The stocks were tanking after a soft buying season and saying nothing lost some folks 30%.
Sure.... there's value in short-term optimism and quiet anticipation, and had the Mac World event presented anything to support it, the stocks would have rebound, but they have not. Yes, it's part of a larger market trend but if this collapse is reflecting that reality then why didn't Apple stocks decline with the rest of the market? Silence and quiet anticipation I suspect.
So, now that reality has fallen upon the Mac community they are asking the questions that they should have asked earlier, before the loss, before the vale was lifted. Faith in a company and/or CEO is not the only criteria that should be used to value products or investments and I suspect the negativity that can be observed in the Mac World is a reality check on that front.
Kris, I suspect that some of those comments are true, but there was already a percentage of iPhones included in the calculation. Yes the 20% could be short, but how short?
As far as the Mac Community losing stock value, they will explain that it's a short term sag in a long term investment. That sort of investing can be very costly. I'm sure if they could have seen it coming they would have all got out of the way and shifted their equity to an offering that has made 10% since AAPL peaked.
Folks that held aapl stock in quiet anticipation lost 40% of value because some didn't asked the critical questions that one would ask of any other company.
Not to put Apple down but they made some critical errors in bringing the iPhone to market and I suspect they are paying for them now. The iPhone is a remarkable offering but it comes with too many strings.