Shares of Apple Inc. [AAPL] today gained $0.81, or 0.59%, to set a new all-time closing high of $138.91 per share on volume of 33,374,920.
Apple’s previous 52-Week and All-Time High closing high was $138.10 set yesterday. AAPL’s all-time intraday high was set yesterday at $139.98.
Apple’s 52 Week Low stands at $51.65, set on July 17, 2006.
Apple’s market value currently stands at $120,149,840,185.20.
AAPL quote via NASDAQ here.
MacDailyNews Note: “I am putting a sell on Apple, the company that created the iPhone,” Laura Goldman, investment advisor, LSG Capital, May 21, 2007. AAPL closed at $111.98 that day.
“A seriously deranged woman.”
Sounds like the future ex-Mrs. Twisted Mac Freak.
I can dig that Hillary on acid, paint my Empress blue, smack my ass hard and call me Hildegarde kind of goddess.
Yep, I recall that one. I was at a tech show in Texas when a trusted friend who worked at Apple (Austin) said they were going to miss a profit goal for that quarter . . . and all heck broke loose the next day.
Still, I’ve held on to AAPL through thick and thin, to the point that my original $67K investment is now worth $791K.
Short-terming ANY decent stock is poor practice, I’ve found in my 59+ years. Even if next Wednesday’s figures prove to be less than stellar, the future for this particular equity is, to quote Steve J, “off the charts.”
“Looking at the 20 year history for Apple stock I cannot find any day that Apple lost 20 dollars on the previous day”
In relative terms, you’d be looking for days when the stock dropped 14% or more.
@MacBill
You’re correct. It was the first sign that the dotcom bubble had burst. Apple announced that it had a high inventory of their stock including the iMac. IIRC the stock lost 90% in a few days. Had peaked at $150. Got bash bad by the Street. In the ensuing months the other PC manufacturers came out with similar results but never got hurt as bad. It was somewhere in late 2000.
It is unlikely that Apple will suffer something similar now since they have multiple platforms performing. In those days the iMac was it. OSX was just being released and the desktops were nothing to write home about.
What ever happen to a company called “Dell”? <GRIN>
Fake Steve Jobs gave me the insider tip to sell my stock. I should have never believed him, or slept with him. He had a mask on, so even I don’t know who he is.
Let he who has not committed a mistake throw the first zune
“What ever happen to a company called “Dell”? <GRIN>”
They’re the world’s largest PC vendor, that’s what happened to them.
Randian accurately quotes from my blog re Laura Goldman, but the quotes aren’t mine. They are from a commenter on my blog and a Boston Globe article. The <a href=”http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-8897359_ITM”>Boston Globe article<a> is, of course, a more reliable source than me or my commenters.
I’m just so dumb I can hardly believe I even know how to buy an stock, let-alone tie my shoes in the morning.
It doesn’t stop me passing on this advice to you that Apple is the greatest company ever and I love my Mac and pod and iPhone so you should probably just but some Apple stock.