There was a time when the S&P 500 reaching record highs without any help from Apple Inc. was almost unthinkable. But those days are over, at least for now.
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In this podcast, Motley Fool host Dylan Lewis and analysts Emily Flippen and Jason Moser discuss:
- The FTC’s suit against Apple, and why it probably means years of lawyer fees and distraction for Apple.
- Chipotle‘s 50-for-1 stock split and the market reaction to Reddit‘s debut.
- Earnings from Chewy, Nike, Lululemon, and Accenture.
- Two stocks worth watching: Pinduoduo and TopGolf Callaway.
Motley Fool contributor Brian Feroldi breaks down Reddit’s S-1 and the major risks facing the self-proclaimed “front page of the internet.”
To catch full episodes of all The Motley Fool’s free podcasts, check out our podcast center. To get started investing, check out our quick-start guide to investing in stocks. A full transcript follows the video.
This video was recorded on March 22, 2024.
Dylan Lewis: Regulators keep cranking the heat on Big Tech Motley Fool Money starts now.
It’s the Motley Fool Money radio show. I’m Dylan Lewis joining me in studio Motley Fool senior analysts, Emily Flippen and Jason Moser. Fools great to have you both here.
Jason Moser: Hey.
Emily Flippen: Good to be here.
Dylan Lewis: We’ve got a mini-dive on a splashy IPO, a story of a struggling ice cream brand and of course, stocks on our radar. Up first though, regulators continue to focus on big tech. Jason Apple is in the cross-hairs of regulators. The FTC filing suit this week aimed at Apple’s iPhone and it’s accompanying suite of services. The FTC alleges that Apple undermines apps, products, and services that would otherwise make users less reliant on the iPhone, promote interoperability and lower costs for consumers and developers. This seems to really boil down, Jason, to the walled garden that Apple has been able to maintain with it’s software and hardware.
Jason Moser: I was going to say, the walled garden really is the phrase that stands out here. This is something that could have some teeth. We’ll have to wait and see there. I’m certainly no antitrust expert nor am I litigator, but I think one thing for sure, this isn’t good in that it’s not going to be resolved anytime soon. We have an idea that this is going to take several years to play out. I think that is probably the biggest near-term risk for Apple in that it’s going to more than likely take their attention away from where they really need to be focused, that’s on innovation.
You look at Apple today, it still really is a phone company meaning at the end of the day, that’s where they make most of their money. Now, that’s slowly starting to change. They are bringing more in regard to services, revenue, and whatnot. But for a company like Apple, I would argue that Apple saved the Vision Pro and I am not a believer that the Vision Pro is going to be accepted by the masses, by any stretch. Fascinating technology, but Apple, has been stuck in this iteration as opposed to innovation cycle.
They’re just not innovating as much as I think people would like to see and that comes at a cost. That starts to bring growth into question. They’re going to have to deal with this for a while and then it takes away from whatever they may be working on. If it takes away from that innovation, that obviously is a near-term risk. Now, this probably ends up as something were Apple has to use money to make the problem go away and that’s not a bad problem for a company like Apple. I did think it’s interesting to note that our balance sheet, we always talk about how much cash Apple has more than most countries.
Apple’s now in a net debt position, which I think is just fascinating to see now, that’s a fine position for them because that debt is stretched out over long periods of time, very low interest debt, and it’s the cash machine. Ninety-five billion dollars of free cash flow after accounting for stock-based compensation. That’s not a problem for them at all, but it is something that is going to take their eye off the ball for a while.
Dylan Lewis: Emily, Apple has very long argued that a lot of the decisions they make within their ecosystem are in the interest of their users, privacy, security, trying to make sure there’s not malicious apps or things like that that are getting out there. We will see where this winds up landing for the company. But I look at this, especially given the series of interventions we’ve been seeing from the FTC and say, regulators are not shying away from Big Tech anytime soon.
Emily Flippen: I’ve been historically dismissive of regulations against a business like Apple because for the most part they’ve been without teeth. That was up until very recently when Apple actually lost a series of judgments in the EU against the use of its App Store. They’ve prevented third-party apps from being able to come in, in-part because they want to maintain that walled garden for their costs.
I said, hey, look, we’ve seen these cases come up in United States, but lower courts have continuously sided, for the most part, with Apple. So to see this come out, especially from the Department of Justice and FTC, it’s clear that this is a bigger overreaching judgment that’s looking at the core of Apple’s business instead of one particular issue, which is really interesting because it’s penalizing Big Tech for being Big Tech.
Being the dismissive person I am, I’d be easy for me to say, hey, look, we’re heading into an election year, the Department of Justice tends to be very politically connected so we don’t really know what’s going to happen in terms of a potential change in administration, whether or not that will change anything for the future. So I wouldn’t be surprised to see nothing come of this, but my dismissiveness in the past has not paid off well so maybe I’ll be a little bit more cognizant moving forward.
Dylan Lewis: Sticking with the Big stories, a huge stock split announced for Chipotle this week. In release, Emily, the company announced a 50-for-1 stock split. I had to double-check that one. I wasn’t even sure that was accurate. I have never seen a stock split of that size.
Emily Flippen: I guess it’s not just Chipotle serving sizes that are getting smaller. [laughs] I say that very tongue in cheek. So stock splits can sometimes raise a lot of investor interest. In this case, a 50-for-1 stock split, which basically means, if you owned one share of Chipotle prior to a split, you are now going to own to 50 shares of Chipotle. They will decrease in price by 50 folds, but you will in turn own 50 more. It’s essentially like cutting up a pizza.
You can have a giant pizza and you can cut it into eight different slices, or you can cut it into 500 different slices, isn’t changed the size of the pizza it just changes the size of the slice, but in this case, it actually can increase accessibility for some investors who don’t have access to fractional share trading, increased accessibility for those who may trade options, as well as for Chipotle to issue its own stock back to employees and internal use. It’s an interesting development, but not one that if you’re a shareholder of Chipotle changes anything in terms of the business performance.
Dylan Lewis: Jason, I think the academic argument was laid out very well right there by Emily’s saying this is how you cut up the pie. I do think when we look at stock splits, very rarely is it a sign that a company is doing something poorly. When we see a stock split of this magnitude, and I think it is just a testament to the incredible run that Chipotle has gone on over the last 15 years.
Jason Moser: It’s been a very incredible run, particularly when you consider the lows that this company hit in regard to the food safety issues from several years back, real recovery there now, it required a leadership change, but you got to do what you got to do. This company has a much better spot today as a shareholder, as a consumer of the product. I love everything that they’re are doing. I’m glad you mentioned issuing stock to employees because I think that’s another thing to point out in the release and like they use this word here, to commemorate this special event
There commemorating this special event, first stock split in history. But they announced a special one-time equity grant for all restaurant General Managers and crew members with more than 20 years of service. We also saw something like this with Amazon. You see it with all of these companies when their share price gets to the point where you’re talking about thousands of dollars, it just becomes very difficult to use equity as a form of compensation. This is going to allow them to do that. I’m not saying that’s the reason why they did it, but it’s certainly a benefit that comes from it.
Dylan Lewis: Before we go to break, we’ve got a new name on the New York Stock Exchange, shares of Reddit hit the market this week. Emily, judging by the reaction, the market excited to see some new names in the IPO market. Shares currently up 50% from where they listed.
Emily Flippen: Shares are fluctuating pretty greatly here, which is not surprising. Also not surprising to see it up so significantly because the IPO was oversubscribed, one of the things that Reddit did. This is a platform, social media platform of sorts, who has offered some of its most loyal and engaged users the opportunity to buy in at their IPO, and contrast, the IPO gives an opportunity for some of their long-term investors and private equity venture capitalists to actually be able to sell out of the company as well. It does test the market’s appetite for IPOs, which I can understand, because it’s the first big tech related IPO we’ve had in a while. But at the same time, given they’re really unique nature of Reddit’s business, the unique nature of this solicitation for the IPO, I think it’s too early to say that this shows that investors are ready again for IPOs.
Dylan Lewis: I think it’s at least a decent sign that we saw a company like Cava come public earlier in the last 12 months and now we have Reddit as well. Jason, when you look out at the Reddit IPO, any thoughts?
