AAPL

Apple Price

AAPL
$252,65
-$5,06(-%1,96)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-07 19:52 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-07 19:52, Apple (AAPL) is priced at $252,65, with a total market cap of $3,65T, a P/E ratio of 34,09, and a dividend yield of %0,41. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $245,69 and $257,80. The current price is %2,83 above the day's low and %1,99 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 11,52M. Over the past 52 weeks, AAPL has traded between $193,25 to $288,62, and the current price is -%12,46 away from the 52-week high.

AAPL Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$258,86
Market Cap$3,65T
Volume11,52M
P/E Ratio34,09
Dividend Yield (TTM)%0,41
Dividend Amount$0,26
Diluted EPS (TTM)7,98
Net Income (FY)$112,01B
Revenue (FY)$416,16B
Earnings Date2026-05-07
EPS Estimate1,94
Revenue Estimate$108,94B
Shares Outstanding14,10B
Beta (1Y)1.109
Ex-Dividend Date2026-02-09
Dividend Payment Date2026-02-12

About AAPL

Apple Inc. designs, manufactures, and markets smartphones, personal computers, tablets, wearables, and accessories worldwide. The company offers iPhone, a line of smartphones; Mac, a line of personal computers; iPad, a line of multi-purpose tablets; and wearables, home, and accessories comprising AirPods, Apple TV, Apple Watch, Beats products, and HomePod. It also provides AppleCare support and cloud services; and operates various platforms, including the App Store that allow customers to discover and download applications and digital content, such as books, music, video, games, and podcasts, as well as advertising services include third-party licensing arrangements and its own advertising platforms. In addition, the company offers various subscription-based services, such as Apple Arcade, a game subscription service; Apple Fitness+, a personalized fitness service; Apple Music, which offers users a curated listening experience with on-demand radio stations; Apple News+, a subscription news and magazine service; Apple TV+, which offers exclusive original content; Apple Card, a co-branded credit card; and Apple Pay, a cashless payment service, as well as licenses its intellectual property. The company serves consumers, and small and mid-sized businesses; and the education, enterprise, and government markets. It distributes third-party applications for its products through the App Store. The company also sells its products through its retail and online stores, and direct sales force; and third-party cellular network carriers, wholesalers, retailers, and resellers. Apple Inc. was founded in 1976 and is headquartered in Cupertino, California.
SectorTechnology
IndustryConsumer Electronics
CEOTimothy D. Cook
HeadquartersCupertino,CA,US
Official Websitehttps://www.apple.com
Employees (FY)166,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$2,50M
Net Income per Employee$674,75K

Apple (AAPL) FAQ

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Apple (AAPL) is currently trading at $252,65, with a 24h change of -%1,96. The 52-week trading range is $193,25–$288,62.

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What is the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of Apple (AAPL)? What does it indicate?

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Risk Warning

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Apple (AAPL) Latest News

2026-03-13 01:24

TradFi Rise Alert: AAPL (Apple Inc.) Rises Over 0.12%

Gate News: According to the latest Gate TradFi data, AAPL (Apple Inc.) has surged by 0.12% in a short period. Current volatility is significantly higher than recent averages, indicating increased market activity.

2026-03-10 10:24

TradFi RisesAlert: AAPL(Apple Inc.) Moves Rises Over 0.12%

Gate News: According to the latest Gate TradFi data, AAPL(Apple Inc.) has surged by 0.12% in a short period. Current volatility is significantly higher than recent averages, indicating increased market activity.

2026-02-11 10:01

U.S. stock futures see a broad decline in crypto-related stocks, BMNR drops 6.99%

Odaily Planet Daily reports that according to msx.com data, U.S. stock pre-market crypto concept stocks generally declined, with MSTR down 3.93%, SBET down 6.47%, BMNR down 6.99%, and CRCL down 0.58%. It is reported that msx.com is a decentralized RWA trading platform that has listed hundreds of RWA tokens, covering U.S. stocks and ETF tokens such as AAPL, AMZN, GOOGL, META, MSFT, NFLX, NVDA, and others.

2026-02-10 10:22

U.S. stock futures see a broad rally in crypto-related stocks, with CRCL up 5.36%

Odaily Planet Daily reports that, according to msx.com data, U.S. stock pre-market crypto-related stocks are generally rising, with MSTR up over 2.6%, SBET up 1.14%, BMNR up 4.79%, and CRCL up 5.36%. It is reported that msx.com is a decentralized RWA trading platform that has listed hundreds of RWA tokens, covering U.S. stocks and ETF tokens such as AAPL, AMZN, GOOGL, META, MSFT, NFLX, NVDA, and others.

