Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL | AAPL Price Prediction) closed at $317.31 on July 13, an all-time high, shortly after it filed one of the most aggressive lawsuits in its recent history. That contrast is the story most investors are ignoring right now.
What the Lawsuit Actually Alleges
On July 13, 2026, Apple sued OpenAI, two former Apple employees (Tang Tan and Chang Liu), and OpenAI affiliate io Products, alleging systematic theft of hardware trade secrets to accelerate development of OpenAI’s first consumer hardware product. Apple claims the scheme reached “every level” of the recruiting process, with Tang Tan, a former Apple VP, now serving as chief hardware officer at OpenAI. OpenAI responded that it has “no interest in other companies’ secrets.”
The legal exposure extends further. Apple is simultaneously fighting Epic Games over App Store commission structure, with the Supreme Court reviewing a contempt finding, and a Safari privacy class action filed on June 24, 2026, alleging the browser fails to prevent fingerprinting despite its marketing claims.
Why Investors Are Shrugging
The market’s reaction has been muted. Apple stock is up 50.3% over the past year and 16.7% year to date, and the company now carries a market cap of $4.7 trillion at a trailing P/E of 38.
Options positioning confirms the complacency. The full-chain put/call ratio stands at 0.53, with November 2026 expirations as low as 0.12. Prediction markets tell the same story: of 11 active AAPL markets on Polymarket, zero address litigation, regulatory fines, or antitrust outcomes. Reddit engagement on the lawsuit hit 1,817 upvotes on a single r/stocks thread, but sentiment scores stayed in the 39 to 53 range, neutral to mildly bearish rather than alarmed.
The Risk Investors Are Underpricing
Apple’s own Q2 2026 earnings call flagged “legal and regulatory proceedings” as a material risk factor, though management declined to discuss specifics. That silence matters, given the fundamentals at stake. Services revenue hit an all-time record of $31 billion, up 16% year on year, at a 76.7% gross margin, and that margin structure depends on the App Store economics Epic is actively challenging. Insiders sold about $70 million in shares over the past three months, a discordant note against Citi’s $365 price target.
The OpenAI case introduces a novel exposure: hardware IP leakage to a competitor that is building its first consumer device. If discovery produces evidence of coordinated recruitment, damages calculations could scale with the market opportunity that Apple accuses OpenAI of accelerating. For a stock priced at 10.3 times sales, this is a tail risk investors are not currently pricing in.
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