Jason Moser: I’m just between this common Chipotle talk now I’m starting to think about Reddit. I’m not a Reddit user, I have been linked to Reddit before, when doing a Google search or something like that. To me, I think this is one where I would absolutely just play, wait and see. It seems to me, at least, that this rhymes a lot with Twitter back in the day. Probably a limit as to how they can really grow that overall user base. It’s a little bit of a different platform to use. Some might say it’s a little bit complicated, a little bit difficult to use. A lot of similarities in what we saw when Twitter first became public, similar concerns. It’s not to say it can’t be successful, but for me, I would absolutely just play wait and see, and let’s see if these guys can really generate some meaningful cash.
Dylan Lewis: If you want more on the Reddit IPO, stay tuned, we’ve got to mini dive coming on the back half of the show, but coming up next, we’ve got Earnings that give a glimpse into two big names and apparel and why they’re struggling. Stay right here. You’re listening to Motley Fool Money. Welcome back to Motley Fool Money. I’m Dylan Lewis, joined here in studio by Emily Flippen and Jason Moser. It’s the tail end of earnings season but we still have some big names reporting this week. Emily, speaking of the tail end, we have an update from pet supplier, Chewy, shares down after reporting, what’s going on with pets bar?
Emily Flippen: If I’m CEO Sumit saying, I’m looking at the market and saying what do you want? [laughs] But actually tell me because what the market was saying for Chewy at this point last year was effectively, hey look, we like your platform. It’s great you’re seeing all this engagement, but you need to have profits. What has Chewy done over the course of the past year? Well, expand profits and that’s exactly what we saw this quarter. Financially, the company’s results were really solid. Sales grew again by their non-discretionary spend. This is things like pet food, cat food, dog food, those repeat purchases, but margins are incredibly strong.
They continue to expand. The company, expanded its free cash flow by nearly three times and management actually said that they think they’ve reached an inflection point for the expansion of their cash flow generation moving forward as well. We have sales growth, margin expansion, cash flow expansion. It begs the question of why is Chewy down? Why do investors not like the stock? Unfortunately for Chewy, that comes back to the pet industry right now.
There has been a slower amount of growth, which is to say negative growth and pet household formation, which is basically the number of people who are buying pets domestically in the United States and that’s been on a pretty consistent decrease since the pandemic, when a lot of pet households were formed in the first place. Now, despite the fact that these pet households that were formed are consuming Chewy and engaging with the product, the same rate that the previous non-pandemic pet households are, that growth has still lead the market to believe, maybe that top-line growth moving forward is just not going to be high enough to justify Chewy’s valuation for which I still believe the company is massively undervalued in relationship to the size of its long-term market.
Dylan Lewis: You are still believer and you feel like the market is underestimating what Chewy’s doing?
Emily Flippen: Yes. In terms of their core E-commerce business. Where I do get a little bit hung up is that, some of their new initiatives. These have been great so far. This is the push into pet pharmacy, pet healthcare, those you call it teledog to steal a word from Jason. All of that is great because it integrates directly onto Chewy’s platform. If you’re an Autoship customer, you get access to a lot of this stuff for free. But one of their newest initiatives is opening up actual physical vet care clinics. They’re starting in Florida where Chewy is headquartered and plan to use that as a gauge for expansion across the rest of United States. Now, they’re smart and slow about how they expand and I appreciate that because again, they don’t want to negatively impact that cash flow. But there is a little bit of potential like a hubris, I guess, that is in building physical stores, that is a massive deviation from their previous strategy so as a Chewy shareholder, that’s probably the thing I’m watching most closely.
Dylan Lewis: Over to apparel, we have earnings from Nike and Lulu. Lemon this week, let’s start out with the goddess of victory, Jason, shares of Nike down 8% after reporting fiscal Q3 results. It seems like Nike is a bit of a company at a pivot or inflection point.
Jason Moser: I think that’s fair to say. I think the result or the market’s reaction is probably a result of guidance, which I’ll get to in a minute. But I don’t think anyone will question how strong a business or brand this ultimately is. But they’ve definitely hit some headwinds recently and in part of that, it was discussed in the call, they had this deliberate strategy, they refer to as the Consumer Direct Acceleration strategy. They wanted to be more of a direct-to-consumer business via digital and their Nike stores. That worked out OK over the last few years because everything was thrown into chaos with, with the pandemic.
But we’re seeing this great reset back to normalcy and Nike is recognizing that this focus on direct came at the cost of all of the success they’ve witnessed through the years, through their wholesale channels. What that resulted in was essentially flat top-line growth for the quarter and ultimately, when I refer to guidance, this was for the third quarter. But when you look out to fiscal 25, they’re actually guiding, at least for the first half of the year, low to mid single digit sales declines. It is something where you’ve got this business, they’re a little bit of a restructuring mode.
It wasn’t a bad quarter and honestly, when you look at where the business, the fundamentals are still good, gross margin was up 150 basis points, inventories standing at 7.7 billion. Now, that was down 13% so it’s nice to see they were able to get those inventories down while pushing those gross margins up. Cash and equivalents that still in very good shape here in cash and short-term investments, $10.6 billion. You look globally, China performed well up 6% versus North America’s 3%.
I think really now it’s just a matter of getting back to that wholesale opportunity. They recognize the opportunity in direct, but maybe they placed a few, too many eggs in that direct basket. It’ll take a little investment in product, a little investment in marketing, and I think we can expect that to flow down to the bottom line, not in a good way. That’s a near-term issue. They’ll figure that out. I think you’ve got to be looking at sell-offs like this with a company like this, and asking yourself if you don’t want to own a few of these shares.
Dylan Lewis: Emily, Lululemon also in the dumps post-earnings shares down 17%. It seemed like a big part of the reason why it was the company’s outlook.
Emily Flippen: Outlook and maybe tonality, I’ll add in there because CEO Calvin McDonald was immediately defensive on Lululemon’s earnings call. Some of the first words out of his mouth were “As you’ve heard from others in our industry, there’s been a shift in US consumer behavior” which nobody wants to hear. But that did distract from what is otherwise a really strong quarter for the company, it had a really strong holiday season, updated their guidance in January as a result, and then exceeded that guidance again in this most recent quarter.
But they did choose to focus a lot on how the behavior of North American consumers has changed recently, in part because it seems like the economic outlook which is impacting, as Jason just mentioned, numerous industries across the United States, but also because they didn’t do a great job of managing their own inventory, which is to say, McDonald accounted for some of the loss to not having the right colors or the right sizes in stock.
In their defense, their inventory has continued to decrease. It’s not like the company is over here buying a bunch of products, stocking them in stores and then throwing their hands up and saying nobody wants it. You have to give management the benefit of the doubt, but there is certainly a bigger story here just to say, we’ve been waiting a long time for the economy to slow down in the United States, for consumer behavior to shift, are these the first canaries in the coal mines that consumer spending is about to be in the dumps over the course of 2024?
Dylan Lewis: I look at Nike, and I also look at Lululemon, and we’ve seen a lot of discussion of consumers trading down as a major story to be watching, looking for more discount options as well, let’s get a little bit tighter. Do you feel like this is something that’s affecting the results here?
Emily Flippen: It’s possible, I will want to see the results from other discount retailers. I’m thinking about like the T.J.Maxxs of the world to see if they’re picking up some of the slump here from Lululemon. But I do think that regardless of what’s driving it, I’m not sure if it really matters from Lululemon’s perspective because they don’t play that game. They don’t mark down and that’s a conscious effort on their part.
Jason Moser: I think that’s important to note too, we’re talking about this for Tay be like Tiffany, in that they understand the value in that brand. They need to protect it by not discounting. When you start putting that stuff on fire sale, all of a sudden, you associate that brand a little bit differently. I think we saw Under Armour for many years trying to play that. Let’s just get this stuff out to as many people as we just sell as much stuff as we can. They lost some brand credibility. That really does play out on those, not only the financials in the near-term, but it creates some long-term headwinds. It’s really difficult to bounce back from that.
Dylan Lewis: We’re going to wrap the earnings takes with a look at Accenture, shares down 12% after earnings. Jason, we’re also seeing results from the company dragging down some of the other companies in the consulting space this way?
Jason Moser: We were talking about Nike being a little bit more company created headwinds. Really Accenture, this is less a company thing, this is more a macro thing. You look at the call there. They said in the call, they see clients continuing to prioritize spending in large-scale transformations, things like AI for example and that converts to revenue more slowly, but then they also see continued delays in decision-making and a slower pace of spending.
