Post #326,885
5/26/10 4:15:06 PM
|
Apple Surpasses Microsoft as Most Valuable Technology Co.
!!111OneONE1!!!111!! [!-as-in- factorial!]
Apple Surpasses Microsoft as Most Valuable Technology Company
Apple, the maker of iPods, iPhones and iPads, overtook
Microsoft, the computer software giant, on Wednesday to
become the world's most valuable technology company.
In intraday trading in the afternoon session, Apple shares
rose 1.8 percent, which gave the company a value of $227.1
billion. Shares of Microsoft declined about 1 percent, giving
the company a market capitalization of $226.3 billion.
This changing of the guard caps one of the most stunning
turnarounds in business history, as Apple had been given up
for dead only a decade earlier. But the rapidly rising value
attached to Apple by investors also heralds a cultural shift:
Consumer tastes have overtaken the needs of business as the
leading force shaping technology.
Read More:
http://www.nytimes.c...apple.html?emc=na
Kalloo Kalayyy
>Inflection Point< -- -- who says a math term cannot be mellifluous, mirthful and even a bit Magnificent !?! Eh?
Need new slogans..
Choose Windows!..
Choose liff: add daily stress, anticipate random horror and expect only brief respites until the next bug-fix/random-breaker-of Other Stuff. A life of fear: what's not to Like?
Nope, too many words.
Choose Doze / then Sell Short / Buy OS X with the profits.
An Apple Each Day Keeps the IT-Doctor Away
Oh well, need more time for it to marinate ... Up Yours 'AD', Virus-X and Ring-0 Kung-Poo roulette!
|
Post #326,889
5/26/10 4:43:41 PM
|
and billy owns 20% or so, crafty beggar
|
Post #326,891
5/26/10 4:57:19 PM
|
wouldn't he (or MS) show up in the Major Holders list?
|
Post #326,894
5/26/10 5:17:10 PM
|
Don't see Jobs there either.
I will choose a path that's clear. I will choose freewill.
|
Post #326,896
5/26/10 5:42:40 PM
5/26/10 5:49:15 PM
|
thought that was odd too
but the insider holders apparently account for < 1%.
Of course "insider holders" may not mean what I think it does.
edit:
if this is still valid, he owns 5.5 million shares
http://www.huffingto...009_n_402654.html
That's 0.6% of the 909.94 million outstanding shares that's shown under Share Statistics on the Key Statistics page:
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=AAPL
Edited by SpiceWare
May 26, 2010, 05:49:15 PM EDT
|
Post #326,904
5/26/10 7:42:56 PM
|
Those lists apparently don't have everyone.
According to Forbes, Jobs is/was the largest shareholder in Disney as of 9/30/2009 - http://www.forbes.co...ve-Jobs_HEDB.html .
But he's not listed on the "Major Holders" list of DIS at Yahoo - http://finance.yahoo...DIS+Major+Holders
I dunno what it means, but there you are.
Cheers,
Scott.
|
Post #326,898
5/26/10 6:17:52 PM
|
sold them in 2003
All 18.2 million shares were sold by Microsoft in 2003.
per
http://justinhartman...-equity-in-apple/
|
Post #326,892
5/26/10 4:59:42 PM
|
I like the Dell comparison
as of last Friday Apple's now worth 8X Dell
http://macdailynews....g/comments/25330/
It's especially sweet considering Michael's comments from 97 that he'd shut down Apple
http://news.cnet.com...001_3-203937.html
|
Post #326,941
5/27/10 1:46:28 PM
|
Did the cocky little sucker really Say That?!? ... Yup:
http://www.nytimes.c...16apple.html?_r=1
Michael Dell Should Eat His Words, Apple Chief Suggests
By JOHN MARKOFF
Published: January 16, 2006
Correction Appended
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 15 - It may not be the last laugh, but on Friday afternoon, after the close of the stock market, Steven P. Jobs, the chief executive of Apple Computer, shared an e-mail chuckle with his employees at the expense of Dell, a big rival.
The message was prompted by the 12 percent surge in Apple's stock price last week, which pushed the company's market capitalization to $72.13 billion, passing Dell's value of $71.97 billion.
In 1997, shortly after Mr. Jobs returned to Apple, the company he helped start in 1976, Dell's founder and chairman, Michael S. Dell, was asked at a technology conference what might be done to fix Apple, then deeply troubled financially.
"What would I do?" Mr. Dell said to an audience of several thousand information technology managers. "I'd shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders."
Dell executives did not return calls over the weekend asking for comment on Apple's rising fortunes.
[. . .]
Mr. Dell appears to have softened his views on Apple recently. In June, he responded to an e-mail inquiry from Fortune.com and said that Dell would consider putting Apple's OS X operating system on its machines if Apple ever decided to sell it separately from its hardware.
Although Mr. Jobs has recently shifted some gears and last week introduced his first computer based on chips from Intel, which are also used in Dell machines, it does not appear that selling the operating system separately is in his plans.
I could almost see voting for Palin in 2012 on the grounds that this sorry ratfucking excuse for a republic, this savage, smirking, predatory empire deserves her. Bring on the Rapture, motherfuckers!
-- via RC
|
Post #326,909
5/26/10 10:29:40 PM
|
Hmm.
Market cap is one thing, but I'll bet MS has more cash and assets, both hard and intellectual.
|
Post #326,912
5/27/10 1:13:21 AM
|
MSFT $37B CoH, $6B debt, APPL $23B (or $42B) CoH $0 debt
http://virtualizatio...an-microsoft.aspx
As several sharp-eyed readers immediately noted (and we forgot), Apple has an unusual method of accounting for some of its cash on hand, which is that it classifies $18 billion of cash as a long-term investment. (This is because the cash is invested in Treasuries with maturities of more than a year). When this cash is included in the company's cash balance, Apple has $42 billion of cash, not $23 billion.
|
Post #326,913
5/27/10 4:38:16 AM
|
Re: MSFT $37B CoH, $6B debt, APPL $23B (or $42B) CoH $0 debt
I wonder how MS managed to accrue $6B of debt.
XBox?
|
Post #326,914
5/27/10 7:14:51 AM
|
Bonds.
http://www.microsoft...=Press%20Releases
Microsoft Announces Debt Offering
Offering is part of $6 billion debt authorization by board of directors in September 2008.
REDMOND, Wash. Â May 11, 2009 Â Microsoft Corp. today announced the pricing of its offering of $3.75 billion of senior unsecured notes. The notes consist of the following tranches:
 $2 billion of 2.95 percent notes due June 1, 2014
 $1 billion of 4.20 percent notes due June 1, 2019
 $750 million of 5.20 percent notes due June 1, 2039
Microsoft intends to use the net proceeds from the offering for general corporate purposes, which may include funding for working capital, capital expenditures, repurchases of stock and acquisitions. The offering is expected to close on May 18, 2009.
[...]
I guess the "free money" from the stock market wasn't enough for them to keep up with their spending, or something. Whether it was related to XBox or their phone(s) or Bing or MSNBC or ..., I can't say.
FWIW.
Cheers,
Scott.
|