Key Takeaways
- Tim Cook offloaded $16.5 million in Apple (AAPL) shares on April 2, selling at $251.25–$256.00 per share
- Apple stock has declined approximately 4.6% year-to-date, currently hovering near $255, trailing the S&P 500 modestly
- The company unveiled the MacBook Neo on March 4 with a groundbreaking $599 price point — the most affordable Apple laptop in history — with all eight configurations completely sold out online by March 20
- Bank of America projects the MacBook Neo could unlock a $32 billion total addressable market opportunity in 2026
- BofA’s Wamsi Mohan maintains a Buy recommendation on AAPL with a $320 price objective
Apple (AAPL) shares are hovering around the $255 mark, reflecting a year-to-date decline of approximately 4.6%.
CEO Tim Cook has been strategically reducing his Apple holdings. In a transaction dated April 2, Cook divested $16.5 million in company stock — totaling 5,087 shares — with execution prices spanning $251.25 to $256.00 per share. These transactions occurred through a predetermined Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement, which eliminates concerns about insider information exploitation.
Despite these sales, Cook maintains ownership of 3.28 million Apple shares, representing approximately $848 million in value at today’s market prices. While the CEO is trimming his position, his substantial remaining stake demonstrates continued confidence.
Speculation regarding Cook’s potential departure from the CEO position has circulated recently. However, Cook directly addressed these rumors in a recent media appearance, clarifying that he has made no public declarations about leaving the role he’s occupied since 2011.
Though Apple’s 2026 performance has been lackluster, the company isn’t facing these headwinds in isolation. All Magnificent 7 technology stocks are experiencing year-to-date losses. Microsoft has plummeted nearly 23%, Tesla has dropped 21.8%, Meta has declined 12.2%, and Amazon has fallen 7.8%. In this context, Apple’s 4.6% decrease appears relatively modest.
What distinguishes Apple from its mega-cap technology counterparts isn’t aggressive AI investment — it’s the strategic decision to avoid it. While cloud infrastructure giants are planning approximately $700 billion in AI capital expenditures for 2025, Apple’s projected capex hovers around $14 billion. Apple’s thesis centers on AI becoming commoditized. Regardless of outcome, this approach maintains lean operational costs.
MacBook Neo Inventory Depletion
The standout product introduction this quarter is undoubtedly the MacBook Neo, unveiled March 4 with a $599 price tag. This represents Apple’s most affordable laptop offering in company history — priced lower than the Apple Watch Ultra 3. The Neo specifically addresses the $500–$1,000 notebook segment, a market where Apple maintained merely 0.6% share throughout 2025.
The launch timing appears strategic. Hundreds of millions of aging PCs lack Windows 11 upgrade compatibility, generating a substantial replacement opportunity. In late 2025, Dell’s COO Jeffrey Clarke projected approximately 500 million Windows 11-compatible PCs remain unupgraded — with an additional 500 million incapable of supporting the operating system entirely.
On March 20, Apple CEO Cook shared via X: “Mac just had its best launch week ever for first-time Mac customers.” That same day, all eight MacBook Neo configurations showed sold out status online with availability pushed to the following month, as reported by 9to5Mac.
Bank of America Projects $32B Market Opportunity
Bank of America analyst Wamsi Mohan conducted comprehensive analysis on the Neo’s addressable market potential. His research team calculated the 2026 TAM at $32 billion, derived from notebook unit shipments in the $300–$800 price range during 2025, adjusted downward 10% for 2026 projections, then multiplied by Apple’s competitive education average selling price of $499.
Assuming 10% market penetration and 19% operating margin performance, Mohan projects the Neo could contribute $0.03 in additional earnings per share. While this increment appears modest independently, the strategic value lies in ecosystem expansion — Apple’s iPhone installed base reaches approximately 1.5 billion units compared to only 260 million for Mac. Converting iPhone users into Mac customers deepens overall Apple ecosystem engagement.
Mohan reaffirmed his Buy rating alongside a $320 price objective, calculated using a 32x multiple on his 2027 EPS projection of $9.94.