That’s really something that is completely out of their control and they just have to deal with it. But the good news is that once that spending does start picking back up, Accenture is one of the first places that should see the benefits there. Now, they did guide down, revenue growth somewhere in the neighborhood of 5%, they guided that down to 3%, pulling earnings back considerably as well. They solve financial services, take a good hit, that’s about 20% of their revenue. The good news is they’re making a lot of investments in AI, they do continue to see the tailwinds there. It’s a macro stretch that they’re going to have to get through.
Dylan Lewis: Emily Flippen, Jason Moser, Fools, we’re going to see you guys a little bit later in the show. Up next, we’ve got a 15-minute Dive Into fresh IPO, Reddit, some of the major risks, some of the major opportunities, and what you need to know for this newly listed company. Stay right here. You’re listening to Motley Fool Money.
Welcome back to Motley Fool Money. I’m Dylan Lewis. This week, a familiar name went public, Reddit, the home of WallStreetBets and the epicenter of the meme stock movement listed its shares on the New York Stock Exchange. As a longtime Redditor, I was excited to dig into the S1 and look at the company’s books. Motley Fool contributor Brian Feroldi, joined me for a mini dive into the site bet, is the self-proclaimed front page of the Internet. Shares of Reddit hit the public markets this week under the ticker RDDT. Joining me to do a mini dive on these social media slash news slash community company is Motley Fool contributor Brian Feroldi. Brian, thanks for jumping on.
Brian Feroldi: Thank you for having me, Dylan. I’ve had my eyes on this company for a while, so I’m glad we finally have numbers to put to the name.
Dylan Lewis: I know we actually checked in on this business back in the beginning of 2022 when it seemed like an IPO was on the horizon. We’ve been waiting for that IPO for a little over two years now, but no more speculation. The shares are listed. Let’s dig into the business. Paint us a little bit of a picture with what you see with Reddit.
Brian Feroldi: For those that are unfamiliar, Reddit describes itself as a quote on quote, “Community of communities.” It’s a social networking slash blog site that brings millions of users together from all over the world to share news, information, recommendations, and what makes reading a little bit unique is that you can do so using an anonymous name or your real name. To put some scale behind this, this is a website that is one of the 10 most popular websites in the world. 73 million daily active users, 267 million weekly average users, over 100,000 active communities on the platform. This was an interesting tidbit considering that 98% of this company’s revenue comes from advertising, 75% of Redditors, that’s what they call their users, believed that it is a trustworthy place to inform them to make a purchasing decision. That could be a major plus in the bookcase for this company.
Dylan Lewis: That’s a key thing that advertisers are paying attention to. I’m someone who has used Reddit since college, and what’s interesting is, I think it shows the duality of the business here because they have about half of their users as logged-in users, but they also have about half of their monthly and daily active users coming in through an unlogged in experience.
We see a lot of that coming in through Google search, people finding information on the internet and then coming to the site, i have found it to be an excellent source of information, particularly for incredibly niche topics. You mentioned the community orientation and I think what’s so great about the platform is you can go really deep with people who are fanatics about something and really find your online community. It can be very useful, and trying to find information there. When you do use it just to help people who understand it, who maybe aren’t as familiar, any specific communities or topics they interact with?
Brian Feroldi: There are a few subreddits that I look at on occasion, there’s one like DataIsBeautiful, that’s subreddit has beautiful graphs and illustrations. There are some wonderful geography subreddits, and if you’re into the financial independence movement like, I am, there’s a wonderful subreddit called fatFIRE, which is all about how people are trying to retire early and live a luxurious lifestyle while doing so.
Dylan Lewis: You mentioned that this is an ad-based business. It’s also one of those high-growth type businesses and the financials really reflect a company that has been private for a while during a period of venture funding. It’s still losing money. It’s posting some decent growth. It’s moderated a little bit but what jumps out to you looking at the numbers, Brian?
Brian Feroldi: Well, first when you said high growth, depends on your definition of high growth. This company is growing at a decent rate. I wouldn’t classify it as a high-growth company. but in the last year ending 2023, we saw revenue grew 21%-$804 million. Probably the most impressive number on the income statement to me was this company’s gross margin at 86% last year, and that was up from 84% in the year-ago period so very high gross margin business.
As you teed up, that’s where the good news stops, on the income statement. This company is spending heavily on operating expenses, particularly research and development, so it’s because of that this company is losing money, $91 million net loss in 2023. Free cash flow losses was $84 million last year. The good news for investors is this company is going to have an absolute war chest of cash to continue funding those losses. Depending on what the IPO price is at, this company estimates that post IPO, it will have $1.5 billion in cash and zero debt.
Dylan Lewis: That’s nice. We like to see that safety and we’d like to see that security. I do wonder a little bit about that R&D spend. I’m curious. I mean, I think you could make a strong case for any tech platform, and you have to look at them as a platform company in a way, making those types of futuristic investments. I do wonder a little bit because it’s coming at the expense of profitability. One of the things I’ve been trying to wrap my head around Brian, looking at this company is, for folks that aren’t familiar. it is an incredibly user-generated content-type business. You have people who are posting and actually, the people who are moderating that content are also generally members of the community. You would think that it would give them a very favorable cost profile but we don’t really see that play out. Do you feel like there’s an actual path to profitability here?
Brian Feroldi: There definitely could be. I mean, the company could, of course, grow its way to profitability, but when I saw the amount of money this company is spending on research and development, I did do a double take to be like, where is that money going? I mean I’m an occasional Reddit user and the site looks pretty much the same to me now as it did a year ago, two years, and three years ago. So one would think, given that they knew that they were about to come public, that they’re using that capital to really build out the advertising tools that will make their platform even more attractive to advertisers, which does take some investment but I have a feeling this company’s path to profitability is through growth and not through cost-cutting.
Dylan Lewis: Speaking of growth, we’re seeing some interesting numbers when it comes to their user trends. I mentioned the logged-in and logged-out breakdown they have for their users. In recent quarters, there has been a pretty decent spike in year-over-year growth and they hit about 27% but this is not a platform that is on the scale of a lot of the other social media businesses out there. I think they have about 70 million daily actives at this point. Can this break out from the very tech-literate, very future-forward audience that it tends to have and get into more of a mainstream spot? Because I know that this is one of those businesses and one of those user sites where, if you’ll love it, you’ll love it, and otherwise you maybe not even have heard of it.
Brian Feroldi: If you haven’t heard of it, you certainly don’t use it. I think that that could really provide some cap on the upside potential of this business. A big part of the thesis here, especially at the valuations they’re coming public at, it hinges on this company significantly, improving its revenue and profitability metrics over time. It is going to be awfully hard to do so if they don’t attract new users to the platform so that certainly could be a challenge. That’s one thing that we saw as a big challenge for Pinterest, the last social media network that we saw that come public, I think in 2019 or so, they really struggled to grow outside of their core user base, and I could see Reddit having the same issue.
Dylan Lewis: If we see user growth as an opportunity, what else is out there in terms of opportunities for this business to grow and hit the scale that I think it probably needs to in order to be profitable?
Brian Feroldi: This company calls out a handful of ways that it could continue to meaningfully grow. One thing that surprised me about the platform is even though it’s nearly 20 years old, 90% of the content on this platform is in English, so there is a huge opportunity for them to penetrate international markets simply by making their platform more friendly to people whose native tongue is not English. Another thing they called out is video.
We’ve seen this as a trend among all the social media platforms where they’re trying to compete against TikTok, and one way they’d do that is really promoting users to share video on their platform as opposed to being just text-based. An interesting category that they called out is that they believe that data licensing and AI training could become a massive opportunity for this company. We’ve seen an explosion in interest, in all things related to AI, and Reddit certainly has a treasure trove of data for AIs to scrape through and build models around.
Now that is a nascent part of the business today, but management believes that it could be a big contributor over time. Finally, they are interested in growing a contributor program and building up a marketplace to allow their users to sell products and services to each other. On the contributor front, they might even get into the fact of paying their users to post, as we’ve seen on X slash Twitter recently, and YouTube and Instagram have been doing so. If they get into that, if there’s a way to make money for, that could attract new users to the platform.
