There will be a day when I express disappointment with some of my stocks, but today is not one of them. AAPL keeps plowing ahead, reaching a 52 week high once again this morning. Not only did RIMM meet expectations, but they upped their guidance (having broad pin action of the strength of smart phones).Combined with the jobs report and you have the making of another small run. But wait...Lift up the hood and you see more good news on the horizon. Leopard, AAPL's new operating system for the Mac, is set to launch in the next three weeks, the iTouch is rockin', and their are numerous rumors that AAPL is planning to open up the iPhone to 3rd party application development. These last three items are the icing on the cake and should continue some serious mojo for Apple.
2 comments:
>> and their are numerous rumors that AAPL is planning to open up the iPhone to 3rd party application development. <<
The last time Apple tried this was with their Mac computers before iMacs.
They leased out the rights to PowerComputing from whom I bought my Mac knock-off. After a few years of PowerComputing selling MacKOs Apple figured that PowerComputing was ONLY stealing potential customers from Apple, rather than the intended expansion of Apple customers to a broader market.
Maybe the iPhone ap-dev will be different.
I hope so, as I have a nice bite of AAPL myself.
Also, on the "Leave your comments" composition page there is the following comment below the composition window: You can use some HTML tags, (it won't post with them in this field).
I'm pretty tech ignorant and don't know a darn thing about these HTML tags.
What do I do with those little taggie-thingie-dingie?
I noticed your AAPL JAN 160 call and thought I might shoot over your way a funky chart I've recently put together.
www.marketwatch.com/tools/quotes/intchart.asp?submitted=true&intflavor=advanced&symb=AAPL&origurl=%2Ftools%2Fquotes%2Fintchart.asp&time=18&freq=8&startdate=&enddate=&hiddenTrue=&comp=APV%3DAL&compidx=aaaaa%7E0&compind=aaaaa%7E0&uf=8&ma=1&maval=0&lf=32&lf2=4&lf3=256&type=4&size=2&optstyle=1013
The primary chart is for the underlying, dwarfed by the option to which it is compared to.
The neato thing about it is that the TA is off of the primary, or underlying, so you can actually make an options trade off of the underlying's TA.
MW also lets you track the option's volume & pricing:
www.marketwatch.com/tools/quotes/intchart.asp?submitted=true&intflavor=advanced&symb=APV%3DAL&origurl=%2Ftools%2Fquotes%2Fintchart.asp&time=18&freq=8&startdate=&enddate=&hiddenTrue=&comp=&compidx=aaaaa%7E0&compind=aaaaa%7E0&uf=0&ma=1&maval=0&lf=268435456&lf2=32&lf3=4&type=4&size=2&optstyle=1013
Have fun, and don't poke yerr eye out!
Fuzz
Post a Comment