checkAd

    Apple - unaufhaltsamer Aufstieg - wie lange noch? (Seite 1242)

    eröffnet am 18.01.05 13:14:58 von
    neuester Beitrag 08.05.24 20:21:45 von
    Beiträge: 49.541
    ID: 944.638
    Aufrufe heute: 15
    Gesamt: 4.624.033
    Aktive User: 0

    ISIN: US0378331005 · WKN: 865985 · Symbol: APC
    175,14
     
    EUR
    +1,30 %
    +2,24 EUR
    Letzter Kurs 24.05.24 Tradegate

    Werte aus der Branche Hardware

    WertpapierKursPerf. %
    3,9600+33,51
    2,2200+5,71
    19,556+5,31
    12,300+4,59
    3,7800+4,42
    WertpapierKursPerf. %
    2,1555-2,88
    25,40-3,05
    1,6900-5,06
    18,200-6,67
    6,0000-14,29

    Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben

     Durchsuchen
    • 1
    • 1242
    • 4955

    Begriffe und/oder Benutzer

     

    Top-Postings

     Ja Nein
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 16:55:38
      Beitrag Nr. 37.131 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 49.260.851 von money84penny85 am 06.03.15 14:41:24Vielleicht hat er auch dringend Geld gebraucht. Jedenfalls ein schwacher Verkaufspreis.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 16:48:29
      Beitrag Nr. 37.130 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 49.263.017 von Linux4me am 06.03.15 16:45:04woher weisst du dass der verkäufer etwas für das iphone bezahlt hat?
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 16:45:04
      Beitrag Nr. 37.129 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 49.260.851 von money84penny85 am 06.03.15 14:41:24> Apple iPhone 6 Plus (4 Wochen alt, wie neu!) - 64 GB - Spacegrau (Ohne Simlock)

      > Erfolgreiches Gebot:EUR 704,00


      http://www.ebay.de/itm/111609199925?_trksid=p2045573.m570.l4…

      Verkauft für 195 € unter Kaufpreis, dazu noch die 10% eBay Gebühren macht 265 € Kosten für 4 Wochen iPhone besitzen.
      1 Antwort?Die Baumansicht ist in diesem Thread nicht möglich.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 16:07:33
      Beitrag Nr. 37.128 ()
      Siehe Microsoft und Intel...AAPL bleibt auch als Dow Company im Nasdaq genauso wie Intel und Microsoft.
      1 Antwort?Die Baumansicht ist in diesem Thread nicht möglich.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 16:02:36
      Beitrag Nr. 37.127 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 49.261.610 von stockbroker83 am 06.03.15 15:21:25
      Zitat von stockbroker83: Korrekt! $AAPL wechselt von der Nasdaq in den Dow. Es ist nicht möglich in beiden Indizes gelisted zu sein.


      Wer sagt das? Cisco Systems ist sowohl im DOW als auch im NASDAQ-100 enthalten, warum sollte das dann für andere Werte nicht gelten können?

      Trading Spotlight

      Anzeige
      JanOne
      2,9100EUR +2,83 %
      Der goldene Schlüssel – Kursexplosion am Montag?!mehr zur Aktie »
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 15:36:45
      Beitrag Nr. 37.126 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 49.261.610 von stockbroker83 am 06.03.15 15:21:25Apple Added To Dow Jones Industrial Average
      Apple Replaces AT&T, Boosts Index’s Weighting Toward Tech Stocks

      Apple will join the Dow Jones Industrial Average at the close of trading March 18. Photo: Reuters
      By Colin Barr
      Updated March 6, 2015 9:14 a.m. ET


      Apple Inc. will join the Dow Jones Industrial Average this month, a long-anticipated change that adds the world’s most-valuable company to the 119-year-old blue-chip index.

      The move is the latest milestone for Apple, which has emerged in recent years as the standard-bearer for a resurgent U.S. technology sector. The Cupertino, Calif., company in January reported latest-quarter net income of $18 billion, the largest quarterly profit on record, fueled by roaring sales of iPhones.

      Apple will replace telecommunication giant AT&T Inc., according to S&P Dow Jones Indices, the unit of McGraw Hill Financial Inc. that owns the Dow. Shares of Apple rose 1.4% in premarket trading Friday to $128.17.

      Apple’s addition caps the ascendancy of tech in the Dow that started in 1999 when software giant Microsoft Corp. and semiconductor maker Intel Corp. joined, a nod to the “New Economy” boom then sweeping the U.S. Like Apple, both companies are listed on Nasdaq . Previously, all Dow components had been listed on the New York Stock Exchange, though there weren’t any restrictions against having a Nasdaq stock.

      Apple will join the Dow at the close of trading March 18. The shake-up won’t affect the value of the Dow, which is up 1.8% this year and has hit more than 90 record closes in the past two years. Apple stock has been one of the market’s monster performers in recent years, posting an annualized total return, reflecting price gains and dividend payments, of 69% over the past year and 36% over a decade.

