Apple, o fruto mais apetecido?
ul Escreveu:Novo record , era da Roche com 16 500 000 000 dólares a Apple vai pedir mais apesar de ter debaixo do colchão 145 000 000 000
Para eles é muito bem visto porque mais de metade dos 145B que têm em cash está fora dos States e para os repatriarem pagam um imposto de 35%.
Assim arranjam cash disponível com um custo muito mais baixo usando o cash exterior como colateral.
As pessoas são tão ingénuas e tão agarradas aos seus interesses imediatos que um vigarista hábil consegue sempre que um grande número delas se deixe enganar.
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
Novo record , era da Roche com 16 500 000 000 dólares a Apple vai pedir mais apesar de ter debaixo do colchão 145 000 000 000
Apple to Sell $17 Billion in
By KATY BURNE and MIKE CHERNEY
NEW YORK—Apple Inc. AAPL +2.94% offered investors $17 billion worth of bonds Tuesday, according to investors familiar with the deal, a record amount for an investment-grade corporate offering.
Apple is selling $17 billion of bonds, a record amount for a U.S. investment-grade corporate offering. Katy Burne reports on the News Hub. Photo: Getty Images.
An Apple spokesman declined to comment on the timing or specifics of the sale, other than to say the company wants to return $100 billion to shareholders by the end of 2015 and is issuing debt to help fund that plan.
Apple has a huge cash stockpile, but much of that cash is overseas. Raising money in the debt market would help Apple avoid the big tax bill that would come from bringing the cash back to the U.S., executives said last week. It also allows the iPhone maker to take advantage of historically low interest rates.
"There is no incentive for them to bring [cash] back with rates at these levels," said Jason Graybill, who oversees $1.2 billion of investment-grade bonds at Carret Asset Management LLC.
The largest investment-grade bond deal previously sold was a $16.5 billion offering in February 2009 from Roche Holdings Inc. ROG.VX -0.60% The second-largest was a $14.7 billion deal in November 2012 from AbbVie Inc., ABBV +1.81% according to data provider Dealogic.
The only debt associated with Apple previously came nearly 20 years ago, when the company was known as Apple Computer Inc. It sold $300 million of bonds at a 6.5% interest rate in February 1994. That debt was all paid back by 2004.
Related Video
Apple is selling a record $17 billion of bonds. President Obama to name Tom Wheeler to lead the Federal Communications Commission. U.S. widens hunt for offshore tax-shelter accounts. Joanne Po reports. Photo: Getty Images
Apple is sitting on well north of $100 billion in cash, and it's of five companies that hold roughly 25% of the combined free cash in the S&P 500, but it still tapped credit markets to help fund its dividend and buyback program, Emily Chasan reports.
Apple Inc. has so far downplayed the notion that it needs to make an iPhone with a larger screen, but a growing number of analysts appear to be banking on the company doing just that. MarketWatch's Dan Gallagher looks at whether we can expect a 5-inch iPhone this year. (Photo: Getty Images)
Apple kicked off a series of meetings with large investors Monday to gauge their appetite, the investors familiar with the deal said. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS +0.66% and Deutsche Bank AG DBK.XE +6.11% were leading the sale of the offering, which was expected to price late Tuesday.
Underwriters lowered the yields expected for the deal throughout the day Tuesday, suggesting healthy demand from investors.
Other companies this week have also rushed to borrow at the historically cheap levels. On Monday, rates on U.S. Treasury securities, which are tied to the rates for prices of corporate debt, hit their lowest yields this year, at 1.65% on the 10-year note. The yield ticked slightly higher Tuesday, to 1.674%.
"Companies that have very little to no debt can be opportunistic when rates hit new lows, and Apple is doing exactly that," said Carret's Mr. Graybill.
High-quality corporate debt is seeing strong demand, despite its low yields and investors' desire for greater returns after years of very low interest rates.
In the first 17 weeks of 2013, a record $55.2 billion flowed into bond mutual funds and exchange-traded funds that focus on investment-grade corporate debt, according to Thomson Reuters unit Lipper. The previous record was $49.9 billion for the same period in 2010.
In response, companies have issued a record year-to-date amount of high-grade bonds in the U.S., Reuters data show.
Some investors, however, said they expected to pass on the Apple offering, believing the investor attention it had drawn had driven prices too high.
The Apple offering comprises six chunks of debt, according to a regulatory filing from the company that didn't detail pricing. Four chunks of fixed-rate debt were being offered that mature in three, five, 10 and 30 years. Apple was also selling two tranches of floating-rate debt, maturing in three and five years.
The deal was expected to yield about 0.20 percentage point more than comparable Treasurys bonds for the $1.5 billion in three-year fixed-rate bonds, down from expectations of 0.35 point earlier Tuesday; about 0.40 point on the $4 billion in five-year fixed bonds, down from 0.55; about 0.75 point on the $5.5 billion in 10-year bonds, down from 0.90-0.95; and one point on the $3 billion in 30-year bonds, down from guidance of 1.15-1.20, according to investors considering buying the deal.h
Apple to Sell $17 Billion in
By KATY BURNE and MIKE CHERNEY
NEW YORK—Apple Inc. AAPL +2.94% offered investors $17 billion worth of bonds Tuesday, according to investors familiar with the deal, a record amount for an investment-grade corporate offering.
