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Apple analysts let down their clients, but it shouldn’t be a surprise


The Apple logo is displayed at the Nasdaq MarketSite just before the opening bell in New York on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2011.

Scott Eells | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The Apple logo is displayed at the Nasdaq MarketSite just before the opening bell in New York on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2011.

Apple analysts, huh, what were they good for? Absolutely nothing. Say it again…

Yep, that’s right, I just butchered one of the most powerful lyrics of the past fifty years. Lyrics immortalized by Edwin Starr in the 1970 Vietnam protest song, but for me it kind of grabs your attention and makes the point rather succinctly.

Yes, this may be a sweeping damnation of the analyst community’s performance regarding Apple, but let me add I’m going to try to avoid repeating the whole Apple demise story. A precipitous fall that has taken it from being worth circa $1.2 trillion to its current more modest $700 billion valuation. One that has many of us who remember Nokia at its year 2000 peak wondering if we will see history repeating itself so speedily?

What I want you to think about is the absolute “shock” experienced by the analysts regarding Apple’s revenue warning last week.

I want you to consider how many of the Wall Street analysts covering Apple had an outright “sell,” or even an “underweight,” on the stock? Now my Reuters analytics may be malfunctioning terribly but I’ve been watching Apple’s stock pretty keenly for years now and in advance of last week’s warning there were — wait for it — zero sells out there on the stock. Not one. As of December 27, Apple had 13 “strong buy” ratings from analysts, 10 “buy” and 20 “hold” ratings, with no “sell” or “strong sell” ratings.

Anyone else feeling a little let down by the objectivity of this motley crew? Let down, yes, yet again, but not surprised.

They herded, scared of being on the wrong side of perhaps the greatest of the FAANGs (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Alphabet’s Google), scared of leaving the pack and actually watching what was going on.

Even us humble, lightweight business TV anchors spotted that there were big problems after the company pulled its individual iPhone number from future reporting back in November. What? Don’t believe me? Play the tapes … all of them, there are lots.

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