Friday, February 8, 2013

Katsenelson: Understanding Apple - Business Insider

So many articles have been written recently about Apple ? defending it or explaining why this glorious fruit will turn into a shriveling pumpkin by midnight (with Samsung?s help) ? that I really haven?t felt the need to contribute to the unending debate. But then Apple?s stock crashed to $450 last month, and we bought a little for our clients. After receiving an outraged e-mail from one of them calling the purchase ?irresponsible? and proclaiming that everyone (including his neighbor) knows that Apple is going down to $300, I decided it was time to join the discourse. Clients rarely (almost never) contact us about stocks we own in their accounts. More important, this is far from the most ?radioactive? stock we own or have owned.

Here, in the first of two columns on Apple, I have no intention of defending or prosecuting the company, but I would like to share some thoughts about it that many pundits have either overlooked or ignored.

What makes Apple stock difficult to own is psychology. The company?s success since 2000 is a black swan. We tend to think of Nassim Nicholas Taleb?s black swans as significant random negative events, but Apple is a positive one. When co-founder Steve Jobs came back to the company in the late ?90s, Apple was about to take its last breath. Jobs pulled off a miracle. He revived the company?s computer product line, making Macs exciting again, and then came out with three revolutionary ?i? products in a row: the iPod, iPhone and iPad. You could argue that the success of each ?i? product in itself was a black swan, exceeding all rational expectations and revolutionizing, transforming and in some cases creating new categories of merchandise that had never existed before.

Apple?s revenue and market capitalization deservedly surpassed those of almighty Microsoft Corp. ? the hairy monster with stinky breath that performed CPR on dying Apple in the late ?90s by injecting liquidity into the company by buying its preferred stock. We have a hard time processing this highly improbable success and an even harder time imagining that there is another black swan about to take flight from the Apple labs, especially with no Steve Jobs around to sit on the egg.

Black swans come out of nowhere, unannounced, but their impact may be long-lasting. The wildly successful ?i? gadgets dug a formidable moat around Apple. They created the most valuable and still most inspirational brand in the world, funded an enormous research and development effort, enabled huge buying power (Apple locks up supply and pays much lower prices than many of its competitors for parts), filled out a mature product ecosystem and stuffed Apple?s debt-free balance sheet with $137 billion ? half the market capitalization of Microsoft. The moat is wide, deep and unlikely to be breached any time soon.

One reason the psychology of owning Apple stock is so difficult: its high price. (Note: I am talking not about its valuation but purely about its price.) Apple has had only one stock split since the late ?90s, when it was trading in double digits, and it now changes hands at about $450 (down from $700 just a few months ago). Stock splits create zero economic value in the long run ? absolutely none. Apple could split its stock ten to one and you?d have ten $45 shares, and nothing about the company or its business would change. But I?d argue that a 3 percent ?slide? of $1.35 would grab fewer headlines than a $13.50 ?drop? ? there is a media magnification factor that is hard to ignore.

Read the rest of this article at InstitutionalInvestor.com >

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/katsenelson-understanding-apple-2013-2

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