Look at those crosses on the 5 minute chart, still one to watch,
Shares of Apple (AAPL) are bouncing back from yesterday’s 3% sell-off, currently up $17.08, or 3.5%, at $503. A somewhat surprising development given the decidedly mixed coverage from the Street today. The shares were cut by Pacific Crest’s Andy Hargreaves to Sector Perform from Outperform, on worries about smartphone saturation limiting growth starting next year. And Merrll Lynch’s Scott Craig cut his price target to $630 from $720, while Stifel Nicolaus Aaron Rakers cut his price target to $725 from $825, both warning investors are conflicted and demand seems uncertain.
There were also some positive words, though. Katy Huberty with Morgan Stanley reiterated her Overweight rating on the shares, writing that the risk-reward balance seems favorable going into the January 23rd fiscal Q1 earnings report. And Cowen & Co.’s Matthew Hoffman this morning reiterates an Outperform rating, writing that despite fears of slack demand for the iPhone, “Our checks run counter to that sentiment; Apple’s smartphone share has risen sharply q/q, from 16.4% to ~23.5% overall (based on our 208MM C4Q12 forecast) while C4Q12 U.S. smartphone share likely increased to >35% from
Speaking of Apple, Bloomberg’s Edmond Lococo this morning writes that the company has begun to offer payment plans in China for purchasers of iPhones and MacBooks, as a means to more effectively compete with low-priced goods in that country.
And an article by DigiTimes’s Jessie Shen says that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM) is likely to secure orders to produce Apple’s custom chips, and may already be working on engineering samples of the processors, with production happening some time after 2013, citing DigiTimes’s own research analyst, Nobunaga Chai.