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Has Apple hit its peak? Commentator bails on its stock

Chad Anderson (eyeidea)
/
flickr.com

When Steve Jobs went on his third and final medical leaveat the beginning of 2011, Strategic News Service publisher Mark Anderson advised his subscribers to get ready to sell their Apple stock.

Recently, Mark took his own advice and sold 75% of his Apple holdings. He explains why on this month's edition of The Digital Future.

First of all, Mark doesn't claim to be a market timer. Apple has recently been trading in the $570 - $590 range after hitting its all time high of $644 per share in April. This high plateau seemed like a good place to sell, although Mark acknowledges the stock may very well go higher in the next year or two.

Apple is healthy now, but Mark is concerned about the long term. He's seen Apple with Steve Jobs at the helm, and without. History shows Apple has always been more successful when Jobs was in charge.

When Jobs left Apple in the 1980s, Mark says, "with the creative genius gone, the company turned to an endless series of line extensions, slicing and dicing segments so that even the company salespeople couldn't tell you why you should buy a certain model."

Mark is watching new Apple CEO Tim Cook, and sees some warning signs:

  • A new iPad was launched without a new name.
  • The highly anticipated successor to the iPhone 4 was the iPhone 4s. Why not the iPhone 5?
  • The company launched a new Apple TV product with virtually no fanfare.
  • Siri, the voice activated personal assistant on the iPhone, isn't very smart (however, it's still in beta).

Can Apple compensate for the loss of Steve Jobs?
Mark is doubtful, saying, "Apple is known for creating insanely great products. How do you compensate for not doing that anymore?"

As time goes on, Mark fears Apple will return to the kind of company it became when Jobs left in the 1980s. And that's why he's selling his stock.

Dave Meyer has been anchoring KNKX news shows since 1987. He grew up along the shores of Hood Canal near Belfair and graduated from Washington State University with degrees in communications and psychology.
Mark Anderson is the CEO of the Strategic News Service® (SNS), www.stratnews.com. SNS was the first subscription-based newsletter on the Internet, and is read by Bill Gates, Michael Dell, Mark Hurd, and industry leaders and investors in computing and communications worldwide. Mark is the founding chair of the Future in Review® (FiRe) Conference, which the Economist has labeled “the best technology conference in the world,” as well as of SNS Project Inkwell, the first global consortium to address technology design changes for one-to-one computing in classrooms. He is the founder of two software companies, a hedge fund, and the Washington Technology Industry Association “Fast Pitch” investment forum, Washington’s premier technology investment conference.