The Democratic Republic of Congo says Apple is sourcing minerals from armed groups committing atrocities. Belgium has launched a criminal probe into the DRC’s allegation. Donald Trump is sworn in as US president. Davos leaders reject climate banking group. And Toyota struggles to jumpstart hydrogen car sales.
Overall revenue may have reached record levels, but big questions lurk about large parts of the iPhone maker’s business.
Belgium has started a criminal probe into allegations that Apple has knowingly sourced “blood minerals” from the Democratic Republic of Congo, in what lawyers for the central African country have called a “massive laundering and greenwashing operation”.
Today, analysts at Jefferies and Loop Capital each downgraded their ratings on Apple.
Belgium is moving ahead with its probe into allegations by the Democratic Republic of Congo that Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) uses conflict minerals from the African country in its supply chain, and has appointed an investigative magistrate to oversee the case,
Donald Trump unveils aggressive new policy measures at his inauguration. The Democratic Republic of Congo puts pressure on Apple over critical minerals. David Pilling Apple says it has undertaken all the steps that it can to ensure that the minerals do not come from these conflict mines. The allegation is that it can’t possibly know.
Daniel Ek’s body-scanning start-up Neko Health has raised $260mn in new capital to fuel expansion of its clinics to the US, as the Spotify founder aims to build what he called the Apple of healthcare.
Steven Cohen runs Point72 Asset Management, one of the most successful hedge funds in history as measured in net gains since inception. Apple stock returned 72% over the last two years, but those gains were driven entirely by valuation multiple expansion,
Apple and Meta might end up being better positioned ... He joined The New York Times in 2022 from the Financial Times, where he held a number of senior roles in Hong Kong and London.
Apple reported robust fiscal 2025 first-quarter earnings that beat expectations, despite mixed performance in key segments.
U.S. stock index futures rose on Friday, driven by gains in Apple following a strong sales growth forecast, as investors focused on key inflation data expected later in the day that could influence the Federal Reserve's policy decisions.
We recently published a list of Warren Buffett’s 10 Longest-Held Stocks. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) stands against other Warren Buffett’s longest-held stocks.