      The shift in Dow components reflects Apple’s technology leadership and the need to rejigger the index for a pending 4-for-1 stock split by Dow component Visa Inc., according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

      Unlike other major indexes, which have hundreds of component companies and are weighted by companies’ market value, the Dow has just 30 members and is price-weighted. The split by Visa, classified as an information-technology firm, would sharply reduce the index’s technology weighting if not for the addition of Apple.

      “Apple is the clear choice for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the most recognized stock market measure,” says David M. Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

      Component stocks of the Dow are selected by the index committee, a group that includes editors of The Wall Street Journal, which is published by Dow Jones & Co., a part of News Corp .

      The decision ends a long period of waiting for Apple investors and consumers, some of whom have questioned previous decisions by the index committee to add other companies to the Dow even as Apple rose to the top of the global market value and profitability tables.

      Apple’s market value, recently $736 billion, reached as high as $775 billion last month, the highest on record. In the most recent quarter, the company sold iPhones at a clip of 568 a minute. Its current market value is nearly double that of the No. 2 global company, Google Inc., at $391 billion.

      Apple’s ascendancy comes as the Nasdaq Composite Index this week eclipsed 5000 for the first time since March 2000, an event that underscored the vast changes in the economy, the financial markets and various stock indexes over the past 15 years. Apple wasn’t one of the 20 largest Nasdaq companies the last time the index traded above 5000.

      To be sure, Apple faces headwinds including an unpredictable market for consumer technologies and a near universal assumption that it will continue to expand revenue and profit and a strong pace. Microsoft and Intel were viewed as similarly unstoppable when they were added to the Dow, but their shares have performed poorly since the Nasdaq’s last record close on March 10, 2000.

      At the same time, fans of the company note that Apple remains far from outrageously priced. Apple’s shares trade now at 17 times their latest 12 months’ earnings, compared with Microsoft’s trailing price-to-earnings ratio of 75 in March 2000.

      In part, Apple’s addition to the index was paved by the company’s decision last year to split its stock. Apple shares exceeded $600 each before the company moved in 2014 to execute a 7-for-1 split, a move that didn’t affect the company’s market value but reduced its per-share price to a recent $126.41.

      S&P Dow Jones Indices said the shift will increase the Dow’s technology representation and reduce its holdings of telecommunications companies in line with the S&P 500. AT&T, with a per-share price of $34 and a market value of $176 billion, wasn’t one of the highest-priced Dow stocks, and was smaller on both a price and market-value basis than a similar rival, Verizon Communications Inc. AT&T had been a member of the Dow since 2005.

      Visa’s split, which takes effect at the same time as the Apple-AT&T shift, stands to reduce its share price to around $68 from a recent $274.13.

      “The Dow is price weighted, so extremely high stock prices tend to distort the index while very low stock prices have little impact,” Mr. Blitzer said.

      The change in the index is the first since 2013, when Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Visa and Nike Inc. replaced Bank of America Corp. , Hewlett-Packard Co. and Alcoa Inc.

      The swap of Apple for AT&T is the first one-company shift in the index since 2012, when UnitedHealth Group Inc. replaced Kraft Foods Inc., which was preparing to spin off its North American grocery business.

      Write to Colin Barr at colin.barr@wsj.com
      http://www.wsj.com/articles/apple-added-to-dow-jones-industr…
      http://www.wsj.com/articles/apple-added-to-dow-jones-industrial-average-1425650402
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 15:29:32
      Beitrag Nr. 37.125 ()
      Krasse Geschichte mit dem Dow, besonders weil er preisgewichtet ist. Nach aktuellem Stand ist Apple dann der 5. dickste Wert im Dow.

      Bin auch mal gespannt auf die Nasdaq künftig, weil Apple da richtig Anteil hatte an den Kursbewegungen.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 15:28:14
      Beitrag Nr. 37.124 ()
      aber im s&p 500 bleiben sie drinnen oder?
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 15:21:25
      Beitrag Nr. 37.123 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 49.261.340 von checkov am 06.03.15 15:07:27Korrekt! $AAPL wechselt von der Nasdaq in den Dow. Es ist nicht möglich in beiden Indizes gelisted zu sein.
      2 Antworten?Die Baumansicht ist in diesem Thread nicht möglich.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.15 15:19:47
      Beitrag Nr. 37.122 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 49.261.364 von trustone am 06.03.15 15:08:36Am 18. März. Apple Inc, the nation's largest company by market value, will join the Dow Jones Industrial Average on March 18, replacing AT&T Inc , S&P Dow Jones Indices said on Friday. Quelle: CNBC http://www.cnbc.com/id/102483643
      • 1
      • 1242
      • 4955
       DurchsuchenBeitrag schreiben


      Investoren beobachten auch:

      WertpapierPerf. %
      +0,57
      -0,54
      +1,36
      +0,46
      +0,38
      +2,20
      -0,07
      +2,79
      +2,29
      +0,13
      Apple - unaufhaltsamer Aufstieg - wie lange noch?