Apple is selling $17 billion of bonds, a record amount for a U.S. investment-grade corporate offering. Katy Burne reports on the News Hub. Photo: Getty Images.
An Apple spokesman declined to comment on the timing or specifics of the sale, other than to say the company wants to return $100 billion to shareholders by the end of 2015 and is issuing debt to help fund that plan.
Apple has a huge cash stockpile, but much of that cash is overseas. Raising money in the debt market would help Apple avoid the big tax bill that would come from bringing the cash back to the U.S., executives said last week. It also allows the iPhone maker to take advantage of historically low interest rates.
"There is no incentive for them to bring [cash] back with rates at these levels," said Jason Graybill, who oversees $1.2 billion of investment-grade bonds at Carret Asset Management LLC.
The largest investment-grade bond deal previously sold was a $16.5 billion offering in February 2009 from Roche Holdings Inc. ROG.VX -0.60% The second-largest was a $14.7 billion deal in November 2012 from AbbVie Inc., ABBV +1.81% according to data provider Dealogic.
The only debt associated with Apple previously came nearly 20 years ago, when the company was known as Apple Computer Inc. It sold $300 million of bonds at a 6.5% interest rate in February 1994. That debt was all paid back by 2004.
Related Video
Apple is selling a record $17 billion of bonds. President Obama to name Tom Wheeler to lead the Federal Communications Commission. U.S. widens hunt for offshore tax-shelter accounts. Joanne Po reports. Photo: Getty Images
Apple is sitting on well north of $100 billion in cash, and it's of five companies that hold roughly 25% of the combined free cash in the S&P 500, but it still tapped credit markets to help fund its dividend and buyback program, Emily Chasan reports.
Apple Inc. has so far downplayed the notion that it needs to make an iPhone with a larger screen, but a growing number of analysts appear to be banking on the company doing just that. MarketWatch's Dan Gallagher looks at whether we can expect a 5-inch iPhone this year. (Photo: Getty Images)
Apple kicked off a series of meetings with large investors Monday to gauge their appetite, the investors familiar with the deal said. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS +0.66% and Deutsche Bank AG DBK.XE +6.11% were leading the sale of the offering, which was expected to price late Tuesday.
Underwriters lowered the yields expected for the deal throughout the day Tuesday, suggesting healthy demand from investors.
Other companies this week have also rushed to borrow at the historically cheap levels. On Monday, rates on U.S. Treasury securities, which are tied to the rates for prices of corporate debt, hit their lowest yields this year, at 1.65% on the 10-year note. The yield ticked slightly higher Tuesday, to 1.674%.
"Companies that have very little to no debt can be opportunistic when rates hit new lows, and Apple is doing exactly that," said Carret's Mr. Graybill.
High-quality corporate debt is seeing strong demand, despite its low yields and investors' desire for greater returns after years of very low interest rates.
In the first 17 weeks of 2013, a record $55.2 billion flowed into bond mutual funds and exchange-traded funds that focus on investment-grade corporate debt, according to Thomson Reuters unit Lipper. The previous record was $49.9 billion for the same period in 2010.
In response, companies have issued a record year-to-date amount of high-grade bonds in the U.S., Reuters data show.
Some investors, however, said they expected to pass on the Apple offering, believing the investor attention it had drawn had driven prices too high.
The Apple offering comprises six chunks of debt, according to a regulatory filing from the company that didn't detail pricing. Four chunks of fixed-rate debt were being offered that mature in three, five, 10 and 30 years. Apple was also selling two tranches of floating-rate debt, maturing in three and five years.
The deal was expected to yield about 0.20 percentage point more than comparable Treasurys bonds for the $1.5 billion in three-year fixed-rate bonds, down from expectations of 0.35 point earlier Tuesday; about 0.40 point on the $4 billion in five-year fixed bonds, down from 0.55; about 0.75 point on the $5.5 billion in 10-year bonds, down from 0.90-0.95; and one point on the $3 billion in 30-year bonds, down from guidance of 1.15-1.20, according to investors considering buying the deal.h
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A APPL tem acelerado a recuperação desde 19/4/2013, porém, permanece em tendência descendente com o padrão de máximos e mínimos mais baixos. Desde Setembro que não consegue ter um máximo superior ao anterior. Se a AAPL tiver um fecho acima de 463,58 inverte a tendência descendente.
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Obrigações Apple
A Apple está a planear uma mega emissão de obrigações (a maior da história americana sem ser do sector financeiro). Alguem sabe como se poderá comprar estas obrigações via algum banco Portugues?
- Mensagens: 19
- Registado: 29/11/2007 11:05
- Localização: Lisboa
A Apple tem vindo a levar uma tareia nestes ultimos meses. Só mesmo o lançamento de um novo produto a levará aos valores que já esteve!!!
