Analyst triggers stock surge; flash sales may tumble 66 percent

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
An investor note by Thomas Weisel Partners has triggered a rush on Apple stock after suggesting that the iPhone and Mac would drive Apple sales for years. Also, iSuppli sees a lack of flash orders from Apple; Microsoft and Yahoo have traded shots over a takeover bid; and Apple may take the matter of an 8800 GT upgrade card into its own hands.



Analyst touts iPhone, Mac as key drivers



Thomas Weisel Partners analyst Doug Reid launched a rush on Apple stock Monday with a research note that pointed to strong long-term growth at Apple for at least the next two years.



The expert claims that Apple will continue to draw in customers through both a sustained "leadership of the aesthetic" as well as a belief that Mac OS X Leopard is more likely to trump Windows Vista in media-centrict homes. A 3G iPhone and the iPhone SDK will help the Cupertino company's handset business, Reid adds.



He estimates a 38 percent year-over-year growth of Mac sales revenue in 2008 to $14.2 billion as well much larger iPhone sales for the handset's first full year on the market, jumping from $123 million in 2007 to just over $2 billion this year. Computer sales would be well above the 3 percent for the PC business as a whole.



The positive comments were enough to help drive Apple shares to nearly $160 in Monday trading, settling at $155.89 (up $2.81) by the end of the day.



iSuppli warns of $400 million Apple flash shortfall



Apple could be one of the largest single contributors to a major shortfall in NAND flash memory orders this year, according to an iSuppli report.



Where the analyst firm had forecast a spike in orders for the storage chips of 27 percent year over year to $17.9 billion, it changed its estimate on Monday to just 9 percent, or $15.2 billion.



The drop is attributed to a tumble in worldwide consumer spending triggered by the US subprime mortgage crisis. However, with Apple's iPhones and iPods making it the third largest client for flash memory, a newly expected drop in the electronics giant's orders for flash is estimated to cost suppliers as much as $400 million by itself.



Apple hasn't made large orders for memory so far this year and is contributing to price cuts by memory producers who continue to face an oversupply problem, iSuppli says. The MacBook Air's solid-state drives are reportedly shipped in too few quantities to have an effect.



Microsoft, Yahoo argue over takeover ultimatum



Microsoft drew a line in the sand on Saturday when it established a three-week deadline for Yahoo to accept its takeover bid.



The Windows designer's chief executive, Steve Ballmer, has sent Yahoo a letter threatening to launch a proxy battle that would vote in a board of directors favorable to the takeover, which Microsoft has alleged is essential to fighting Google's control of web ads and searches.



It also claims that Yahoo should appreciate the existing $31 per share offer due to a worsening US economy and that the search engine firm has hurt its value with strategic decisions over the months since the takeover was proposed in January.



Yahoo, however, has rejected the allegations through its own letter and insists that it will only consider an increased Microsoft offer. The Microsoft bid devalues Yahoo and neglects a drop in the fortunes of the former's own stock.



Microsoft also hasn't addressed antitrust concerns that are likely to creep up, Yahoo says.



Apple to manufacture own Mac Pro GeForce upgrades?



A message on Mac Rumors' forums is raising eyebrows through its claims of a solution to ongoing troubles with upgrades for first-generation Mac Pro workstations.



In a reported e-mail, Apple chief Steve Jobs has reportedly assured one owner of the Xeon-based tower that a backwards-compatible version of the GeForce 8800 GT would be available "in about a month."



Although NVIDIA itself had promised a new version of the card that would support the original firmware, the update has not yet materialized at Apple's store, prompting criticism from owners expecting a clear upgrade path from the cards offered with the Mac Pro's 2006 introduction.



Jobs is known to periodically reply personally to customers with certain questions, though the authenticity of the e-mail is unknown.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 29
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    I'm not sure I understand the bit about the cards. Apple makes its own cards. There's no reason to believe that Nvidia has to get involved in making a card properly compliant, esp. as the reason was mostly about pinning on the card. The original card wasn't properly designed in the first place, because all cards designed for Express 1 are supposed to be compatible with Express 2, and visa versa, according to the standard.
  • Reply 2 of 29
    jmadlenajmadlena Posts: 43member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I'm not sure I understand the bit about the cards. Apple makes its own cards. There's no reason to believe that Nvidia has to get involved in making a card properly compliant, esp. as the reason was mostly about pinning on the card. The original card wasn't properly designed in the first place, because all cards designed for Express 1 are supposed to be compatible with Express 2, and visa versa, according to the standard.



    I'm pretty sure that NVIDIA makes the GeForce cards for the Mac Pro, not Apple.
  • Reply 3 of 29
    phizzphizz Posts: 142member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post


    Jobs is known to periodically reply personally to customers with certain questions, though the authenticity of the e-mail is unknown.