Dylan Lewis: We’ve talked a little bit about where they fit into the overall social landscape. I think one of the big questions for me and one of the big risks for me looking at its business is, is it more in the lane of a Twitter or X? Or is it more in the lane of a Meta? Is it a business that can find users outside of its core group? Also, is it a business that can effectively monetize in a way that doesn’t bother its core users? I don’t have a good answer to that. Other than to say, I have my doubts. I think generally what we tend to see when companies come public is an increased focus on monetization and increased focus on extracting more value from the time that people spend online. Brian, I think one of the big risks I look at what this business is are the moves that they’re going to make to become more profitable, going to make the experience materially worse for an audience that’s very vocal, very tech forward, and very willing to hop to other platforms at times?
Brian Feroldi: That to me is also the key question and the key risk for investors to think about. To your point, when a company goes from being private to being public, the culture of that business changes. For the first time, the management team has a number over their head that they have to hit every 90 days, and that pressure changes the culture up and down the organization. They may have to start stuffing more ads down users’ throats, and it’s going to be interesting to see if the users, accept that, or if they rebel. I think you bring up an excellent point. Anecdotally, the people I know that our Reddit users tend to be young, extremely tech savvy, and also have ad blockers up on their systems. So I could see this company having a hard time monetizing its user base.
Dylan Lewis: I think one of the other things that comes to mind for me as a risk with this business is the pecking order in digital ad spend. We have seen broadly when ad budgets start to tighten up, the major players, the YouTubes, the Facebooks, and the Metas feel a pinch, but the budget stays with them. I think right now Reddit lives in the same lane as Snap, probably Twitter or X and places like Pinterest, where it’s nice to have for a lot of ad budgets but they still need to be convinced that the dollars are going to come back to them. It’s probably one of the first places that people are willing to cut when times get tough.
Brian Feroldi: You just hit the nail on the head. When you’re an advertiser, you are going to try and put your dollars behind the place that had the highest return on your investment. Meta and [Alphabet‘s] Google are two fabulous platforms for advertisers to earn a very strong return on their investment. Reddit has the opportunity to offer a differentiated user base. If they can build out the tools, it’s possible that they could continuously peel out that away. Also, the advertising market is just massive, it’s a trillion dollar market. Even if this company only gets to a few percent market share, that could still be a big opportunity. Of course, it’s also been around for almost 20 years now and it hasn’t even come close to hitting that 1% market share. Perhaps that shows the core business itself is going to have a hard time doing so.
Dylan Lewis: All right, Brian, putting all this together, we have worked our way out of the IPO winter, so to speak. We’ve had some big names come public like Cava. But the market is always hungry for new names, always looking for new businesses. As this one comes public, is this one that you’re interested in.
Brian Feroldi: You have to channel my inner Jim Gillies here. I would be interested in this company at the right price. I never buy IPOs, and I was burned a couple of years ago by being super interested in bullish on Pinterest when it came public, and that company has really struggled on the public market. If the numbers that we see are to be believed, this company’s becoming public at a valuation of about 8X sales or 10 times gross profit. That’s not extreme, but we don’t know what the first-day pop is going to be for this business. At the right price, I might be interested, but I never buy IPOs. I give them at least a year to see how they actually perform. But if this company outperforms expectation and comes on the right price, I could see myself taking a position.
Dylan Lewis: Since you mentioned Pinterest, I do want to walk through what the cautionary tale there looks like. What was the thesis and what went wrong, and what can we learn there as we look at Reddit here?
Brian Feroldi: Pinterest was my wife’s favorite company. She used it all the time and it was a social media platform that had a lot of positives to it. A core, a user base, a very friendly platform. It was a natural place to go from being a core lurker to someone that would make a purchase. That was very much what the platform was about. What they struggled with was growing the user base and then increasing their average revenue per user. A big part of the thesis was, there were like one-tenth of the rate that Facebook was, and if they can just get to a third of the rate of Facebook, that would lead to tremendous upside growth. They’ve made some progress on that front, but it hasn’t been as easy as I assumed it was going to be. I could very much see Reddit having that same promise, but also having that same struggle.
Dylan Lewis: Brian Feroldi, thanks so much for joining me today and talk me through this prospectus.
Brian Feroldi: Always a pleasure to be here Dylan.
Dylan Lewis: Listeners, if you’ve got a company you want us to do a 15-minute Dive Into, let us know. Write in at [email protected]. Coming up next, Emily Flippen and Jason Moser return with a couple of stocks on their radar. Stay right here. You’re listening to Motley Fool Money. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. Don’t buy or sell anything based solely on what you hear.
I’m Dylan Lewis, joined again by Emily Flippen and Jason Moser. We’ve got stocks on our radar coming up in a minute. But first, pour some melted ice cream out for Unilever. The consumer giant announced plans to cut 7,500 jobs and it will also be spinning out its ice cream unit, which is the home of Ben and Jerry’s. Jason, are you surprised to see Unilever moving away from ice cream and such a big brand like Ben and Jerry’s.
Jason Moser: The timing seems a little odd, hadn’t these guys heard a little thing called. Now, apparently you just take some of them, eat all the ice cream you want. I did find it interesting when you look at the ice cream space, just in regard to US market share, actually private-label is the biggest shareholder. But Ben and Jerry’s, it’s a close second, so it’s not an irrelevant business, but like he said, growth has slowed down, perhaps doesn’t fit well with the rest of Unilever’s business, so it seems like it’s on the chopping block.
Dylan Lewis: Emily, I know when I’m looking for a treat Ben and Jerry’s is where I go. I’m usually a Jerry Garcia guy. What about you?
Emily Flippen: Well, first of all, chunky monkey girl of course banana ice cream, you can’t beat it. I am concerned though, because part of the reason they’re making this spin-off is just because consumer trends have abbed away from ice cream. Whether that’d be for health reasons or otherwise, whatever was driving people to buy lots of Ben and Jerry’s is no longer driving that same growth, and I can appreciate that from a leverage perspective, but from a consumer perspective, I’m going to lose it if I don’t have access to Ben and Jerry’s. Not that I eat it, I get I’m part of the problem. I look at the calories on the pint and I can’t justify making that purchase, but on the rare occasion that I do, I want the junkie monkey and I think there’ll be a big hole in people’s hearts if this for some reason loses distribution as a result of its spin-off.
Brian Feroldi: [laughs] Let’s get over to stocks on our radar. Our man behind-the-glass, Rick Engdahl, is going to hit you with a question. Jason, you’re up first. What are you looking at this week?
Jason Moser: Interesting week for Topgolf Callaway Brands ticker is MODG. Earlier in the week a rumor started spreading there. Maybe some acquisition of the company. South Korean news outlet reported that there was interest in perhaps spinning off the top golf side of the business and selling the Callaway side of the business. The company [inaudible] hot over that, didn’t really commit one way or the other, but it’s an interesting thing to think about. The major shareholders apparently have selected a lead manager to explore possible deals. There’s even a rumor out there floating that PIF, the public investment fund that controls live golf, they might be interested in buying this Callaway brand business. Phil Mickelson is clearly on board with it, said, “I pray this happens. ” Rick, a question about Topgolf Callaway.
Rick Engdahl: The top golf people worried about competition from the ax throwing people because given the conflicts, I got to go with the ax throwers, although top golfers have the range, I don’t know. What do you think?
Jason Moser: Ax throwing seems like it would be a lot more fun and this is coming from a lifelong golfer Rick. Emily, what’s on your radar this week?
Emily Flippen: PDD holdings. That’s the ticker, PDD, also known as Pinduoduo, the Chinese e-commerce giant, up massively after their quarter. Temu, which is their ex China facing e-commerce app just continues to blow results out of the water. I am a shareholder of Pinduoduo, I forgot about that until I looked at my accounts recently and realize I’ve apparently made a lot of money on it, even though the mandate of the company has changed.
Dylan Lewis: All right, Rick, a question about Pinduoduo.
Rick Engdahl: First of all, I didn’t think it was real company until I had to looked it up. I had never heard of Temu before, until my daughter brought it up in a rant about fast-fashion and labor practices or something. Is there any concern about the upcoming young generation of conscious consumers out there or is this just a myth?
