fascinating discussion underway on The Mac Observer's Apple Finance Board — one of my favorite places for tracking the sentiments of Apple (AAPL) investors.
The participants on AFB tend to be bullish on Apple and long the stock, but they're smart investors and have good antennae for anything that could affect their holdings — up or down. So I was interested to see how they would respond when a member who calls himself (or herself) "lumi" opened a new thread early this morning with these questions:
What are the chief potential stumbling blocks, things that *could* either delay or derail AAPL's projected growth trajectory? What events would be red flags or precursors to correction or erosion?
The early responders have taken the challenge seriously, as they usually do on AFB, and offered answers that are quite insightful. The most interesting so far was posted by Alexis W. Cabot, an investor based in Rome. With his permission, I quote it in full:
Steve Jobs continued leadership of the company is still essential. We all know how his idea of what works and what doesn't permeates the decision thinking process at Apple, but Apple must learn to do without him, otherwise it will not be a great company. General Electric has done a great job at creating internal leaders that are excellent managers and have kept the company at the top of corporate America for a century. Apple must have it's own management creation process in place.
Corporate hubris. Signs that the company starts believing it can do no wrong and that customers will buy anything they produce will be when the company has peaked. Apple went through this phase in the late 1980's and we all know how that ended. Apple's insistence on revenue sharing with the networks just to sell a Jesus Phone would be nice for us shareholders, but there is a wider world out there that has laws against such restrictions on trade. I hope that Apple/SJ doesn't shoot itself in the foot if it insists too much on these revenue sharing deals.
Inability to build lasting partnerships. As SJ himself said at All Things Digital that Apple has to learn how to make better partnerships. Never has Apple needed more content and networking partners than before. It needs to work with music and movie companies, with it's own set of histrionics, and then with the highly regulated and staid cell-phone networks.
Souring US relations with China and the rest of the world. A trade war between the incumbent superpower and the aspiring one are likely to derail Apple's (and most of corporate America) growth. It will be more expensive to outsource and then sell to China, which has one of the most rapidly growing and homogeneous middle classes of the world. Given the poor job the US has done in managing its international relations, this is a growing possibility. (link)
You can follow the discussion on AFB. It starts here.
UPDATE: This topic is still going strong on the Apple Finance Board, and includes some remarks that were ported over from the comments here. Below the fold, a summary by "lumi" of the first day's posts.


