I also own Apple stock, and I'm going to hold onto it. In fact, if it does drop after the release, I will probably buy more to lower my average purchase price and increase my future returns. Then I'll hang on for the 6 months to 1 year it takes for the initial negative hype to die down, Apple to release upgrades, and for everyone and his mother to jump onboard and make Apple the king of cellphones like they are MP3 players. This phone has a lot of promise. It may not truly be ready for primetime, as with all first gen products, but they are poised to do really well here. It just may take a little time.
Selling a stock at the first sign of trouble is generally bad practice. Buy stocks for the long-term, and balance your portfolio, and you'll be fine.
Besides, everyone already pretty much knows what issues the iPhone will have. Those concerns are priced in already, for the most part.
I agree. If you look to ones record of keepig it's suppliers happy and their constant updates of tech products, you will see that they are truly one of the best in the biz. Any biz. They rank highly for customer satisfaction in many ad-free journals and just generally listen to the consumers talk about what would make the product better. In fact, many companies that are successful are good listeners. Toyota, Honda, Lexus, Acura. Apple. No one else in the electronics business can match the sytle, substance, support and satisfaction. Four very important components in any business arena that will make or break even marginal advertising. Apple even does that well. If you own Apple stock and have any other reasons to sell, please email us and give us something concrete other than pure speculation and zero background information. Reminds me of some Democrats I know.
“The HD2 is a magnificent monster. It is a hulking, intimidating, massive slab of a gadget. If you think the device looks big in photos, it's nothing compared to how it seems up close.”
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I also own Apple stock, and I'm going to hold onto it. In fact, if it does drop after the release, I will probably buy more to lower my average purchase price and increase my future returns. Then I'll hang on for the 6 months to 1 year it takes for the initial negative hype to die down, Apple to release upgrades, and for everyone and his mother to jump onboard and make Apple the king of cellphones like they are MP3 players. This phone has a lot of promise. It may not truly be ready for primetime, as with all first gen products, but they are poised to do really well here. It just may take a little time.
Selling a stock at the first sign of trouble is generally bad practice. Buy stocks for the long-term, and balance your portfolio, and you'll be fine.
Besides, everyone already pretty much knows what issues the iPhone will have. Those concerns are priced in already, for the most part.
I agree. If you look to ones record of keepig it's suppliers happy and their constant updates of tech products, you will see that they are truly one of the best in the biz. Any biz. They rank highly for customer satisfaction in many ad-free journals and just generally listen to the consumers talk about what would make the product better. In fact, many companies that are successful are good listeners. Toyota, Honda, Lexus, Acura. Apple. No one else in the electronics business can match the sytle, substance, support and satisfaction. Four very important components in any business arena that will make or break even marginal advertising. Apple even does that well. If you own Apple stock and have any other reasons to sell, please email us and give us something concrete other than pure speculation and zero background information. Reminds me of some Democrats I know.