Emily Flippen: Certainly a lot of concern, not a business that’d be willing to recommend today, even though I have all the [inaudible] and that I do own it in my account.
Dylan Lewis: Rick, you’ve got two very different businesses here this week. Which one’s going on your watchlist?
Rick Engdahl: I think I want to see that battle between the golfers and the ax throwers. It’s going to be prime TV.
Dylan Lewis: You and me both, I’d love that. Emily Flippen and Jason Moser, thanks for being here. Rick, thanks for weighing in on our radar stocks. That’s going to do it for this week’s Motley Fool Money radio show. Show was mixed by Rick Engdahl. I’m your host, Dylan Lewis. Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next time.

Preorders for Apple‘s $3,499 Vision Pro headset began Thursday morning ahead of its U.S. release on Feb. 2.
The Vision Pro is Apple’s first new product category since it released the Apple Watch in 2015. Wall Street doesn’t expect Apple to sell it in the same quantities as it does its other products, such as the iPhone, Apple Watch and Mac — at least not at first.
“We believe success with the Vision Pro is less about 2024 and more about its longer-term potential,” Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring said in a note to investors in December.
UBS’ David Vogt estimates Apple could generate about $1.4 billion in revenue from the Vision Pro in 2024, assuming Apple ships about 400,000 handsets. By comparison, Apple generated $43.81 billion in iPhone revenue during its fiscal fourth quarter.
The entry-level Vision Pro comes with 256GB of storage and the same M2 chip that Apple includes in some of its Macs. The company is also selling a 512GB Vision Pro for $3,699 and a 1TB model for $3,899.
It provides a “spatial computing” experience. The headset can serve as a virtual reality display that lets users watch movies, for example. Or a user can pin several different apps and screens in their view while also seeing the world around them.
Apple’s preorder website asks customers to use an iPhone or iPad with Face ID to find the best-fitting size.
The company is also offering a 12-month financing plan. The $3,499 model costs $291.58 a month with that option. Prescription lens inserts can be purchased for $149.
Apple announced the Vision Pro at its Worldwide Developers Conference in 2023.
Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:
Investors who were savvy enough to buy Apple Inc. bonds in October are now looking at equity-like returns, as prices have climbed while spreads have tightened as Treasury yields tumbled.
Hopes for one or more rate cuts by the Federal Reserve in 2024 have sparked a rally in Treasurys that has seen the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index, a broad-based fixed-income benchmark, surge 4.91% so far in November as of Wednesday’s close. That puts it on pace for the biggest monthly gain since May 1985, when the monthly return was 5.23%.
The high-grade and highly liquid bonds issued by the iPhone maker have gained up to 15% in price depending on duration, while spreads have tightened up to 22 basis points, since mid-October, as the following charts from data-solutions provider BondCliQ Media Services show.
In comparison, Apple’s stock
AAPL,
has rallied about 10%
Since MarketWatch wrote on Oct. 18 that investors were flocking to bonds issued by (almost all) of the Magnificent Seven companies for their juicy yields, the bonds have rallied.
At the time, Apple’s 10-year bonds were yielding about 5.2%, while the stock’s implied dividend yield stood at 0.54%.

Price performance of select Apple Inc. bonds
BondCliQ Media Services
The following chart shows the movement in spreads in the same time frame.

Spread performance for select Apple bonds from Oct. 18.
BondCliQ Media Services
Given those strong returns, the bonds have seen net selling in the last 10 days, most likely due to profit-taking as the month draws to a close and fund managers seek to lock in some gains.

Most active Apple Inc. issues with net customer flow (last 10 days).
BondCliQ Media Services
Bonds issued by Apple and other household name companies had fallen in price as yields climbed during the rate-hiking cycle the Federal Reserve started in March 2022. That’s because of the inverse relationship between bond prices and yields and not because of any credit-quality issue.
But the move meant investors could add high-yielding, high-quality names to portfolios at a discount.
Apple has issued billions of dollars of bonds with maturities out to 50 years, much of it intended to raise the funds for shareholder returns. In 2013, for example, it issued $17 billion of bonds in a six-part deal, its first bond issuance since a convertible offering in 1996. At the time, most of the company’s cash was parked overseas, and would have been subjected to a 35% tax if the company had repatriated it.
After 2013, the company kept issuing bonds to take advantage of rock-bottom borrowing rates at the time.
For Apple investors, there’s just one stock, but there are many bonds in circulation to choose from.

Outstanding Apple Inc. debt (USD) by maturity year
BondCliQ Media Services
Read also: Corporate bonds are on sale. How to add cheap Apple, Disney and Microsoft bonds to your portfolio.
Apple’s Loaded Product Lineup Headed Into the Holidays Is Good News for Investors
Apple (AAPL 1.87%) isn’t messing around this holiday season. The tech company added to an already exhaustive lineup of new products this week, announcing new chips and Macs, including 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros in a new “space black” finish. The new devices build on a range of new product introductions headed into the holidays, including updated smartphones and smartwatches. Apple even brought to market a new Apple Pencil.
All of this positions Apple strategically to capture wallet share from increasingly strapped consumers who are pressured by inflation and high interest rates. More importantly, Apple’s latest round of new products increases the odds of the iPhone maker returning to growth during a quarter in which it typically rakes in the lion’s share of its annual net income.
Apple’s new space black laptop is key
On the surface, Apple’s product event on Oct. 30 may seem unimportant. After all, it was a Mac-focused event, and Mac only accounted for about 10.2% of Apple’s fiscal 2022 revenue. But investors shouldn’t count out this product event as a key catalyst for the holidays yet. There are several reasons new Mac products could be important catalysts for Apple when combined with the already-robust lineup of new products Apple has going into the holidays.
First, other than Apple’s move in the summer of 2022 to update its 13-inch MacBook Pro to include a new processor, the company’s MacBook Pro lineup was an aging product line going into the holidays last year. For instance, the last major refreshes to its 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro devices were in October of 2021. With the help of these new products, Apple’s Mac business grew 25% year over year during the calendar 2021 holiday quarter. Indeed, Apple management specifically credited the segment’s growth to the “newly redesigned MacBook Pro” during the earnings call for the period. While 25% growth from Mac during the holiday quarter is unlikely, given the current macroeconomic backdrop, Apple’s well-timed refresh of the MacBook Pro will almost undoubtedly help the important period’s results in some fashion, particularly since Apple is going up against a period last year when the Mac lineup was aging.
Additionally, it’s worth noting that Apple’s MacBook Pro lineup commands some serious pricing power. The 16-inch MacBook Pro, for instance, starts at $2,499. Strong orders and shipments of the new product could really move the needle for not only Apple’s Mac segment but its entire business.
Finally, something tells me Apple’s new space black color will be popular with pro users. Call it speculation, but that’s my hunch.
A healthy supply chain
There’s also something to be said about an improving global supply chain. As the world recovers from COVID-19-related factory shutdowns, Apple is likely better prepared to build and ship more products going into the holidays this year than it was in the year-ago period. Indeed, this is likely one key reason why Apple has introduced so many new products leading up to the holidays. Chances are, Apple’s new MacBook Pro will both solicit strong demand but also be followed up with good production volume — at least compared to recent years, which often saw manufacturing interrupted by sudden and unplanned factory shutdowns due to China’s zero-COVID policies at the time and some disruptions in other markets as well.
An easy comparison
Finally, it’s worth emphasizing that Apple is going up against an easy comparison during the holiday quarter (the first fiscal quarter of 2024) particularly when it comes to Mac. Apple’s total revenue fell 5% year over year in its first quarter of fiscal 2023 (the fiscal quarter coinciding with the fourth calendar quarter of 2022), with Mac revenue declining about 29% year over year.
Apple’s new space black MacBook Pro, along with its refreshed iMacs, could be the determining factor for the company returning to year-over-year revenue growth in the holiday quarter.
Fortunately, however, Apple isn’t entirely dependent on the MacBook Pro for a good holiday quarter. It has overhauled other major products going into the final calendar quarter as well. This loaded product pipeline will help Apple grab as much share from consumers’ holiday-spending budgets as possible.
Investors may get some insight into what Apple expects from its holiday quarter when the company reports earnings for its fiscal Q4 after market close on Thursday, Nov. 2.
