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Been thinking about Apple stock lately and the wild swings we've seen over the years. People always ask me why Apple stock drops sometimes, but honestly the bigger story is how insane the long-term gains have been if you actually held through the noise.
Let me break down something that's been bugging me. Imagine you bought Apple back in July 1985, right after their IPO a few years prior. If you threw in 10K and just forgot about it for 20 years, you'd have had about 40K by 2005. That's solid, right? 304% gain. But here's where it gets wild.
Then 2007 happened. iPhone dropped and everything changed. The people who actually had the guts to buy Apple stock in July 2005 and held through all the volatility, the corrections, the market crashes, the "why is Apple dropping" moments everyone panicked about - those people are sitting on something ridiculous. We're talking 10K turning into roughly 1.5 million by now. That's not a typo.
I think what most people miss is that Apple built something that actually stuck. The whole ecosystem thing - iPhone, iPad, AirPods, all the services - it created this lock-in that's just insanely powerful. Customer loyalty is real with Apple in a way it's not with most tech companies. That's why even when Apple stock drops on some earnings miss or market correction, it tends to bounce back harder.
The real question is whether we'll see another 20 years of that kind of performance. Will there be another iPhone moment? Some transformative innovation that changes everything again? Hard to say. But if you're looking at the track record and asking yourself if Apple deserves a spot in your portfolio for tech exposure, the numbers kind of speak for themselves.
Obviously past performance doesn't guarantee anything, but there's something to be said about a company that's managed to stay relevant and dominant through multiple market cycles. That's rarer than people think.