2025-12-10 13:48

Aster: Stock perpetual contract trading with $0 commission

Odaily Planet Daily News: Aster announced on the X platform that perpetual stock contracts (NVDA, TSLA, AMZN, AAPL, etc.) on Aster are now completely zero-fee, with both maker and taker fees at 0%.

Hot Posts About Apple (AAPL)

ZkProofPudding

ZkProofPudding

2 hours ago
Just realized how many newer traders get caught off guard by what happens right after a big earnings move. You buy a call thinking the stock's gonna moon, it does, but somehow your option is still losing money. That's the IV crush meaning in action, and it's brutal if you don't see it coming. Here's the thing about implied volatility – it's basically what the market is pricing in for expected moves. Before earnings, option premiums get expensive because market makers are building in protection for massive swings. They're pricing volatility way higher than it might actually be. Then earnings hits, the stock moves, and suddenly all that uncertainty evaporates. Even if the stock went up like you predicted, the option value tanks because the volatility expectations just collapsed. I've seen this play out countless times. Say AAPL is at $100 the day before earnings and a straddle is only priced at $2 – that's the market saying maybe a 2% move. Compare that to TSLA at $100 with a $15 straddle, which means traders are expecting like a 15% swing. Huge difference in what the market's actually pricing for volatility. If you sell that TSLA straddle pre-earnings and the stock doesn't move 15%, you're profitable. But if you're long and expecting that big move, you better hope it actually happens or the IV crush will wreck your position even if direction is right. The real trap is not understanding historical volatility versus what's being priced in. VIX spikes before major events, option prices get inflated, then once the event passes, IV contracts hard. That's when the crush happens. I've found that looking at historical earnings moves for a stock versus the current IV pricing is where the edge actually is. Sometimes the market's overpricing the move, sometimes underpricing it. One pattern I've noticed: when SPY's crashing and VIX is spiking, options go into crush mode too. The fear premium disappears fast once the panic selling stops. This is actually where opportunities hide if you understand the cycle. Bottom line – before you enter any options trade around earnings or major announcements, check what IV is actually pricing in. Compare it to historical moves. That's how you avoid getting blindsided by a volatility crush. The traders making consistent money aren't the ones predicting stock direction perfectly, they're the ones understanding how volatility pricing works and trading accordingly.
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ser_ngmi

ser_ngmi

2 hours ago
Just been thinking about something Charlie Munger said that's stuck with me for years. The guy passed away last year at 99, but his investment wisdom is still as sharp as ever. He basically told Buffett to stop chasing cheap stocks and instead focus on buying genuinely great businesses at reasonable prices. Sounds simple, but it's the opposite of what most retail investors do. Here's the thing that really caught my attention though – Munger apparently used a specific technical tool that most people associate with trend traders, not value investors. He'd buy high-quality stocks when they pulled back to their 200-week moving average. I know, I know – Buffett and Munger are supposed to be pure fundamentals guys. But this quote keeps resonating with me: if you just bought quality businesses whenever they hit that 200-week level, you'd crush the S&P 500 over time. And honestly, I've been doing exactly that for years without even realizing I was following Munger's playbook. The real edge here isn't complicated. You need to focus on liquid, industry-leading companies – the ones that institutional money actually cares about. Not penny stocks or yesterday's darlings. Look for businesses with strong cash positions and solid fundamentals. When these quality names pull back to that 200-week moving average, that's when patient investors get their shot. Look at Apple. The stock has basically held that 200-week line for the entire 2000s. Even during the 2008 financial crisis when everyone was panicking, AAPL respected that moving average. It's tested it maybe five times in two decades. That's how rare and powerful this signal actually is. Nvidia's another perfect example. Back in late 2022 when semiconductor stocks were getting destroyed and NVDA had lost two-thirds of its value, the 200-week MA acted like a magnet. Investors who recognized that signal and picked up shares there? Life-changing money by now. Microsoft showed the same pattern in late 2022. After that brutal bear market, MSFT pulled back to the 200-week and then doubled from there. Microsoft is a perfect example of what Munger meant – quality company, fair price at the right moment. Then there's MicroStrategy. In 2022, when crypto was in shambles and everyone was writing obituaries for Bitcoin, MSTR hit that 200-week moving average in the $30s. People who bought there and held? They're sitting on a stock that hit $540 by 2024. That's the kind of asymmetric opportunity you get when you have patience and discipline. Right now I'm watching AMD pretty closely. The fundamentals are still solid – this is a global semiconductor powerhouse designing high-performance computing and graphics tech. But sentiment is absolutely terrible. The stock's making a rare retreat to its 200-week MA, and most traders are too focused on short-term noise to notice. That DeepSeek story spooked people, but the reality is AI spending isn't slowing down. If anything, it's accelerating. What makes AMD interesting right now is the valuation. Price-to-book is at levels we haven't seen since 2023, and that's when the stock went on a massive run. That's the kind of setup Munger would probably be looking at. The bottom line? Charlie Munger's real genius wasn't some secret formula – it was about combining quality analysis with patience and discipline. You don't need to be a balance sheet wizard to apply his thinking. Find the best-in-class companies, wait for them to pull back to that 200-week moving average, and then be patient enough to hold through the noise. That's how you actually beat the market over time.
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CodeZeroBasis