Daniel Sparks has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. His clients may own shares of the companies mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Apple. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Hello and welcome to Financial Face-off, a MarketWatch column where we help you weigh a financial decision. Our columnist will give her verdict. Tell us whether you think she’s right in the comments. And please share your suggestions for future Financial Face-off columns by emailing our columnist at lalbrecht@marketwatch.com.
Fall is almost here, but if you follow the consumer calendar this period is better known as pumpkin-spice latte season at Starbucks
SBUX,
and new iPhone season at Apple
AAPL,
The PSL is now 20 years old and the iPhone is 16, but every year, Starbucks and Apple try to get you to fall in love all over again with their headline-grabbing products.
The nutmeg-coated latte will cost you at least $6.45 for a grande in New York City. The latest iPhone 15 starts at $799 for the basic model, $899 for the 15 Plus, $999 for the Pro and $1,199 for the Pro Max, the company said when it unveiled the product lineup Tuesday.
“These are the best and most capable iPhones we’ve ever made,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said.
If you’re an iPhone owner nearing the end of a two-year cell phone contract, there’s a good chance you have an iPhone 13. How does the iPhone 15 stack up against the iPhone 13, and is it time to upgrade?
Why it matters
If you take Apple’s word for it, upgrading matters because of all the new features the company trumpeted at Tuesday’s event, including the iPhone 15’s “all-day” battery life (Apple didn’t say how many hours this means); the fastest smartphone chip “ever” for the 15 Pro and Pro Max; a “state-of-the-art telephoto camera” on the 15 Pro Max; a lightweight yet thinner and more durable titanium casing on the Pro and Pro Max models; and satellite-powered roadside assistance through AAA on all iPhone 15 models.
Are those enhancements enough to justify spending the cost of a laptop or vacation on a phone? With inflation still driving higher prices on everyday essentials, shoppers may be reluctant to rush out to buy the new iPhone, even though Apple kept the prices the same as last year on three of the iPhone 15 models. Some 37% of consumers say they plan to get the latest iPhone this year; that’s up from 29% in 2021, according to surveys by WalletHub.
When deciding whether to upgrade, first sit down and think about how you use your phone, said Nicholas De Leon, a tech expert at Consumer Reports. “If you’re someone who doesn’t use it for much, if you scroll through Instagram
META,
and then text your husband, I don’t know that you need a new phone to do that,” he told MarketWatch before the Apple product launch. But if you’re a TikTok influencer whose livelihood depends on churning out high-quality videos, the upgrade could make sense.
“The iPhone 15’s improvements won’t change the lives of typical iPhone users, but paying off debt will.”
As for the 13 vs. the 15, one of the most notable differences (other than the new type of charging port) is that the 15 has the “Dynamic Island,” a mini control hub on the phone’s home screen that shows you information such as what song you’re listening to, or who’s calling you. Apple described this feature as “magical.”
De Leon is not convinced: “Is that enough to rush out and upgrade?” he asked. “Ehh. The Dynamic Island is neat but not what I would call transformative. But it’s a nice bonus if you do upgrade this year.”
Both the iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max have ProMotion display, which was only available previously on the 13 Pro. It makes animation and other movements appear much smoother, which could be important to you if you’re a gamer.
The iPhone 15 also has a faster chip, which amounts to a “decent, if not mind-blowing upgrade” over the iPhone 13, according to the product-review site Tom’s Guide. iPhone shoppers who want to upgrade from an iPhone 13 but don’t want to spring for an iPhone 15 may want to consider buying the iPhone 14 Pro, according to Tom’s Guide, because it has most of the same improvements, with the exception of the USB-C charging port.
The verdict
Skip running out to buy the iPhone 15. Now is not the time. Many households are on shaky financial ground. Credit-card debt is at a record high, and student-loan payments are about to start up again. The iPhone 15’s improvements won’t change the lives of typical iPhone users, but paying off debt will.
Don’t miss: ‘iPhones are depreciating devices:’ Should you buy an iPhone 15 or invest $800 in Apple stock?
My reasons
There was a time when getting the newest iPhone made a much bigger difference for the average iPhone user. Early iPhone users couldn’t even copy and paste on their phones. At this point the annual changes are pretty incremental. But Apple still uses its annual event to drum up media coverage and influence its stock price. This year the latter didn’t happen; Apple shares slipped after Tuesday’s event.
The typical phone user is probably better off ignoring the hype and making a decision based on their needs. “They’ve always been good at the razzle dazzle showmanship aspect of this,” De Leon said. “But I just look at ordinary folks in my life and feedback from readers, about what people are doing with their phones. ‘Not much’ is kind of the answer.”
“You can also extend the life of your existing phone. If your iPhone 13 is running out of pep, you can get the battery replaced.”
Instead of buying a new phone, you can extend the life of your existing one. If your iPhone 13 is running out of pep, you can get the battery replaced by Apple or at Best Buy
BBY,
for $89, according to both company’s websites. That could buy you another year or so, at which point you can get yourself a new iPhone 16 (if the company calls it that), which will probably feel like marked improvement over your current device.
Another tip: don’t let the length of your cell phone contract sway you. Now that contracts at some carriers run three years long, spending $100 more to get the fancier iPhone model will cost you about $2.80 per month over 36 months. That removes the financial sting, which can lead to buying a more advanced phone than you really need, said Josh Lowitz, co-founder of Consumer Intelligence Research Partners, or CIRP, which publishes a Substack newsletter on Apple.
“[It] eases the decision to buy the more expensive phone and it subtly encourages you to buy the more expensive phone, because you’re expecting to own it longer and you want to future-proof your phone,” Lowitz told MarketWatch.
In other words, if you know you’re going to hold onto your phone for three years, you may buy one with more features and computing power than you actually require for your everyday tasks, because you may worry your phone will start to feel outdated in 12 or 24 months. Ignoring that concern could save you $100.
See also: How does the iPhone 15 compare to the latest Pixel and Galaxy devices?
Is my verdict best for you?
On the other hand, if the safety features that Apple has been touting in recent years are important to you, the iPhone 15 could be worth it. The iPhone 13 doesn’t have the Emergency SOS feature that lets users text emergency responders via satellite when they’re out of cell phone range; that started with the iPhone 14.
For the iPhone 15 series, Apple has rolled out satellite-powered emergency roadside assistance through a partnership with AAA. The service is available for free for two years for all iPhone 15 buyers. “Apple is leaning into three critical, broad attributes: safety, privacy and health apps,” said Mike Levin, co-founder of CIRP. “All three are very personal to people. It’s very seductive. Those are messages that resonate very hard with many many different demographics.”
If you decide to upgrade, don’t forget that you can often get a discount on a new phone by trading in your old device. Here’s a look at the deals on offer from Verizon
VZ,
T-Mobile
TMUS,
and AT&T
T,
Tell us in the comments which option should win in this Financial Face-off. If you have ideas for future Financial Face-off columns, send me an email at lalbrecht@marketwatch.com.
CEO paid more than Apple’s Tim Cook last year—and Harvard Law’s youngest-ever graduate—unexpectedly leaves his $110 million gig
Kiwi Camara, the chief executive of legal tech firm CS Disco, turned heads earlier this year when data highlighted him as one of just nine CEOs to get a bigger paycheck than Apple’s Tim Cook last year.
Camara’s compensation totaled $110 million last year, compared to Cook’s $99 million, according to the Wall Street Journal in July, citing data from analytics company C-Suite Comp. In the company’s rankings, Camara came in just below Pinterest CEO Bill Ready (who received $123 million in pay), while Blackstone’s Stephen Schwarzman topped the list with a $253 million paycheck.
But the bumper pay wasn’t enough for Camara to stay in the role.
On Monday, CS Disco revealed in a stock filing that Camara was stepping down as CEO, with immediate effect. The filing gave few details of the circumstances of Camara’s exit, only saying that it was not due to “any disagreement with the Company on any matter relating to the Company’s operations, policies or practices.”
Yet much of Camara’s sizable paycheck may not come to fruition, given the terms of his exit. Almost all of Camara’s compensation came in the form of stock options, which would normally only vest when the company’s stock passed certain thresholds, the lowest being $150, according to the Wall Street Journal. CS Disco’s shares have not even reached half that level since it started trading in 2021.
