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  Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
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JTNews  
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 More options Oct 19, 10:49 am
From: JTNews <jtnews2...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 19 Oct 2009 07:49:49 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon, Oct 19 2009 10:49 am
Subject: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
Will Apple continue eating nokia's lunch?
Is Apple the source of nokia's problems or
is someone else to blame?

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Ming Zhang  
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 More options Oct 20, 4:42 pm
From: Ming Zhang <ming.s.zh...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2009 13:42:33 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Oct 20 2009 4:42 pm
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
> Will Apple continue eating nokia's lunch?

No, nobody would want to carry the same phone year after year for 3
years. At some point the iphone like the ipod would come to a ceiling;
unless apple starts creating variations of the phone to expand their
current niche market. This is not in the next year or so, but in 3-5
years apple will hit the ceiling if there's no new innovation.

> Is Apple the source of nokia's problems or is someone else to blame?

Apple is a problem, so is RIM, HTC, MOT, SAMSUNG, LG and other mobile
makers. Nokia being the leader in the mobile industry have more to
loose than it's much smaller competitor.

Nokia also have internal problem, management have failed to properly
address the US market; and also failed to realized the importance
touch phones over 3 years ago. Had Nokia released some of the better
touch phone before the iphone, the iphone wouldn't be so big of a
deal.

On the bright side, management at Nokia realized the problems they're
facing and are taking some actions to correct/respond to this. I'm in
long on Nokia and not worry at all. This is a stable dividend company
that will take a lot more than a few mistakes to fail.


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Jako  
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 More options Oct 21, 12:54 pm
From: Jako <jako...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 09:54:13 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Wed, Oct 21 2009 12:54 pm
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
Things are not as bad as they seem. For example Nokia had quite good
growth in high end smartphone devices the last quarter, about 35% unit
increase in 5800/97, compared to 37% unit increase for iPhone. Also I
think Nokia teaming up with Microsoft will help to take on RIM
eventually, and new devices should at least be somewhat iPhone
competitive, so things will only get better from here, the way I see
it.

While I donīt own any Nokia products and like Apple much more, I think
the clue to investing is to buy what is depressed and to avoid what is
overpriced. Apple has a P/E of 35 and would have to continue a
formidable growth for many years in order for it to be a good
investment, because itīs always the risk of the growth stagnating and
then the P/E to drop down to 10-20. Nokia on the other hand is now
trading at only 6 times pre september 2008 earnings. Statistically it
is much more likely Nokia will go up than Apple over the next years.

I guess the situation is a little bit like in 2004, where the stock
dropped from $23 to $11 and it took 2-3 years for it to go up to $23
again. But by the end of 2007 it was trading at $40. Giant
corporations like Nokia takes a lot of time to turn around, but should
not be discounted (neither should Microsoft, in my opinion).

I believe earnings will be suprisingly good the next quarter, so Iīm
starting to accumulate Nokia shares here.

On 19 Okt., 16:49, JTNews <jtnews2...@gmail.com> wrote:


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@@@@@  
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 More options Oct 21, 2:58 pm
From: "@@@@@" <frecess...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 11:58:02 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Wed, Oct 21 2009 2:58 pm
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
sureee

On Oct 21, 1:31 pm, per <per.stenv...@gmail.com> wrote:


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Jako  
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 More options Oct 23, 5:46 am
From: Jako <jako...@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 23 Oct 2009 02:46:15 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Fri, Oct 23 2009 5:46 am
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
I agree that the Booklet and the N900 looks pretty good; would
actually consider replacing my MacBook Air with the Booklet, mainly
due to battery performance, but I'm not ready to replace my iPhone
with the N900 - although the next generation probably out next year,
mentioned by Anssi Vanjoki at Nokia World, could very well make me
reconsider that, at least if there's not much new things coming on the
iPhone. I also know that Nokia has stated again and again the 6-12
months that they are working very hard to improve the user interfaces
and that they are not happy with the current situation. So they
realize that things needs to be improved a lot, and so they will. It
is just that they are a big company that takes time (and not without
errors I'm sure), to reinvent itself from a hardware to a software/
service company. I think they have in their DNA a capability of such
transformations.

