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    Apple shareholders to meet as stock at record high

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Apple Inc Chief Executive Tim Cook is in an enviable position - market leading products, a $98 billion warchest and a seemingly gravity-defying stock price.

    But as he gears up for the annual face-to-face meeting with shareholders, a few issues may be causing him angst. Chief among them are in China, where poor labor conditions are in the spotlight and Apple's iPad trademark is under attack.

    The meeting this Thursday comes days after Apple touched a new lifetime high of $526.29 before receding slightly. The stock may get a boost next month, when Apple is expected to unveil a new version of its best-selling iPad.

    Apple shares have seen a blistering rally in the past seven weeks, gaining $100 and making Apple the most valuable U.S. company, with $468 billion in market capitalization.

    But as much as Apple's shares rally, working conditions at the company's manufacturing contractors in China have also attracted attention this year.

    Recently, Apple has been trying to redirect the spotlight on its efforts to force its partners to treat their employees better and the iPhone and iPad maker may use Thursday's meeting to repeat it commitment to improve labor conditions in its supply chain.

    "The Fair Labor Association and the audit they are doing of all their (supply) firms is a corporate governance issue that will probably be a reasonably active discussion at the shareholder meeting," said Tim Lesko, portfolio manager at Granite investment Advisors. Apple share account for about 3 percent of Granite's equity assets.

    The U.S. non-profit labor group Fair Labor Association has begun a study of the working conditions at Apple's main contract manufacturers, including supplier Foxconn Technology Group's plants in China, which has been in the news for worker suicides, a plant explosion and poor working conditions.

    Another thorny issue that has now started attracting attention from shareholders is the trademark battle moves in China where troubled technology company Proview is seeking to halt the sale of iPad tablets, claiming it owns the iPad trademark in china.

    Connor Browne, portfolio manger of Thornburg Value Fund -- another Apple investor -- wants to see the trademark case settled.

    "Apple has positioned itself well in China," he said. "I would hate to slow the momentum there because of court issues."

    CASH TO COME UP AGAIN

    A perennial issue that shareholders zoom in on is Apple's enormous cash pile. The company now boasts of over $100 a share in cash and securities.

    Cook said earlier this month that the company is in very active discussions at the board level about what to do with its cash, asking shareholders to be patient as Apple decides the way forward, stoking speculation that Apple may return some of that money to shareholders through dividends or share buybacks - even if it is only a one-time deal.

    Apple's cash balance is the largest among U.S. technology companies, and many analysts think the company should put at least some of the money to work. The company last bought back shares in 2001 and scrapped its dividend in the mid 1990s.

    A dividend could give Apple stock a short-term boost as institutional investors - who typically own only stocks that pay dividends - may buy it.

    "It certainly would increase the potential owners for the stock," Lesko said.

    Apple's annual meeting rarely yields any financial forecasts or product-related news but corporate governance could be part of the discussion.

    Last year, in a rare show of strength, Apple shareholders voted for a non-binding proposal to require board directors be elected with a majority vote but Calpers, which put it forward, is reintroducing the measure as Apple has not acted on it.

    The largest U.S. pension fund says that policy would better protects investors' interests but Apple had urged shareholders to vote against the proposal.

    The company's board has long been criticized for its lack of disclosure, particularly about leadership succession while Steve Jobs battled illnesses whose details were not made public.

    (Reporting By Poornima Gupta; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

    See all articles from Reuters
     

    15 comments

    • Tiger  •  2 months ago
      One of the best products in the world keep up the good work.
    • Mugen  •  2 months ago
      So... can we legalize Marijuana now?...
    • georgec  •  2 months ago
      Apple and Google have targets on their backs., it is good to be big, it is bad to rub it in faces.
      • Joe 2 months ago
        No problem, because Apple and Google are the only ones who can shoot straight.
      • georgec 2 months ago
        I hope so, Google may have some legal problems though with integrity, Apple with human rights and the fact there is no longer a Steve Jobs or Woz.

