APPLE CRUSHED: Stock Falls Another 4% To New Closing Low

Apple stock

Apple stock got clobbered again today, falling 4% to $510.

That's the lowest close for the stock since its recent swoon began in September.

(It's also a level that Apple first breached on the way up last winter. The stock is still up sharply this year, having entered the year at about $400.)

What's going on?

Several things.

Some are fundamental, having to do with changes in Apple's business.

Others are market-related (tax-related selling is likely having a significant impact).

Still others related to sentiment.

Here are some of the issues:
  • First, in news today, Apple has reportedly slashed its orders for iPhones for the first quarter of next year. According to UBS and other sources, Apple cut its "build" orders from 35-40 million units to 25-30 million. This suggests that sales of the all-important iPhone may be far lower than Wall Street has been expecting. It also suggests that the iPhone 5 has not been the colossal hit that Apple needed it to be.
  • More broadly, Apple has been a monster of a stock for the last decade, and some investors are likely taking the opportunity to lock in these gains while paying today's low capital-gains tax rates. Whatever deal the government finally arrives at with regard to the Fiscal Cliff (if any), it will likely include a hike in the capital gains rate.
  • Apple recently shot its wad from a product-launch perspective, and analysts aren't expecting anything truly exciting to happen until next summer at the earliest. That gives short-term investors little reason to hang on to the stock.
  • Apple's amazingly high profit margin is likely to decline over the next several years, as Apple's product mix shifts toward lower-margin tablets from the high-margin iPhone and the iPhone margin itself declines with the introduction of lower-priced phones. This suggests that earnings are likely to grow more slowly than revenue, in contrast to the situation for the past 5 years.
  • Apple's next revolutionary new product--a TV or TV device of some sort--appears to have been postponed by a year. Analysts are also not sure what this product will be and how it will sell. Dozens of companies have tried to reinvent TV over the last 15 years, and almost all of them have failed. Apple also appears to have met resistance from the TV industry, which will do everything it can to preserve the status quo.