There are certain companies that never seem to leave the investing conversation, and Apple sits comfortably at the top of that list. Every few months someone declares the company has run out of ideas, the iPhone has peaked, or the stock has become too expensive to justify buying. Then Apple quietly reports another mountain of cash flow, sells millions of devices, expands its services business, and reminds everyone why betting against it has been a painful hobby for decades. I've learned that investing in Apple isn't about trying to predict what happens next quarter. It's about asking whether the company is likely to be more valuable ten years from now than it is today. That's a much more interesting question, and one that separates traders chasing headlines from investors willing to let time do the heavy lifting. The Biggest Mistake Investors Make Every earnings season feels like watching a sporting event. Analysts obsess over whether iPhone sales beat estimates by ...
A few years ago, it felt like everyone had written Meta off. The headlines were brutal. Investors questioned the company's spending on the metaverse, critics declared Facebook was becoming irrelevant, and the stock became the poster child for what happens when Wall Street loses confidence in a tech giant. If you listened to the loudest voices at the time, Meta was supposedly destined for a long, painful decline. Fast forward to today, and the conversation couldn't be more different. The stock has staged one of the most impressive recoveries in recent market history. Revenue growth has accelerated, profits have expanded, artificial intelligence has become a major catalyst, and investors who held through the storm—or had the courage to buy when sentiment was awful—have been rewarded handsomely. Now comes the question I'm hearing more than almost any other: Is Meta still a buy after its massive comeback, or has the easy money already been made? Looking Beyond the Headlines One...