        Trouble with being king of the hill is when others want you pushed off of the hill.
      • georgec 2 months ago
        Watched ABC News last night, and guess they got the word to play nice with the China Apple factory there. Told how nice the little Chinese people loved working day and night, living 8 to a room in the factory, and those beautiful nets around the factory that catches the suicide jumpers who love it so much there that they are willing to die there, I guess.

        Dissapointed in Diane Sawyer
    • Tiger  •  2 months ago
      Why no splitting of Stocks or Dividends, its past time.It should give Apple more sale of stock"s.Just wondering.
    • Joe  •  2 months ago
      Do either of you (Chuck & B) know what a P/E is?
    • Thomas M  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  2 months ago
      An American (?) success story. Over valued, over - hyped, overpriced.
    • viper  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  2 months ago
      APPLE has CHILD LABOR in china , they should be ashamed paying $ 1 .25 an hr to these KIDS and adults who are commiting suicide every time they turn there backs there.. they even put up nets in the building that houses them ... apple is banned in our house
      • Tim A 2 months ago
        Look around your house and I bet you 90% of your stuff came from China. Are you going to ban your clothing, furniture, cleaning products, and everything else you buy? Foxcon probably assembled the PC you are using right now to read this article.

        Apple is very public about their global work force and are taking steps to make things better for them. Name one other company that is doing the same.
      • C 2 months ago
        Another iHater. Hey, Foxxcom also built for Microsoft, HP, Dell, Toshiba you name it.

        We should be glad to have local successful businesses. What I regret is all the jobs outsourced.
      • Alarm Clock 2 months ago
        What is $1.25/hr equivalent to here in the US, based upon per capita income in China? Do you ever think past the sound bite you repeat?
    • Chris  •  Huntsville, Alabama  •  2 months ago
      What's wrong with child labor? We have it here in the USA too---I worked odd jobs ever since I was 11, and had a paper route at 15. I learned valuable lessons working young and had money to buy the things I wanted.
      • Hastings67 2 months ago
        A child working in a dangerous factory is a good idea to you?
    • lakeqi  •  2 months ago
      I love how liberals drive around with cute little apple stickers on their cars broadcasting their support for outsourcing, exploitation and slave labor. I mean, I love my IPOD too, but putting those stickers on your car is just SICK.
      • Joe 2 months ago
        Actually, broadcasting their support for a profitable company.
      • lakeqi 2 months ago
        So profit over all. In other words you just made my point for me.
      • C 2 months ago
        Liberals? This is not a political article. Your assumptions shows your lack of critical thinking.
    • VLaD  •  2 months ago
      i give it 2 years and the stocks will be at $200. They where overbought.
    • Spac3nerd  •  2 months ago
      Cheaply made devices of mediocre quality and performance sold at a premium to the mindless millions that line up like sheep for hours. It's well known fact that Apple products have sub-par hardware, restrictive software, that sell at a very high price. When you buy an iDiot device, you don't buy it for usefulness, or performance, you buy it for the apple sticker, a brand name.
    • Chuck C.  •  2 months ago
      Why would anynody want there stock ?
    • Sudarshan  •  Fremont, California  •  2 months ago
      Enviable - products, company, funds! Lacks global vision and will lose to Android.
    • Billy  •  Barrow, Alaska  •  2 months ago
      So everyone that can afford to eat more than rice, or has not yet been executed in china bought one. Roughly 1/3 of the world population. Apple really has a reason to celebrate. And what good is having a outdated crappy apple, in a country that outlaws Individualism. The first video game Pong that was played on mostly black and televisions in the early 1970's (invented in the USA) would become a stock market sensation If China decided to market it again.Whomever did not buy it would be carried away from their homes during the night and secretly vanish.
    • The Big B  •  Derry, New Hampshire  •  2 months ago
      Have we learned anything from all of those other market wonder stocks who seemingly were headed to the sky?
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