Price-Targets.Com (Targets da Europa e América)
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JogoDeBolsa.Com (Para quem quer jogar na bolsa)
BolsaToolbar.Com (Em construção)
BolsaBlog.Com (Comente a atualidade bolsista)
JogoDeBolsa.Com (Para quem quer jogar na bolsa)
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Resistencia
Penso que está agora a bater ali numa resistência (relativa) :
http://www.4-traders.com/APPLE-INC-4849 ... &mots=aapl
Alguem pode comentar...
http://www.4-traders.com/APPLE-INC-4849 ... &mots=aapl
Alguem pode comentar...
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Apple’s $145 Billion in Cash Fails to Win AAA Debt Rating (Apr 24, 2013 7:31 PM GMT+0100)
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-2 ... ating.html
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-2 ... ating.html
Fundos à la carte:
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Finance and Investments
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Finanzas y inversiones
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财务及投资作出
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Portugal, Brasil, Angola, Moçambique, United Kingdom, Ireland (Éire), USA, France, Belgique, Monaco, España, Italia, Deutschland, Österreich, Luxemburg, Schweiz, 中国
Asset Allocation, Risk Management, Portfolio Management, Wealth Management, Money Management
Parece que o povo gostou dos resultados.
Everything You Need to Know About Apple’s Q2 Earnings
Apple had an earnings call today, giving the low down on the company’s performance for its second quarter of 2013. Overall, there weren’t any big surprises. The Cupertino company beat analyst estimates on a number of fronts, including total revenue and iPhone and iPad sales.
We’re going to break it down for you in plain English.
Apple:Wall Street analysts and stockholders have been bearish on Apple and its CEO Tim Cook since the company’s stock peaked at $702.10 in September 2012. Shares have dropped a stunning 42 percent since that high, even as Apple continues to set record sales and profit thanks to its iPhone and iPad lines. “The decline in apple stock price frustrating to all of us,” Cook acknowledged during today’s call.
- made $43.6 billion in revenue and $9.5 billion in net profits. While this is a record for March revenues, this is the first time profits have fallen for Apple in almost a decade.
- sold 37.4 million iPhones, compared to 35.1 million last year. Over the previous (holiday) quarter, Apple sold a whopping 47.8 million iPhones.
- sold 19.5 million iPads, up from 11.8 million iPads in the same quarter in 2012 — that’s a 65 percent year-over-year increase. It sold 22.9 million iPads over the holiday quarter. Apple sold “significantly more iPad minis” in the March quarter than in the December quarter.
- sold 5.633 million iPods, down from 7.673 million iPods in the same quarter last year.
- sold just under 4 million Macs.
- is hiking its quarterly dividend by 15 percent, and is throwing a bone to battered investors by planning to buy back $50 billion of its own shares.
- CEO Tim Cook acknowledged that the company’s growth rate has slowed, and since its 2012 results were incredibly strong, that is making comparisons difficult this year.
- is hard at work creating “innovative products,” according to Cook. Cook said its teams are hard at work on some “amazing new hardware, software, and services,” things it “can’t wait to announce in 2014.”
The latest numbers from Apple seem to be bringing some Apple investors back to the company. Shares jumped 5 percent in after-hours trading immediately following the quarterly numbers release.
- Anexos
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- AAPL230413.PNG (70.05 KiB) Visualizado 8253 vezes
As pessoas são tão ingénuas e tão agarradas aos seus interesses imediatos que um vigarista hábil consegue sempre que um grande número delas se deixe enganar.
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
"Life was much easier when Apple and Blackberry were just fruits."
As pessoas são tão ingénuas e tão agarradas aos seus interesses imediatos que um vigarista hábil consegue sempre que um grande número delas se deixe enganar.
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
paubo Escreveu:Depende do índice...no s&p 500 pesa 4,44% ao fecho de ontem. No nasdaq 100 11,68%.
Desculpem se me meti pelo meio...![]()
Obrigado paubo é isso mesmo.
De facto no Nasdaq a Apple já pesou 20%, actualmente pesa menos de 12%.
Isto quer dizer que se a Apple cair 10% o Nasdaq cai apenas 0,8%. Não é assim tanto. A Apple perdeu imenso valor de mercado e já não tem tanta capacidade para influenciar o índice como "antigamente".
- Mensagens: 35428
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zecatreca Escreveu:Elias Escreveu:zecatreca Escreveu:Achei curioso, como é que a aapl desceu e desceu e desceu, com os mercados americanos a bombarem estes meses todos.dssss mistério!
Tens noção do peso da Apple?
Neste momento, não.
Qual o peso dela?
Depende do índice...no s&p 500 pesa 4,44% ao fecho de ontem. No nasdaq 100 11,68%.
Desculpem se me meti pelo meio...


Novo blog agora com a colaboração do J Alves, Paubo e Zecatreca- http://portugueseteamtraders.blogspot.com/