Latest Trade Alerts

Brokerage Partners

Apple: iPad Mini Wins Because It's Expensive

Tickers in this article: AAPL AMZN GOOG MSFT

Look at the iPad mini. People are willing to pay for something of quality that they know will give them a lot in return. It's no longer a case where it's a race to the bottom to create the cheapest and most easily-produced product. People are realizing that you frequently get what you pay for.

-- Eric Kuhn, The Wall Street Journal
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- That's an excellent excerpt from an excellent article that reveals where so many otherwise excellent people miss with errant emotional reactions to Apple (AAPL) over the last several weeks. If these folks credit Google (GOOG) with any perceived weakness at Apple, they're really far gone.

Anton Wahlman writes solid articles for TheStreet. I don't agree with him very often, but that doesn't mean his work isn't strong. We just don't see eye-to-eye on much.

While I don't think he dislikes Apple, Wahlman appears in love with Google. A quick glance at his article history reveals that his Google love stems largely from the company's strategy to produce relatively inexpensive ("cheap") hardware.

Wahlman particularly digs Google's low-priced Chromebook laptops. Most recently, he waxes bullishly about Google leading a smartphone price war.

Wahlman claims there's not much room left to innovate with the smartphone and that it will go the way of the flat-screen television in terms of pricing. He might be right, but that's not the issue.

The meaningfully scary part: Wahlman's not alone. In fact, Google Chairman Eric Schmidt waxes delusional about a "platform fight" between Apple and Android benefiting the consumer with "lower prices".

Frightening: This notion that producing cheap products somehow makes things better for consumer, company and sector. That's a load of short-sighted, sounds-good-to-cheer, but really-isn't nonsense.