Shares in CS Disco have fallen by over 26% since Monday, when the company disclosed that Camara was leaving the company. The company now has a market capitalization of just $422 million. CS Disco’s shares are now almost 90% below their peak of $65.88 in September 2021.
CS Disco did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Founded in 2013, CS Disco provides technologies like artificial intelligence to law firms, thus saving time on tasks like legal discovery.
On Monday, CS Disco appointed board member Scott Hill as its interim CEO. Hill previously served as CFO and special advisor to the CEO of Intercontinental Exchange. Hill will be paid a salary of $50,000 and restricted stock options of around 32,000 shares (worth about $225,000 at Thursday’s closing price).
CS Disco reported $34.3 million in revenue for the quarter ending June 30, 2023, a rise of 2% year-on-year. It also narrowed losses to $14.9 million, compared to $20.2 million a year earlier. The company has never reported a profit since it went public.
Kiwi Camara’s career
Camara has had a prominent and, at times, controversial career. He’s the youngest-ever graduate of Harvard Law School, getting his degree at the age of 19. Yet his schooling was marked by a scandal when, at the age of 16, he shared class notes that included a racial slur. Camara apologized for the mistake, yet thinks the resulting controversy denied him opportunities at major law firms.
Camara then set up a firm with his Law School classmate Joe Sibley. The two gained prominence again in one of the earliest cases of file-sharing: The two defended Jammie Thomas-Rassett after record companies sued her in 2006 for downloading and sharing 24 songs on the platform Kazaa. Thomas-Rassett was, as one point, liable for $1.92 million in damages, which was eventually whittled down to $222,000 by 2013, seven years after the suit was first filed.
Camara’s former law partner now thinks he’ll be taking a break after his time leading CS Disco. “He just had so much on his plate with work that it was very difficult for him to find any leisure time,” Sibley told the Wall Street Journal.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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Apple CEO Tim Cook holds the new iPhone 14 at an Apple event at their headquarters in Cupertino, California, September 7, 2022.
Carlos Barria | Reuters
Apple is holding its most important launch event of the year on Tuesday at its headquarters in Cupertino, California, where it’s expected to unveil new hardware, including the iPhone 15.
Apple will present a prerecorded video featuring company executives to launch the products, which will be streamed on YouTube and Apple’s website. Last year’s event lasted about an hour an a half. Apple has used prerecorded videos for its product showcases since 2020.
Apple’s launches are important for the company and build hype for the products and set the stage for a marketing blitz heading into the December quarter, its biggest sales period of the year. Thirty-one million people have watched Apple’s YouTube video from last year’s launch, revealing that customers still like to get information directly from the company.
This year, the tech giant is hoping the new iPhones can bust a sales slump, fend off renewed competition from Huawei and persuade owners of Android phones to switch.
Apple also announced its new VR headset, the Vision Pro, in June ahead of a planned launch in 2024. The company could provide an update on its efforts to attract developers, but more details about that product are likely not to be released until next year.
Apple’s Macs and iPads are unlikely to see new reveals on Tuesday, given the company usually prefers to give them their own events. Last year, Apple announced new iPads through a press release.
This year’s launch invitations have the tagline “Wonderlust,” although the taglines don’t necessarily preview what the company is announcing. CNBC will be covering the launch live from Apple’s headquarters and with a live blog on CNBC.com.
Last year, Apple announced new iPhones, Apple Watches and updated AirPods at its September event. Here’s what to expect from this year’s edition:
iPhone 15: USB-C and titanium
Apple’s invite to its Sept. 12 event.
Apple
Apple is expected to release four new iPhone models, continuing the pattern that’s been in place since 2020. If Apple keeps its naming pattern, this year’s models will share the iPhone 15 brand.
Apple is likely to release two sizes of middle-range iPhones, one with a 6.1-inch screen and one with a 6.7-inch screen, as well as two sizes of higher end “Pro” phones with titanium casing and better cameras, according to reports from Bloomberg News, TF International Securities hardware analyst Ming-Chi Kuo and Wall Street analysts.
This year, the biggest change is expected to be a USB-C charging port, replacing Apple’s proprietary Lightning port, which was introduced in 2012 as the iPhone charger “for the next decade.”
A USB-C charging port on iPhones will match the same charging port on Android phones, newer laptops, iPads, wireless headphones and other gadgets.
The change is being spurred by new European regulations which require a common charging port. Apple is unlikely to mention that the change was required by a new law, but it will probably emphasize the positives for users, such as convenience and faster charging. It might also give the port a proprietary Apple marketing name.
Apple will “comply” with European Union regulation that requires electronic devices to be equipped with USB-C charging, said Greg Joswiak, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide marketing. That will mean Apple’s iPhones, which currently use its proprietary Lightning charging standard, will need to change to support USB-C.
Jakub Porzyck | Nurphoto | Getty Images
New Pro models could also get a titanium casing, replacing the stainless steel used in the past few models. Titanium is lighter than steel, reducing the phones’ total weight. Event invitations show an Apple logo in what looks like a titanium finish.
Lower-end phones — expected to be called simply iPhone 15 — could get an upgrade to what the company calls the “dynamic island,” or a cutout that holds the phone’s facial recognition cameras toward the top of the screen. Last year’s Pro models ditched Apple’s “notch” for the undulating window, which can show real-time updates, such as how far away an Uber is or what’s playing on the music app. The mute switch, which has been present on iPhones for over a decade, could gain new functions as a customizable “action button.”
Apple is also likely to focus on camera and chip improvements as reasons for the upgrade. The biggest and most expensive iPhone model, the bigger Pro, could get a new lens that can zoom with twice the strength as the 3x zoom lens on the iPhone 14 Pro, according to Bloomberg.
One open question is whether Apple will raise price points. Some analysts think so, noting rising costs for parts like memory or processors. However, Apple did not raise U.S. iPhone prices last year under similar conditions. It does tweak its prices around the world regularly after launches and in response to currency fluctuations.
Apple Watch and accessories
Apple Watch Ultra.
Sofia Pitt
Last year, Apple released the Apple Watch Series 8 and a new high-end titanium model called the Ultra in September.
Both are likely to get updates this year, although Apple’s Watches don’t typically get as many major changes from year to year as the iPhones. Apple’s mainstream watches have had the same size and shape since 2018.
The company is likely to upgrade the chip inside the new watches, as well as update its health sensors, according to analysts. But Apple may save bigger changes for the device’s 10th anniversary next year.
Apple also has several accessories that use Lightning connectors, such as some of its AirPod models, Beats headphones, mice and keyboards.
AirPods Pro will get a new feature that doesn’t need new hardware called Adaptive Audio. It uses machine learning and software to intelligently turn down the volume and noise canceling so users can be aware of their immediate surroundings.
Apple will likely update its accessories to work with USB-C, but the updated accessories may not be discussed on Tuesday, or could be released later.
iOS 17
StandBy Mode in iOS 17
Todd Haselton | CNBC
Even users who don’t plan to pick up a new iPhone or Watch will get new software for their devices. Apple previews its latest operating systems for its devices in June, then releases them in September alongside new iPhones.
Many of Apple’s best new features don’t require new hardware and will be available to everyone with an iPhone released since 2018.
Here’s some of what is new in iOS 17:
- The software includes a revamp of the caller ID screen called “contact posters” where users can choose the images that show up when they call other iPhone users.
- Autocorrect has been improved using a transformer-based language model, the same technology underpinning applications like ChatGPT.
- A new Journal app encourages users to save thoughts and feelings on a daily basis and uses on-device machine learning to spot patterns without sending the data to a server in the cloud.
- A new standby dock mode turns your phone into a clock with widgets that can show alarms, appointments or other updating information.
- A business card replacement called NameDrop allows two iPhone users to exchange personal information by tapping their phones together.
- Offline Apple maps make it possible for users to save huge swaths of roads and land to navigate even without cellphone service.
Apple’s Lesser-Known Co-Founder Owned ⅓ Of The Company But Missed Out On A Potential $900 Billion Fortune

With the late Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, Apple Inc.‘s co-founders, dominating the tech world for decades, it’s easy to overlook the vital role played by a lesser-known figure: Mike Markkula.
While Jobs and Wozniak captured the limelight, Markkula’s contributions to Apple’s success were no less significant. From angel investor to CEO and chairman, Markkula’s journey with Apple showcased his belief in the power of personal computers.
