Pixar didn't enjoy iPhone-like profitability (edit: that's not the same as revenue, everyone knows that, right?). And the reason is that it had very successful competitors. The Mac likewise. That's not good enough. Apple investors can make their own decisions about buying into new products like that. The GP post was implying that the "leadership team" was likely to do better.
My point is that (1) no, they really can't product another iPhone-like hit (that's a once-a-generation thing) and that (2) Jobs is dead, so there's a serious question about the "leadership team" that investors need to see as a risk. Is it really "safer" to leave your share of that $100B egg in one basket, or just to put it into a mutual fund?
Personally, I'd say Pixar seems to be the Apple of the movie industry. A few products, done right, and hugely profitable:
> As of February 2012, its films have made over $7 billion worldwide, with its $602 million average gross by far the highest of any studio in the industry. In addition all the films produced by Pixar are among the fifty highest grossing animated films of all time, with Finding Nemo (#26), Up (#43) and Toy Story 3 (#7) all in the top 50 list of highest-grossing films of all time. - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pixar
> My point is that (1) no, they really can't product another iPhone-like hit (that's a once-a-generation thing)
They've already put out three in a generation - iPod, iPhone, and iPad. Lumping those three distinct systems into one is intellectually dishonest.
And... the expected Apple fan flames have begun. Pixar, iPod and iPad didn't have anything like the iPhone's level of profitability. I lump the latter in with the iPhone because the current implementations are one platform (no one calls it, ahem, "intellectually dishonest" to talk about "windows" profitability instead of "windows home" vs. "windows server" numbers).
But there's no need, so I'll simplify. If all Apple can do with that $100B is generate another Pixar, Macintosh, iPod or iPad, it is not enough and they should give the money back. To make it seem like a good bet, they need to produce another iPhone. And they can't, because no one can do that at will. We'll see another hit like that in 15 years or so if we're lucky.
The iPhone was the next step in omnipresent computing. You always have your iPhone. It's two steps down from laptops (leap-frogging the tablet, which has come after the iPhone). The next step is either glasses with computer screens (kind of geeky), or voice-interface computers.
With a voice interface, you can shrink a computer down to the size of a wristwatch. Getting data out is a problem (display glasses? some kind of projector?) is an issue, but not insurmountable.
> To make it seem like a good bet, they need to produce another iPhone. And they can't, because no one can do that at will. We'll see another hit like that in 15 years or so if we're lucky.
You can't really compare iPhone and Pixar that way. IPhone was a product by an established company that was already producing the iPod. Pixar on the other hand was a startup (sort of), which Steve Jobs invested $10 million in and sold for $7.4 billion, quite an impressive return on investment.
This completely misses the point (or rather: completely confirms what I'm saying). The question at hand is "What should Apple do with $100e9US". What relevance does an investment of 0.01% of that total have, even if they could get that RoI on demand. With (pinky to mouth) One Hundred Billion Dollars you need to be aiming much, much higher. And they aren't. And even if they could they're just a bunch of Jobs-less yahoos playing with cash that landed in their laps. Be honest: they aren't going to create ten thousand Pixars with that money, they'll be lucky to get five. And they can fund five (or fifty) on existing revenue without the cash reserves.
What's with this idea that they have to pick one and only one thing to do with a hundred billion dollars? What's with this idea that they should spend it all so they don't have any reserves?
My point is that (1) no, they really can't product another iPhone-like hit (that's a once-a-generation thing) and that (2) Jobs is dead, so there's a serious question about the "leadership team" that investors need to see as a risk. Is it really "safer" to leave your share of that $100B egg in one basket, or just to put it into a mutual fund?