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The flagship Apple Store, "The Cube", on 5th Avenue.
New York’s Apple store on Fifth Avenue (Getty Images)

One of Dan Ives’ top 5 AI stocks for 2026 is Apple, despite its “invisible AI strategy”

Right now, investors like Apple because its AI strategy is different from other megacap tech companies.

Wedbush Securities senior technology analyst Dan Ives, architect of the Dan IVES Wedbush AI Revolution ETF, released his list of the “top five names to play the AI revolution into 2026.”

Most are relatively uncontroversial picks: Microsoft, Tesla, Palantir, and CrowdStrike.

And then there’s Apple.

That one should raise a lot of eyebrows for anyone who’s been paying attention to the Cupertino-based company’s AI strategy (or lack thereof), as Ives admits:

“The elephant in the room remains the invisible AI strategy, with the biggest consumer installed base in the world of 2.4 billion iOS devices and 1.5 billion iPhones, the time is now for Apple to accelerate its AI efforts. We believe the AI monetization piece could add $75 to $100 per share to the Apple story over the coming few years as it finally plays out after a head scratching AI strategy this year in Apple Park. We also believe Tim Cook will remain CEO of Apple through at least the end of 2027 to see Apple through this key AI technology transition in Cupertino.”

There’s certainly one way to skin a cat: Apple can become an “AI winner” by reaping the fruits (pun intended) of everyone else’s capex and applying those advances and features to its already very sticky user base of hardware and services.

But a more pointed, investment-forward AI strategy that looks like the rest of its megacap tech peers would risk Apple becoming something it’s not, and undercutting why investors find value (and seek safety) in the iPhone maker’s shares.

Apple has behaved very differently from its Big Tech peers this year. Its modest success has largely come down to two factors: the natural upgrade cycle boosting iPhone sales, and the fact that it’s not really an AI stock.

Apple’s performance in 2025 is a throwback to the days of not so long ago when tech companies simply made a gazillion dollars and used a big chunk of that to make themselves smaller via share repurchases.

In its most recent quarter, Apple returned $20 billion to shareholders through buybacks alone. (It also pays a modest dividend.) That’s more than the share repurchases for Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle combined.

Apple can be a better AI company than it is now, sure. Recent personnel changes suggest Tim Cook and co. are very aware of this! But leaning less into capex relative to Apple’s megacap peers may be what’s earned it a place in many portfolios, and a meaningful shift away from that could make it just like any other AI company, with the added disadvantage of being seen as late to the game.

For now, investors are seemingly very willing to pay up for its formula of profits equal shareholder returns, as Apple’s forward price-to-earnings ratio is the second-highest among Magnificent 7 stocks (behind Tesla, of course).

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Vertiv falls after Jefferies downgrade, company announces $50 million to expand Ohio manufacturing capacity

Vertiv Holdings is sliding 2% in premarket trading on Tuesday after the data center digital infrastructure provider was downgraded to "Hold" from "Buy" by analysts at Jefferies.

Citing risks in slowing hyperscaler capex growth in 2027 and beyond, as well as the view that out-year margin expectations are elevated, Jefferies cut its price target for Vertiv to $260 from $280. Estimates from Jefferies analysts assume that the firm successfully expands its capacity to meet its "outsized" current order book.

Separately, the company announced an investment worth up to $50 million to expand its manufacturing facilities in Ironton, Ohio and headquarters in Westerville, Ohio.

The Ironton expansion will “increase Vertiv liquid cooling and chilled water systems used in advanced thermal management applications,” often used in high performance AI workloads, by ~45%, per the company’s press release, and is expected to be operational in the second quarter of 2027.

The company also recently announced its acquisition of heat-exchange technology provider Thermokey, as Vertiv continues to focus on investing in advanced cooling solutions used in AI data centers.

$4

US average gas prices hit $4.018 a gallon on Tuesday, crossing the $4 threshold for the first time since August 2022, according to the American Automobile Association. That’s roughly a 35% jump, or $1.04 more per gallon, since the Iran war began in late February. Diesel has surged even more sharply, rising about 45% to $5.45, raising concerns about higher shipping, grocery, and consumer goods prices.

With the Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly a fifth of global oil supply previously flowed — effectively closed, crude prices are up more than 50% since the war began, feeding quickly into pump prices across the US.

Still, regional differences remain, with drivers in California now facing nearly $5.90 a gallon for regular gasoline, followed by Hawaii ($5.50) and Washington ($5.30), while those in Oklahoma, Iowa, and Kansas pay under $3.30 a gallon.

Prices could even approach $5 nationwide if the strait remains blocked, Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, told CNBC.

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Memory, optical, and AI-construction stocks dive as embattled SaaS stocks rebound

Memory stocks sank on Monday, continuing a sell-off that began last week with new details about a potentially more memory-efficient AI algorithm from Google Research.

Western Digital, Micron, Seagate Technology Holdings, and retail favorite Sandisk all tumbled.

Industry publication Wccftech flagged that some memory chip prices have seen a “significant drop” recently across multiple US retailers.

A new, upbeat initiation for Seagate by JPMorgan analysts — they rated it “overweight,” basically a buy, on “opportunity for significant upside” — couldn’t help Seagate shake off the slump in the broader data center trade.

Optical stocks — recent high-flyers — also got slammed, taking down Applied Optoelectronics, Corning, Lumentum, Coherent, and Ciena Corp. . The group may also under particular pressure in light of reports that Samsung is entering the silicon photonics market.

AI construction trades like Emcor, Vertiv Holdings, and Sterling Infrastructure also sank.

Meanwhile, traders seemed to be scurrying back to securely profitable software-as-a-service (SaaS) and cybersecurity stocks as a place to wait out the market mayhem.

ServiceNow, Zscaler, CrowdStrike, Salesforce, and Atlassian were all solidly in the green in midday training.

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