There are companies that participate in the economy, and then there's Amazon. At this point, I half expect Amazon to announce it's getting into weather. Not forecasting it—selling it. Prime members would get sunshine delivered two days early while everyone else waits in line behind a thunderstorm. I've followed Amazon for years, and what fascinates me most isn't that it's become enormous. Plenty of companies get big. What amazes me is that Amazon somehow keeps convincing investors that it still has room to grow like an ambitious startup. Most corporations hit a certain size and spend the rest of their existence defending what they've built. Amazon looks at its empire, shrugs, and asks, "What trillion-dollar industry haven't we disrupted yet?" That attitude is exactly why I continue to believe Amazon remains one of the most compelling long-term investments in the market. The funny thing is that many people still think of Amazon primarily as the p...
For years, owning Apple stock felt almost unfair. Every earnings report seemed to deliver another reason to believe the company had discovered a cheat code for capitalism. The iPhone kept selling. Services kept growing. Cash piled up faster than most countries could count it. Every time critics claimed Apple had reached its peak, the company politely reminded Wall Street that it had another few hundred billion dollars' worth of ideas left. Now the conversation has changed. The question isn't whether Apple is a great company. I think that debate ended years ago. The real question investors should be asking today is much more interesting: can iPhone growth still meaningfully drive Apple's stock higher, or has the world's most successful smartphone become too mature to move the needle the way it once did? That's a far more difficult question than simply asking whether people like iPhones. They obviously do. Walk into any airport, coffee shop, corporate office, college ...