As for Nokia going down to $12 etc, I think we need to consider that a
lot of positive news - the mentioned Booklet, N900, Nokia Money etc -
since the last time it was at $12.2, should prevent it from going this
low again, despite somewhat disappointing earnings results. This is
especially so when the market in general is up some 6% since that
time. Nokia stock don't work isolated from the rest of the market, and
unless we'll have a general market correction, I don't expect Nokia to
go much lower. But if you're betting on that I guess you should rather
buy something like UUP or QID at this point.

Will we have a market correction soon? At least there's still so much
cash on the sidelines and with so low interest rates and a continuing
weakening dollar, people are really forced to speculate into
commodities (like agriculture, gold, oil, natural gas etc), and stocks
to make money. When stocks like Nokia give 4% dividend, why not invest
in them instead of putting money in the bank with close to zero
interest? Furthermore, I think a market correction, when it eventually
happens, will lead to a strenghtening of the dollar, so this needs to
be considered for those that buy Nokia with for example Euros - if the
dollar strenghtens by 10% against the Euro, then $11.8 is pretty much
the same as the current $13.

On Oct 21, 7:31 pm, per <per.stenv...@gmail.com> wrote:


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Frank  
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 More options Oct 31, 6:10 pm
From: Frank <frank1...@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 31 Oct 2009 15:10:52 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sat, Oct 31 2009 6:10 pm
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
"This is not in the next year or so, but in 3-5 years apple will hit
the ceiling if there's no new innovation. "

But in the meantime Apple will come out with even more hardware
features, new OS features (to support the FM receiver in the 3GS for
instance) and the number of apps from the app store will let the
iPhone do tons of nifty things. By dissing Apple 3-5 years out, I
think you are praising it over the next three years. Stock prices
track 0-2 year sales and earnings and then punt on the long term.

"While I donīt own any Nokia products and like Apple much more, I
think
the clue to investing is to buy what is depressed and to avoid what
is
overpriced. Apple has a P/E of 35 and would have to continue a
formidable growth for many years in order for it to be a good
investment, "

Apple already has fleshed out many possible hardware upgrades for the
iPhone and will bring them to market when it feels they need it to
maintain growth. AAPL is a risky stock and will go down when the
market goes down. It is taking a rest here but will be substantially
higher in 6 months. As far as depressed stocks doing well, they need
to successfully address their problems and prove it by bringing it to
the top line and the bottom line. Wall Street no longer buys promises.
Also, you need to subtact out the cash per share from Apple's stock
price and project out sales and earnings to get a better feel for
AAPL's valuation.

"As for Nokia going down to $12 etc,"

Whops, got there on Friday. If the tape continues down, look out for
an $11 handle. AAPL will follow the market down also.

"When stocks like Nokia give 4% dividend, why not invest
in them instead of putting money in the bank with close to zero
interest? "

Most retail investors are putting their money into bond funds of every
flavor. I agree that a dividend paying stock is a much better
alternative but I am concerned about NOK maintaining its dividend.
Need to crank some numbers, but if the correction continues, there may
be better stocks to buy for their dividend.

On Oct 23, 4:46 am, Jako <jako...@gmail.com> wrote:


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Jako  
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 More options Nov 1, 3:31 pm
From: Jako <jako...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 12:31:41 -0800 (PST)
Local: Sun, Nov 1 2009 3:31 pm
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
Yes, but statistics is not on Appleīs side, cf:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/77/Price-Earnings_Rat...

And I can mention a number of once-promising companies like Apple
today, that everyone expected to go higher that didnīt. Actually one
example is Nokia. In the end of the 1990īs they had similar profit
growth, ROE etc as Apple today, and actually a market cap also very
similar to Apple! Look where it is now.

I think what will happen in the future is that other companies will
emulate what now make Apple so great (this is what allways happens),
and then Appleīs margins will eventually be lower. It could also be
that the whole US economy will suffer much worse than today (it cannot
thrive on borrowed/printed money forever), and that this will affect
Apple too. The valuation of US stocks are quite high compared for
example with Japanese (the DOW companies are trading with average
price/book 2-3x higher than the average Nikkei-company).

