Jobss Return to Apple Greeted With Little Fanfare By Investors


Apple

Apple, up 67 percent since Jobs went on leave Jan. 14, fell 47 cents to $141.97 yesterday in Nasdaq Stock Market trading. That compares with gains in the Standard & Poors 500 Index and the Nasdaq Composite Index.

Investors have gotten comfortable with Apples management team and its ability to run the company without Jobss oversight, said Ryan Jacob, head of the Jacob Internet Fund in Los Angeles. Jobs, a cancer survivor, received a liver transplant during his five-and-a-half-month leave. His doctors said last week that he was recovering well.

“If you look at how the stock has performed as the ultimate barometer, one of the reasons it held up is that the company performed well during his absence,” Jacob said. Apples stock is his firms biggest holding. “If we were talking last year or even six to nine months ago, Id be complaining that they werent doing enough to show off the depth of the team behind Steve Jobs.”

Jobs, 54, was back at work yesterday, making good on a promise to return by the end of June. He will come to the office a few days a week and work from home the rest of the time, said Steve Dowling, a spokesman for the Cupertino, California-based company.

Few Details

Apple hasnt provided details on Jobss current medical condition. Last week, the Memphis hospital where he had his liver transplant said Jobs has an “excellent” prognosis. He was the sickest patient on the waiting list at the time a liver was available, the hospital said.

The disclosures about Apples CEO should come from the company and not from outside sources, corporate-governance experts said. Since Jobs is so closely aligned with Apples brand, and since speculation about his health caused the companys shares to fluctuate last year, investors should be kept apprised of his health, said Charles Elson, director of the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware.

“They need to put out a statement to explain what happened during his departure, to explain what happened between now and then to put him in good health,” Elson said. “It has to come from Apple.”

Dowling declined to comment on Apples disclosures.

If Jobs is fully capable of doing his job, the company may feel it doesnt need to disclose specifics about his health, said James Balassone, executive in residence at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University in California.

Need to Know?

Jobss return was a missed opportunity for him to shift into more of a design role, leaving day-to-day management to others, said Apple investor Michael Obuchowski. When he went on leave, Jobs handed the reins to Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook. In 2004, Cook also filled in for Jobs, while the CEO recuperated from surgery for a tumor in his pancreas.

Cook has been running the company with a team of executives, including marketing chief Phil Schiller, design leader Jonathan Ive and retail manager Ron Johnson. Under their guidance, Apple introduced Mac computers, redesigned its iPod media player and began selling a faster version of the iPhone.

Strong Culture

In April, the company reported profit and revenue that topped analysts estimates. Apple releases third-quarter results next month.

“Steve Jobs created a great team with a very strong culture,” said Obuchowski, chief investment officer at First Empire Asset Management Inc. in Hauppauge, New York. “I believe that this team is more than capable of functioning really well without a need for daily supervision.”

Jobs first talked about potential successors in March 2008, saying Apples board would have “great choices” among the executive team if he decided to leave for any reason. The board told shareholders at their annual meeting in February that the company has a succession plan, which is confidential.

“As a public company with a celebrity CEO, Apple really should directly address Steves health and present a transparent succession plan,” Obuchowski said.

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