    I've never heard this. Is there a website or something showing examples? Fair play to the man if it's true.
  • Reply 4 of 29
    shogunshogun Posts: 362member
    I got an email from the Steve once. Totally unexpected. It was when they put Rosa Parks on their homepage after her death. I thought it showed a real lack of class as it seemed to me at the time that they were capitalizing on her death to sell computers.



    I wrote a strongly worded email demanding that they take it down and amazingly enough got an email back from Steve Jobs that began, "You are wrong about this." He then went on to say briefly that they spoke to her several times about a previous campaign and had much respect for her and were going to display her picture and name out of that respect. I wanted to write back and grovel as the point was well-taken.



    On the Flash subject, it seems to me that Apple wants to get their hands on HD sized SSDs asap, so they're probably holding out till the last minute when their flash supply is nearing zero so they can order huge and get some decent prices on the big stuff.
  • Reply 5 of 29
    samnuvasamnuva Posts: 225member
    Since when is 2.61 a massive stock surge?
  • Reply 6 of 29
    bjkbjk Posts: 34member
    Ok, get ready for some fuzzy math.



    a = 2007 iPhone unit sales = 1,389,000

    b = 2007 Income From Sales = 123,000,000

    c = 2007 Per Unit Income = 88.5529158 [b/a]

    d = Est. 2008 income from cumulative sales = 2,000,000,000

    e = Est. Cumulative unit sales = 22,585,366 [d/c]

    f = Est. 2008 unit sales = 21,196,365 [e-a]



    Thoughts?
  • Reply 7 of 29
    minderbinderminderbinder Posts: 1,703member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Samnuva View Post


    Since when is 2.61 a massive stock surge?



    It was up to almost 160 before dropping a bit, that's a surge. And who ever said "massive"?
  • Reply 8 of 29
    bjkbjk Posts: 34member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I'm not sure I understand the bit about the cards. Apple makes its own cards.



    Did you mean to say Apple makes it's own card firmware? nVidia is certainly the manufacturer of the card in question.



    EDIT: Nevermind, I'm an idiot. I should have trusted that a person with melgross's experience would know what he's talking about.
  • Reply 9 of 29
    kasperkasper Posts: 941member, administrator
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Phizz View Post


    I've never heard this. Is there a website or something showing examples? Fair play to the man if it's true.



    Steve indeed responds to emails from time to time... It's legit.



    Best,



    K
  • Reply 10 of 29
    ikirikir Posts: 127member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I'm not sure I understand the bit about the cards. Apple makes its own cards. There's no reason to believe that Nvidia has to get involved in making a card properly compliant, esp. as the reason was mostly about pinning on the card. The original card wasn't properly designed in the first place, because all cards designed for Express 1 are supposed to be compatible with Express 2, and visa versa, according to the standard.





    You don't get the point. The new card is not compatible with EFI 32 of old macpro. Apple will release hopefully a specific efi32 version. The new one has efi 64.
  • Reply 11 of 29
    cameronjcameronj Posts: 2,357member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post


    iSuppli warns of $400 million Apple flash shortfall



    Apple could be one of the largest single contributors to a major shortfall in NAND flash memory orders this year, according to an iSuppli report.



    Where the analyst firm had forecast a spike in orders for the storage chips of 27 percent year over year to $17.9 billion, it changed its estimate on Monday to just 9 percent, or $15.2 billion.



    The drop is attributed to a tumble in worldwide consumer spending triggered by the US subprime mortgage crisis. However, with Apple's iPhones and iPods making it the third largest client for flash memory, a newly expected drop in the electronics giant's orders for flash is estimated to cost suppliers as much as $400 million by itself.



    Apple hasn't made large orders for memory so far this year and is contributing to price cuts by memory producers who continue to face an oversupply problem, iSuppli says. The MacBook Air's solid-state drives are reportedly shipped in too few quantities to have an effect.



    Apple's just waiting for the market to reach maximum pain so they can secure a long term contract and very good prices. With flash hard drives starting to hit the market, I think flash prices could actually rise in the next couple years. Selling 64 or 128 GB at a time for an ever growing chunk of the laptop market will bleed the supply dry far more quickly than 1-2 GB at a time in flash memory sticks and SD cards.
  • Reply 12 of 29
    boogabooga Posts: 1,082member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by BjK View Post


    Did you mean to say Apple makes it's own card firmware? nVidia is certainly the manufacturer of the card in question.