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Born on Feb. 11, 1942, in Los Angeles, Markkula was no stranger to the world of technology. Armed with bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Southern California, this Trojan brother was already well-versed in the intricacies of the field. Markkula’s career at Fairchild Semiconductor International Inc. and Intel Corp., where he retired as a millionaire at the young age of 32, showcased his deep understanding of the tech landscape.
It was during an encounter with Jobs and Wozniak that Markkula’s trajectory took a momentous turn. Recognizing the potential of the Apple II computer, Markkula’s imagination soared. Fueling his conviction with action, Markkula emerged from retirement in 1977, becoming an angel investor in Apple. His $250,000 investment, a combination of loans and equity, solidified his position as the second CEO, third employee and a significant one-third owner of the budding company. In 2023, a one-third stake in Apple would be worth about $900 billion.
This unfortunate reality for Markkula highlights an important lesson for investors and the general potential with longer-term investments and the lucrative but volatile nature of startups. For example, despite the recent decline in venture capital, retail investors have invested over $1 billion through startup investing platforms like StartEngine.
Markkula’s Impact
Markkula, eight years older than Wozniak and 13 years older than Jobs, brought a mature perspective and technical prowess to the table. His contributions to Apple’s early innovations, including writing several programs for the Apple II and beta testing hardware and software, further solidified his importance at the company.
Markkula’s business expertise breathed new life into Apple’s operations. He orchestrated credit arrangements and secured vital venture capital investments, propelling the company forward.
With the appointment of executive Michael Scott as Apple’s first president and CEO, Markkula’s vision for a Fortune 500 company started to take shape. He believed they could achieve that goal within five years. In May 1983, Apple made its debut on the Fortune 500 list at No. 411. Apple become the fastest-growing company in history.
Apple’s sales skyrocketed, with revenue climbing from $773,000 in 1977 to $117 million in 1980, the year of the company’s initial public offering. Markkula’s equity investment yielded a 220,552% gain, leaving his shares worth $203 million.
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As a CEO himself from 1981 to 1983 and later chairman of the board of directors from 1985 to 1997, Markkula proved to be the steady hand steering Apple through turbulent waters. He played a pivotal role in preserving the Macintosh plan, even when Jobs attempted to derail it multiple times in favor of his own project Lisa.
Markkula’s unwavering support for Macintosh and his alignment with John Sculley, Apple’s CEO from 1983 to 1993, during a critical dispute with Jobs ultimately led to Jobs’ departure from the company.
A 1996 article reported that Markkula sold 500,000 shares, amounting to 14% of his stake in the company. But he still retained 3.1 million shares, making him the largest individual shareholder at that time. The sale was attributed to “personal reasons,” as stated by an Apple spokeswoman, although no further details were provided.
Despite retiring from Apple in 1997, shortly after Jobs’ triumphant return as interim CEO, Markkula’s impact continued to resonate. He supported Jobs’ comeback and, more importantly, left behind a legacy of keen decision-making. Markkula’s intuition, especially when it came to the personal computer market, proved spot-on.
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This article Apple’s Lesser-Known Co-Founder Owned ⅓ Of The Company But Missed Out On A Potential $900 Billion Fortune originally appeared on Benzinga.com
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Over $200 billion of Apple’s market cap has vaporized since Thursday. Here’s what’s going on
Shares of Apple continued their post-earnings plunge on Monday, falling 1.7% despite a rebound in the broader market. The tech giant has now lost over $200 billion in market cap in less than a week, its worst five-day session since November 2022.
On the one hand, Apple’s size makes even a slight decline in its share price look pretty significant in terms of market cap, but on the other hand, the recent drop has been large by historical standards. Here’s why the market got so (relatively) spooked about Apple.
Falling revenues
The turbulence began on Aug. 3 when Apple reported that its iPhone sales had fallen well short of Wall Street’s estimates for the June quarter, leading to the company’s overall revenues dropping 1% year-over-year to $81.8 billion.
While Apple has grown its services segment revenues in recent years—adding billions to its top line from the App Store, iCloud services, as well as Apple Music, Apple TV+, and Apple Pay—iPhone sales still account for roughly 50% of total revenue. As a result of this reliance, the iPhone sales drop led to a wave of analyst downgrades for Apple’s stock last week.
Rosenblatt analysts downgraded Apple’s shares to “neutral” from “buy,” arguing the company is stuck in a “slowdown phase.” And Loop Capital analyst Ananda Baruah lowered his rating to “hold” from “buy” as well, noting that Apple’s current revenue guidance is at risk if iPhone sales don’t rise throughout the year.
It was a tough quarter for Apple’s hardware sales business overall. IPhone revenues fell 2.4% year-over-year to $39.7 billion, Mac revenues sank 7.3% to $6.8 billion, and iPad revenue plummeted 19.8% to $5.8 billion.
Weak guidance
Another reason for the recent sell-off in Apple stock was weaker-than-expected guidance from management.
For the September quarter, Apple said it expects gross profit margins to be between 44% and 45%, with flat to slightly slower year-over-year revenue growth. And while iPhone and services segment revenue may accelerate slightly, Apple CFO Luca Maestri said he expects revenue for the Mac and iPad to continue falling throughout the year.
Wedbush tech analyst Dan Ives, a noted Apple bull, admitted in an Aug. 3 note to clients the guidance was “a tad light of the Street.” And Bank of America analysts, in a similar post-earnings note, said the outlook showed Apple is facing a “backdrop of a weak U.S. smartphone market.”
A lofty valuation
Apple’s rich valuation is the third key reason that the stock is under pressure, according to analysts.
Despite three consecutive quarters of falling revenue, shares of Apple were up 51% year-to-date at their peak, leading its shares to trade as high as 33x times earnings. And even after the recent post-earnings stock price drop, Apple still trades at roughly 30 times earnings. For comparison, the S&P 500 trades at roughly 20 times earnings, per WSJ data.
Some analysts point to Apple’s cost cutting measures and growing high-margin services revenue as a reason to pay a premium for the stock, noting that overall net income rose 2.3% to $19.9 billion in the June quarter and services revenue jumped 8% to a record high $21.2 billion. But others argue that Apple remains overly reliant on waning iPhone sales in a difficult macroeconomic environment.
Still a long-term winner?
Apple’s latest quarter was enough to spook investors, but Wall Street analysts’ reaction was split, with many big names remaining upbeat about the tech giant’s long-term prospects despite the recent headwinds.
While investors fear that falling iPhone sales are an indication of waning demand for Apple’s most important product, bullish analysts note that, on a constant currency basis, revenues for the iPhone segment actually rose 1.4% year-over-year last quarter.
Wedbush tech analyst Dan Ives explained that iPhone revenues would have beat the Street’s consensus forecast excluding the foreign currency exchange headwinds and argued that strength in key overseas markets for the smartphone offers a runway for future growth.
China iPhone revenues, for example, rose 8% year-over-year in the second quarter and management told investors on a post-earnings call that India iPhone revenues hit a record high, although they declined to disclose the exact figures.
Ives also believes that the release of iPhone 15 in September will create a “mini super cycle” of demand for the product at a time when Apple continues to increase its services segment revenues.
“We believe iPhones and Services should be stronger than expected and remain the core of the Cupertino growth story,” he wrote, reiterating his “outperform rating” and a $220 price target.
That view was backed up by Bank of America analyst Wamsi Mohan in an August 3 note. Mohan said that he believes Apple’s services business revenue can continue to grow due to “improving trends in advertising, mobile gaming and App store sales.” He also highlighted the record number of “switchers”—consumers who opted to switch to an iPhone from another brand—in China in the second quarter, arguing it could help to offset a “weaker consumer spending environment” globally.
While most analysts remain bullish about Apple’s long-term prospects, there are some who worry that there could be more near-term pain due to the company’s lofty valuation and falling revenues.
UBS analyst David Vogt noted that despite “disappointing” hardware sales, Apple currently trades at a roughly 50% premium to the S&P 500. And he said that although some of his peers are brushing off declining iPhone, Mac and iPad sales as “transitory” and pointing to the potential for growth in the services segment, he’s worried about underlying demand.
“The gravity of a challenging smartphone market particularly in developed regions that should continue…is a headwind for the stock,” he wrote, reiterating his “neutral” rating and $190 12-month price target.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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