May 16, 2007 10:25 AM PDT

Engadget sends Apple stock plunging on iPhone rumor

Millions of people, from hardcore computer geeks to high-finance Wall Street martini drinkers, hang on every word related to Apple. Sometimes, that can have consequences.

A midday plunge in Apple's stock was caused by an Engadget report based on a fake internal memo at Apple.

(Credit: Financialcontent.com)

Engadget posted a story Wednesday morning at 11:49am ET claiming that Apple was about to announce another delay of Leopard, the next version of Mac OS X, as well as a delay for the iPhone, perhaps the most hyped gadget of all time.

"This one doesn't bode well for Mac fans and the iPhone-hopeful: we have it on authority that as of today, the iPhone launch is being pushed back from June to... October (!), and Leopard is again seeing a delay, this time being pushed all the way back to January," Engadget said. Panic ensued. Apple's stock immediately plunged 2.2 percent as investors contemplated another product delay at Apple, following the first Leopard delay as well as the Apple TV delay in February.

But around 20 minutes after the original post, Engadget started to update its story. First, the site said it had heard back from Apple PR that there was no delay. Then the full story started to emerge.

Apparently an internal memo was sent to several Apple employees--and forwarded to Engadget--around 9am CT today saying that Apple issued a press release with the news that the iPhone was now scheduled for October, and Leopard was delayed until January. About an hour and a half after that e-mail went out, a second e-mail was sent--this time officially from Apple--saying the first e-mail was a fake, and that the delivery schedule for the iPhone and Leopard had not changed. Engadget then updated its headline as "False alarm: iPhone delayed until October, Leopard delayed again until January.

Commenters on Engadget and Apple investor boards were not amused. Many of those comments are not printable in this space, but it's safe to say that there's some very unhappy Apple shareholders out there today. Apple's stock recovered as the full story emerged, but was still down slightly in afternoon trading.

Engadget said that the e-mail was forwarded by "a trustworthy source," and definitely sent from within Apple's internal e-mail system. "Presumably Apple is now on the hunt for whomever was able to spoof its internal email system," it said in a later version of the post that used a strikethrough font effect on the text of the original report.

UPDATED: An Apple representative confirmed that there has been no change in the company's schedule for both Leopard and the iPhone. "The communication is a fake and did not come from Apple," the representative said.

Originally posted at Crave
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 9 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Not a bad way to buy Apple Stock
by henebry May 16, 2007 10:48 AM PDT
Spoof the site, pull down the stock price temporarily, and buy in big!
Reply to this comment
Serves people right
by tashman May 16, 2007 10:58 AM PDT
This sort of thing is exactly why the world just needs to calm down. Who gives a flying toaster about whether we see the iphone, or leopard or Vista or anything else tomorrow, the next day or 6 months from now. If I was an investor I certainly wouldn't trade based on one story from one news source. I think most investors would just call apple's investor services and ask, if apple was proven to "lie" about timing then investors are simply better off in vegas at the craps table.
Reply to this comment
I love these single digit "plunges"
by sbwinn May 16, 2007 11:19 AM PDT
I love these single digit "plunges". Why does everything have to be so over-hyped? I bought Apple when it was 14.25 a share and it has spilt since then. It has single-handedly made up for all of the other lack-luster tech stocks I bought and then some.
Reply to this comment
Plunging?
by Hep Cat May 16, 2007 11:37 AM PDT
I'll give C|Net this: they know how to sensationalize. A 2% dip during the trading day is a plunge. Who knew?
Reply to this comment View reply
Making trades based on a blog post? You get what you deserve.
by M C May 16, 2007 12:44 PM PDT
And kudos to those who recognized it was a good time to buy.
Reply to this comment
leaking info
by dirk goedseels May 16, 2007 11:11 PM PDT
I presume Apple wanted to check on who inside the company was leaking info. As you know, Apple is very keen on the fact that Jobs himself is the one bringing news. The fact that this "breaking news" was sent to a limited number of people might have been a trap to find the employee that maybe already had been leaking info before. I can imagine by now this guy is no longer working for Apple.
Reply to this comment
Insider trading
by mikeburek May 17, 2007 6:49 AM PDT
So wouldn't that be trading on insider info since it was a "leak" and not a press release? I'm not sure I understand the 1st source right. Was it from someone probably outside Apple the forged the e-mail, or it actually from Apple? Maybe it was just a mole hunt and people are getting fired as a leak now.
Reply to this comment
Apple stock plunging 11%
by ysunwoo January 26, 2008 6:32 AM PST
Apple seems to forget the people that doesn't make above avg. salary. What most of the people want, and other computer related majoring students is a Mac Pro (desktop) that's affordable and expandable. We don't need 8-cores or even 4. In the PC world you can buy a dual core for less than $300 but I think a $600 one is a decient machine. Can't Apple make a decient single socket dual-core thats expandable for less than $700 or even $999.99? Maybe Apple just want the high end market. And don't tell me about Mac Mini! It isn't meant to be user upgradable. Me and thousands of students and techies are waiting and buying PCs until we do get A sub $700 dual-core MacPro. All-in-one Macs don't cut it! Diversify Apple, wake up!
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