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View Full Version : Steve Jobs And Early Apple Investors Knew This... Do You?



agemuwoy
02-28-2017,
I would bet few investors really understand what's behind the success of technology behemoth, Apple, Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL (https://www.streetauthority.com/stocks/AAPL)).

The rags to riches story of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak building the first Apple computer in a garage is widely known. And of course, it's products like the iPod, iPhone and Macbook that first come to mind when you think of the company's biggest hits.

AgpixFag
03-01-2017,
But today I want to share with you the secret that's led Apple to become the world's largest company by market capitalization and helped its share price skyrocket more than 9,700% since 2001.

You see, it's not the company's revolutionary products that drive its success...

ahonepewafafo
03-02-2017,
The key to understanding the company's success can be seen in a simple pattern. Once you identify this pattern, the catalyst to future growth for Apple -- and the way investors can make money from the company today -- will be apparent.

After Apple sold the first iPod in October 2001, it was not received well by critics, consumers and investors.

AirmanHamy
03-03-2017,
Not what you'd expect, right? Apple shares lost 29% of their value after introducing one of the most revolutionary products in its storied history.

But in April 2003, Apple would dramatically change not only the music industry, but how we purchased music. It introduced the iTunes Store, offering 200,000 songs for $0.99 each.

No longer would we have to rip music electronically from our favorite CD, manually type in the song title and artist and then load it to our iPod... we could simply purchase our favorite songs and seamlessly put them on our iPod.

In the third quarter of 2003, Apple sold 336,000 iPods, up 140% from the same quarter a year before. Two years later, Apple sold nearly 6.5 million iPods in the third quarter alone -- 20 times more than in the third quarter of 2003.

This was the first step of a repeating pattern that has taken Apple from a $4.8 billion market capitalization in 2003 to its current $588 billion market cap.

Akraborzek
03-03-2017,
Most recently, I've written about its newest software, Apple Pay, which enables consumers to buy goods with a simple tap of their phone. I've also detailed how near field communication (NFC) chips now allow smartphones and cash registers to communicate, making cash and credit cards obsolete.

Use This Lesson From Apple To Score Triple-Digit Gains
But now that I've revealed the company's true strategy, you'll understand why I have been pounding the table on Apple Pay. Based on my research, these forces could unlock an $11 trillion market opportunity thanks to Apple Pay and the key partnerships that will help make it happen.

In my premium advisory, Game-Changing Stocks, I correctly predicted in 2012 that Apple would introduce a mobile payment feature in the iPhone. But more importantly, I pointed out that it would be the key supplier of Apple's NFC chips that came out the biggest winner. It's a bet that's already led readers to gain more 225% in just over two years.