Will apple stock ever reach $700 again?
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Just last year, Apple was a tech investor's dream, and its stock hit $700 in September as gadget junkies snapped up Apple's industry-dominating iPhones and iPads. Since then,
however, Apple's stock has been in a prolonged slide. Even when the company announced better-than-expected quarterly profits of $13.1 billion and record sales of (47.8 million) and
iPads (22.9 million), its stock dove by as much as 12 percent early Thursday. What went wrong? Apple's profits went flat, fueling fears that its dominance is slipping as it tweaks old
gadgets instead of unveiling game-changing new ones. With Samsung and other rival smartphone and tablet makers making gains, Apple's stock is now trading around $450, and some analysts
wonder whether the company can ever climb back to its peak. "Apple's been on top for so long now," says Matt Warman in Britain's _Telegraph_, "there is only one way
it can go." Indeed, Apple shares will never get back to $700, says _The Economist_. The stock has recovered after being "mauled by bears" before, but this time is different.
The company's visionary co-founder, Steve Jobs, is dead, and since his passing in 2011, Apple "has concentrated on sprucing up its existing products." These days, tech blogs
are buzzing about Samsung's latest Galaxy smartphone, due out in March, the way they used to about iPhones. The nearest thing Apple has to the next big thing is an iTV, expected later
this year, but it will have plenty of competition out of the gate and is "no surefire blockbuster." The fantasy that "Apple would be the first organization in history to grow
forever" has finally dissolved, says Jeff Macke at _Yahoo Finance_. "What matters now is fixing the company." It can climb back with three drastic but simple steps. First, it
has to fire Tim Cook, who took over in 2011. The company's stumbles are on him, and "it's time to give him the hook." Next, the company needs to fill its vacant retail
head job with someone who has vision. Finally, it needs to unveil bold new products, instead of tweaking old ones by fiddling with their shapes and colors. SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEK Escape your
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directly to your inbox. But as "Apple's luster dims on Wall Street," says Andrew Tangel at _The Los Angeles Times_, its stock is actually "becoming a bargain." If
any other company had posted an earnings report as good as Apple's, says S&P Dow Jones Indices analyst Howard Silverblatt, "we'd be breaking out champagne." When it
comes to Apple, people have unreasonable expectations, so they're pushing the company's shares lower than they should be. Apple's price-to-earnings ratio, a shorthand measure
of a stock's value, has dropped to 10.5, far below the average of 15 for the broad Standard & Poor's 500 index. In other words, Apple stock is selling at a "steep
discount," Tangel says. Investors might actually want to buy now, before Apple's stock starts going back up.