- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- Dell Has Some Explaining to Do
- Dell May Start to Show Some Promise
- Has Twitter's Finest Hours (Seconds) Come and Gone?
- Intel's Andy Bryant Offers An Explanation
- Apple's Global Retail Invasion
- Intel Settles; AMD Settles the Score
- HP's Shot Across Cisco's Bow
- Back Off, Regulators!
MOST SHARED
- Wall Street Finds Profits by Reducing Mortgages
- CNBC VIDEO: Warren Buffett & Bill Gates 'Walk & Talk' at Columbia University
- Kraft Weighs Higher Cadbury Bid as Rivals Circle
- What if a Recovery Is All in Your Head?
- Gold Prices to See Correction in 2010: Analyst
- Oil Prices to be Range-Bound This Week: CNBC Survey
- Don't Dwell on Investment Mistakes; Move on, Like Buffett
- CNBC VIDEO: Warren Buffett & Bill Gates 'Walk & Talk' at Columbia University
- U.S. Stocks Slip, Dollar Rises
- How Stock Investors Can Play Holiday Travel
- Time Lapse World Series Is A Great Play
- Hirschhorn: Greed...or Fear
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- May Day For Dendreon
- US Job Losses to Bottom out Next Quarter: NABE
- Late Payments on Credit Cards Drop in Third Quarter
- Smallest US Businesses Borrowing Again: PayNet
- Little Sign of Inflation on the Horizon: IMF
- Kraft Weighs Higher Cadbury Bid as Rivals Circle
- MBS Program Should be Extended: Fed's Bullard
- Tyson Food Profit Beats Estimates
- JPMorgan's Dimon Could Succeed Geithner: Report
- For Newspapers, Even Good News Isn't That Good
RSS FEED
Tech Check
![]() |
CNBC.com Apple Stocks Down |
Some idiot posts a statement on a CNN citizen journalism web site that Apple [AAPL
Loading...
()
]CEO Steve Jobs suffered a heart attack. And while this is America and we do enjoy the First Amendment right to free speech, this was the financial equivalent of "Fire" on a crowded trading floor.
I'm reluctant to even address any of this since it all hinges on a silly-- yet dangerous--rumor. But because the headline drove Apple to a new 52-week low, and because Apple took the right step in shooting the rumor down ("It's not true," a spokesman assures me), this needs to be talked about.
Apple is a target of manipulation precisely because it is a target of manipulation. What I mean is that like 5-year olds playing, when they tease each other, they do so because it evokes a reaction. The more the victim cries, the more teasing that will come his way. The trouble with Apple: the company's secretive nature, its carefully crafted image, Jobs' history of health issues and his intrinsic importance to the future success of the company all contribute to the effectiveness of these rumors in moving Apple shares. Good and bad, quite frankly.
Today's blog stupidity was only matched by the gullibility of traders who acted on the rumor. And with electronic trading and a few traders capable of wielding so much power, individual investors are essentially helpless.
It's not true. The rumor is not true. But the reaction to it just goes to show the enormous insecurity some traders suffer toward Apple and its shares. And how easy it is to manipulate this stock. That in itself is an unfortunate risk factor investors have to accept if they're going to put their hard-earned cash into this company.
How unfortunate. But such is the ridiculous climate on Wall Street right now. I hope they find this guy who wrote this post. But all the traders who dumped Apple shares based on that garbage have some searching of their own to do. Soul-searching. Selling first and asking questions later is the work of amateurs. It's not true. The rumor is not true.
Questions? Comments?









