Apple’s chart-topping run gets a boost from retail investors
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Apple’s chart-topping run gets a boost from retail investors

Apple’s chart-topping run gets a boost from retail investors

Since bottoming in mid-June, the iPhone maker’s shares have surged 27 per cent, outpacing the S&P 500 Index and the Nasdaq 100 Index

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Apple’s Chart-Topping Run Gets a Boost From Retail Investors

Apple is back in a familiar role as market leader after a painful first half of the year that saw hundreds of billions of dollars in market value disappear, and individual investors are a big reason for the rally.

Since bottoming in mid-June, the iPhone maker’s shares have surged 27 per cent, outpacing the S&P 500 Index and the Nasdaq 100 Index. That’s put Apple back on top as the world’s most valuable company and within sight of turning positive for the year. Apple is now down just 7.2 per cent in 2022, compared with a drop of 19 per cent for the Nasdaq 100.

Apple shares benefitted from a relief rally after its quarterly earnings were better than feared, and its ongoing buoyancy reflects Wall Street’s confidence in its ability to continue churning out big profits. Individual investors, who recently helped ignite rallies in speculative corners of the market, have flocked to the stock.

“Retail investors have been strong buyers of Apple over the past couple of months, first attempting to buy the dip, then buying into the recent recovery,” said Lucas Mantle, a data scientist at Vanda Research, which tracks investor positioning.

Apple has routinely ranked among the most purchased stocks among that cohort over the past month, according to data from Vanda Research.

Despite concerns about a potential recession in the US and risks related to supply chains in China, Apple’s profit estimates have stayed steady while those for other megacap companies and the technology industry more broadly have shrunk.

The average earnings-per-share estimate for Apple next year has fallen less than 1 per cent over the past month, compared with a drop of about 4 per cent for Microsoft and 7 per cent for Amazon, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Mom-and-pop traders are no doubt attracted to Apple’s massive cash flows that have allowed the company to return more than $80bn to shareholders in the form of dividends and share repurchases in the first three quarters of this fiscal year.

The price for a piece of that cash geyser, however, doesn’t come cheaply. Apple is trading at 26 times profits projected over the next 12 months, well above the 10-year average at 17 times. By contrast, the S&P 500 is priced at about 17.5 times earnings.

Apple, with a market value of $2.6tn surpassed oil giant Saudi Aramco again in July to become the world’s largest company. It’s 13 per cent away from the $3tn valuation that seemed a nearly impossible milestone just a couple months ago.

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