CodeZeroBasis

5 hours ago
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps publicly designated 18 American technology and defense companies — among them Nvidia $NVDA +0.14%, Apple $AAPL +1.15%, Microsoft $MSFT -0.16%, Google $GOOGL +1.43%, and Meta $META -0.25% — as valid military objectives, announcing that strikes against their Middle Eastern operations could begin as early as Wednesday at 8 p.m. Tehran time (12:30 p.m. E.T.). The IRGC broadcast the warning through a Guard-linked Telegram channel and the semi-official Tasnim news service, framing the targeting as retaliation for what it described as American and Israeli assassination operations against Iranian leadership. "From now on, for every assassination, an American company will be destroyed," the IRGC said in the post. #### Related Content Visa is bringing AI to credit card charge disputes The SpaceX IPO is coming — and it looks massive Beyond the headline names, the Guard's list extended to Cisco $CSCO +1.79%, HP $HPQ -2.92%, Intel $INTC +0.79%, Oracle $ORCL -0.57%, IBM $IBM -0.57%, Dell $DELL -0.68%, Palantir $PLTR -0.36%, JPMorgan $JPM +0.80% Chase, Tesla $TSLA -2.15%, GE, and Boeing $BA +1.96% alongside two Gulf-based firms: G42, Abu Dhabi's prominent AI company, and Spire Solutions, a Dubai-based cybersecurity provider. The Guard's warning urged employees at all listed companies to vacate their offices without delay, and separately called on residents within a one-kilometer radius of those facilities throughout the region to evacuate. The advisory indicated that the intended targets are the companies' infrastructure across the Middle East, rather than facilities inside the U.S. The IRGC said the companies were designated because of their alleged role in enabling the killings of Iranian leaders, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and Revolutionary Guards commander-in-chief Mohammad Pakpour, according to Time. "Since the main element in designing and tracking terror targets are American ICT and AI companies," the IRGC said, "the main institutions effective in terrorist operations will be our legitimate targets." Intel issued a statement confirming it has activated protective measures for regional employees and facilities, describing employee safety as its "number one priority" and adding that it is "taking steps to safeguard and support our workers and facilities in the Middle East." Neither Microsoft, Google, nor JPMorgan provided a statement in response to requests for comment. The latest threat builds on a pattern of escalation: Iranian forces previously targeted Amazon $AMZN +1.44% Web Services data infrastructure across the Gulf in early March, triggering widespread service disruptions for digital platforms throughout the UAE and surrounding countries. Some American companies had already asked Gulf-based employees to work remotely ahead of this latest escalation. American technology companies have aggressively expanded their physical footprint across the Middle East in recent years, drawn by relatively inexpensive energy and ample land for large-scale AI and cloud development. The Gulf facilities now threatened represent billions of dollars in cloud and AI investment. As the war stretches into its second month, the economic damage is quickly accumulating, darkening the global economic picture. Iran's threat comes as both sides send mixed signals on the possibility of ending the conflict, which began Feb. 28 with U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. Trump publicly stated his expectation that American troops would be withdrawn from Iran within the coming weeks, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio suggested the conflict's endpoint was approaching. But Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the U.S. would continue "negotiating with bombs" while working out a deal. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Al Jazeera that while he is in contact with U.S. officials, Iran has not responded to a 15-point ceasefire proposal. "We do not have any faith that negotiations with the U.S. will yield any results," he said. "The trust level is at zero." CSIS data indicate that Iranian forces have launched in excess of 3,000 projectiles — drones and missiles combined — against targets in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Kuwait since the conflict began. Brent crude prices have climbed above $100 a barrel since the war started, and U.S. gas prices exceeded $4 a gallon for the first time since 2022. 📬 Sign up for the Daily Brief ------------------------------ ### Our free, fast and fun briefing on the global economy, delivered every weekday morning. Sign me up
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