Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) one the most manipulated stocks of 2012 continues the trend into 2013.
Most
technicians would agree that when viewing a chart of Apple Inc. stock
there appears to be some “irregularities,” during some periods of time.
Questionable trading
activity can be seen both on the downside and the upside. On September
19th, the stock closed at $702.10, and a little over 3-months later on
December 28th the equity fell to $509.58. A drop of 27.4% occurred with
little news from the company and without any shocking developments about earnings, guidance or new product line development.
About
two months ago, Apple jumped over 7% in one trading session. After
closing at $527.68 on November 16th, the stock closed the very next day
at $565.73, – a dramatic increase of $38.00. Another example is from the
period of July 25 to September 21, when shares of Apple soared 24% or
$135 in just 42 trading sessions. That type of performance effectively
means that the stock averaged an increase of just over $3.20 per trading
session for forty two consecutive days.
Some have argued that Apple’s stock performance leading up to the
2007 with the unveiling of the iPhone, made it a prime company for
foment and manipulation. It is well-known that many media channels
regurgitate the same misinformation in the market, which can easily
cause a temporary panic-induced drop. Despite the news being completely
untrue, someone can use these movements in the stock to profit
handsomely.
Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) is much easier to move
compared to other companies with very little volatility such as
Microsoft. Despite being in the same sector, Microsoft experienced a
small difference in stock price since the 2000 bubble popped. More
household names such as Procter & Gamble and Verizon are other
examples of much more stable price movements.
These aforementioned
companies simply do not have the type of ground breaking innovation
that Apple is known for. They provide more stable products, and moving
one of these stocks would be extremely difficult. In Apple’s case, an
analyst or investor can simply say that they are hearing a rumor about
“something” that “may” be happening in the near future. It could be
based on complete speculation, but nevertheless will spur an initial
move in the stock.
Investors who disregard the technical analysis
and simply focus on the fundamentals may want to reevaluate their
investment strategy. Technical analysis is a very important part of
investing and the Apple (AAPL) chart supplies an abundance of useful
information. When looking at the chart there were some movements that
stuck out such as stacked buying for certain increments of time. When
taking a closer look at intra-day moves and weekly options there seemed
to be a constant occurring towards the end of trading, particularly some
weird activity on Fridays.
On Fridays when weekly options are set
to expire, many traders lose any potential gains as the equity value
tends to move to get closer to the strike price for the week’s options.
Lucky traders will be able to cash these securities in the money if
given the chance and timed correctly, while others lose a substantial
amount of principal. On these days there has been some erratic trading.
For
example, on April 29th 2011, there was an extreme jump in trading in
AAPL as more than 15 million shares changed hands and the stock dropped
below the $350 strike price just before the closing bell (see chart
below). The value of those calls disappeared almost instantaneously,
while other puts were drastically put in the money. There are some that
contend that fairly common hedging activity is the primary cause for the
drifts in stock price. Other scientific reports have revealed that such
stock price activity would not be accounted for by just hedging, and is
thereby indicative of equity price manipulation, which by definition is
illegal under United States securities law.
Apple
Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL)’s stock is vulnerable and can be easily moved due to
its media exposure, popularity amongst all age demographics and the
price of the stock. Most folks do not realize that the price of the
stock is actually assisting in it being manipulated. Generally, a more
expensive stock is more difficult to move due to how much capital it
takes to do so. But with Apple, it’s different. About half of all
trading in the stock generally takes place in very risky options that
are set to expire at the end of the week. Apple stock option daily
volume in weekly options was just over 90,000 contracts during the first
three quarters of 2012.
Most investors want a piece of AAPL stock
considering the current product line and the innovation that comes
along with the name. Most retail investors cannot afford a $500 stock,
or cannot buy enough shares to fill their appetite, so they turn to the
options market. Most institutional investors are aware of this and are
able to generate momentum in the stock, making it go significantly
higher or lower. This allows the price to move quickly and trigger a lot
of stops and scare day traders out of their position. Since options are
so heavily traded with stop and limit orders, a select few are able to
sway the stock and trigger these trades, causing abnormalities and
spikes in the stock. It becomes what is known as a domino effect, and
with Apple it is very easy to do.
The media has also tainted the
credibility of the some of the equity movements in the stock. CNBC’s Jim
Cramer was reported to have released an incorrect story following the
iPhone’s launch that the company’s wireless partner Cingular, which was
renamed AT&T at a later date) would supply a year and 6-months of
free mobile service for the iPhone. The story was deemed completely
false but was already picked up by blogs and widely publicized on
various financial and syndicate sites like Digg. People began to
question the report wondering why Cingular would give away $1440 of free
service to at least ten million subscribers just to earn just $480 over
two years. CNBC in general has been a basher of Apple Inc.
(NASDAQ:AAPL), consistently pointing out how this may be the quarter
when the company falters.
The Street’s Scott Moritz is also guilty
of filing a very dubious report aimed at nailing Apple’s stock. The
reported harped on the idea that Apple’s great launch weekend was a bust
since the company was expecting to ship 1 million products within a few
days, citing unanimous “whisper” sources. This story was deemed
incorrect as the company does not release whisper numbers. The disbelief
of the constant success and outperformance of the company has much of
the media skeptical, especially folks at CNBC, who are always looking to
poke holes in one of the most amazing corporate stories of a
generation.
It appears that Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) stock will
continue to be manipulated until there are firm consequences put in
place to stop people from driving the security up or down. Apple is a
unique company and its stock carries a lot of euphoria that can be
controlled with timely buying and momentum swings. These tactics in the
end almost always benefit the large institutions and hurt the small
retail investor.
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