As I mentioned Nokia had as good unit growth in its high end
smartphones as Apple with its iPhone last quarter, and while Appleīs
iPhone did very well that quarter (37% sequential unit growth), this I
think was mostly due to the new 3GS being released. This meant that
Apple gained some market share from others like RIM and Nokia. I think
this christmas quarter Nokia will regain some percentage market share
in smartphones (possibly going up to 40% again) due to the
introduction of three new touchscreen phones. In particular the 5530 I
think will sell extremely well. You have to consider that everyone
cannot afford the iPhone, unless Apple cut its margins, but then they
will make little profit, so itīs a fine balance. Nokiaīs advantage is
high market share, which will help their app stores and services
business in another way than Apple, and will also help cut down costs
further.

I donīt necessarily think Nokia will cut its dividend. They have about
$12B in cash (sufficient to give out a 4% - $2B - dividend next 6
years). That they have kept their dividend is just an example that
they are in much better shape than many believes.

I donīt think itīs fair to "subtract" out any cash. You should see it
as part of the balance sheet and look at the total book value.
Remember than Apple also has $26B in liabilities. And Appleīs price/
book - often an indicator of whether a company is overvalued over the
long run - is twice that of Nokiaīs. Opposite you could say that, well
ConocoPhillips is a terrible investment because they have $28B in debt
and no cash, but it is actually a good investment because the price/
book is very low.

But as I said: I like Apple very much, itīs performance are great and
will continue to be great for a long time. But you need to consider if
all that is priced in, and I think it is. I was bullish on Apple at
$80, and would be if it was lower than $120-150 at this point. But
right now it is overpriced, in my opinion.

I should like to finally say that I think the market correction has
now started, but that this will likely lead to a strenghtening of the
dollar. The past week Nokia has followed the Nasdaq down 5%, but the
dollar has also strenghtened 3% against the Euro, so it isnīt much
lower measured in Euros. Suppose itīs not a good think to be in any
stock at this point, but Iīll still keep my Nokia shares, although not
buy any more right now.

On Oct 31, 11:10 pm, Frank <frank1...@gmail.com> wrote:

...

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Frank  
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 More options Nov 3, 9:02 am
From: Frank <frank1...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 06:02:17 -0800 (PST)
Local: Tues, Nov 3 2009 9:02 am
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
subtract cash out of the stock price to compute P/E. This is standard
practive for companies with a war chest like Apple.

I am NOT saying buy and hold Apple forever, buy on a dip and hold for
about 6 months.

Own stocks in companies with good balance sheets, good business model,
good expectations for growth and a dividend appropriate for its
industry. Buy on dips not at the top.

On Nov 1, 2:31 pm, Jako <jako...@gmail.com> wrote:

...

read more »


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Jako  
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 More options Nov 3, 10:12 am
From: Jako <jako...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 07:12:07 -0800 (PST)
Local: Tues, Nov 3 2009 10:12 am
Subject: Re: Is Apple eating Nokia's lunch?
Buy low P/E companies with high return on equity, and ideally low
price/book, that would be my advice. Of course P/E at these troubled
economic times is difficult to measure properly, so I believe it makes
some sense to look at P/E based on pre-september 2008 earnings. An
example of a company meeting all these criteria are GLW.

It wonīt help much if balance sheets are good, profit growth good etc,
if it is all priced in via a bloated P/E (and enormous market cap).
Appleīs $170B market cap is now the same as the combined market cap of
for example Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola, Sony and Yahoo. These five
companies has sales about 10 times higher than Apple and equity about
4 times higher probably, but each of them had at some point a market
cap similar to Apple today with equally bullish sentiments, and a lot
of people would make similar arguments for buying them as you make (?)
for buying Apple today.

I think thereīs a bit of a manipulation game regarding Apple stock,
where it is trading more on speculation than fundamentals, so I agree
you could make some money by buying low and selling high, but the
problem here is that you donīt know if this game will continue, and
when it donīt you could lose your money. But in any case buying Apple
now so close to its all time high would not be a good idea in my
opinion.

I also think thereīs a number of reasons why Apple can not continue
its current profit growth for very long. Iīll leave those for another
time.

On Nov 3, 3:02 pm, Frank <frank1...@gmail.com> wrote:

...

read more »


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