    Really? I didn't know nVidia manufactured video cards. They certainly didn't used to when I used to buy them on the PC side-- nVidia just sold chipsets to card manufacturers. When did they start manufacturing whole cards? (link?)
  • Reply 13 of 29
    bjkbjk Posts: 34member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Booga View Post


    Really? I didn't know nVidia manufactured video cards. They certainly didn't used to when I used to buy them on the PC side-- nVidia just sold chipsets to card manufacturers. When did they start manufacturing whole cards? (link?)



    *gulps hard*



    I assumed they manufactured their own cards, sorry all. I tried to back up my claim, and realized I didn't know what I was talking about. I've only purchased specific cards as a BTO option, and I haven't even done that since switching to macs. I've edited my post.
  • Reply 14 of 29
    msnlymsnly Posts: 378member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Phizz View Post


    I've never heard this. Is there a website or something showing examples? Fair play to the man if it's true.



    I actually got one from him once to, it was very short, about a sentence or two. That actually makes me think it was from him haha.
  • Reply 15 of 29
    ipeonipeon Posts: 1,122member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by BjK View Post


    *gulps hard*



    I assumed they manufactured their own cards, sorry all. I tried to back up my claim, and realized I didn't know what I was talking about. I've only purchased specific cards as a BTO option, and I haven't even done that since switching to macs. I've edited my post.



    Aaaaa, don't feel so bad. I was under the impression that NVIDIA® manufactured these cards? But hey, I must confess that this was an assumption.



    Since when has Apple been making their own Video cards?
  • Reply 16 of 29
    rot'napplerot'napple Posts: 1,839member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post


    The Windows designer's chief executive, Steve Ballmer... ...also claims that Yahoo should appreciate the existing $31 per share offer due to a worsening US economy and that the search engine firm has hurt its value with strategic decisions over the months since the takeover was proposed in January.



    Yahoo, however, has rejected the allegations through its own letter and insists that it will only consider an increased Microsoft offer. The Microsoft bid devalues Yahoo and neglects a drop in the fortunes of the former's own stock.





    I was going to say... Ballmer criticizing Yahoo on hurting its value with strategic decisions over the months... if that's not the Kettle calling the Pot black.



    Sure MS has had it's problems, anti trust suits here in the US in the late 1990's and with the European Union, Pirated software, Longhorn delays and Vista troubles if you believe some people (I'm just trying to be fair here), but hey Steve Ballmer and MSFT, you are not alone... Apple has had it's fair share, such as the promise of 3Ghz IMB PowerPC processor chip debacle, backdating stock options mess, Steve Jobs health scare (once news was released to the media), music/movie industries giving Apple hard time with contract renewals or pulling out all together because of Apple's success. So each has had their fair share of "issues" to deal with and yet Apple's stock has blossomed, fallen and blossomed again. Microsoft stock was at a high of $92 on April 1, 1999 - eight years ago! If you look back at the last five years, it has remained flat, hovering from the mid twenties to a 52 week high of $37.50 and Steve Ballmer has the "chutzpah" to even remotely critique Yahoo's stategic decisions hurting Yahoo value.
  • Reply 17 of 29
    anantksundaramanantksundaram Posts: 20,404member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by BjK View Post


    Ok, get ready for some fuzzy math.



    a = 2007 iPhone unit sales = 1,389,000

    b = 2007 Income From Sales = 123,000,000

    c = 2007 Per Unit Income = 88.5529158 [b/a]

    d = Est. 2008 income from cumulative sales = 2,000,000,000

    e = Est. Cumulative unit sales = 22,585,366 [d/c]

    f = Est. 2008 unit sales = 21,196,365 [e-a]



    Thoughts?



    I think it has to do with screwy revenue recognition methods that Apple has chosen to pursue. 2007 is only half a year of 'revenue.' 2008 will be a full year, so the forecasted number will be f/2 = 10,598,182 units. That seems closer in line with Apple's own predictions.
  • Reply 18 of 29
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Samnuva View Post


    Since when is 2.61 a massive stock surge?



    Quote:

    Thomas Weisel Partners analyst Doug Reid launched a rush on Apple stock Monday with a research note that pointed to strong long-term growth at Apple for at least the next two years.



    Since when is a rush $2.61?
  • Reply 19 of 29
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Kasper View Post


    Steve indeed responds to emails from time to time... It's legit.



    Best,



    K



    Alright, alright everyone. Don't get too excited. Jobs runs a company, he's not the second coming, fer ****'s sake.
  • Reply 20 of 29
    msnlymsnly Posts: 378member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SpamSandwich View Post


    Since when is a rush $2.61?



    I know right? Personally, I think of the way gas is nowadays, and shouldn't Exxon going up by 18 cents be a rush?



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SpamSandwich View Post


    Alright, alright everyone. Don't get too excited. Jobs runs a company, he's not the second coming, fer ****'s sake.



    Well, If only I wasn't an atheist...\
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