Apple's cash reserve could keep the company in operation for another 7 years

I told you a few days ago that Apple has a monetary reserve of almost 66 billion dollars, money collected mainly from the sales of iDevices in recent years. We are talking about an extraordinarily large figure for any company, a figure that could maintain the Apple company in operation for another 7 years if starting tomorrow it would not produce anything at all. Assuming that from tomorrow Apple would no longer sell any of its own products, for 7 years it could keep everything functional without the slightest problem with the money it has in its own accounts.

The funds are big enough to place Apple's CFO office in the top 100 largest fund managers in the world and larger than any hedge fund manager.

Current cash is worth more than Nokia, RIM and Motorola Mobility's market caps, put together.

Apple's cash is worth half of Google's enterprise value.

If that sounds interesting to you then how about the fact that Apple's current cash reserve is worth more than the market capitalization of Nokia, RIM and Motorola together. These liquidities available to Apple represent liquidations from accounts and other salable goods. Apple has secured its future and all it has to do now is to maintain its position on the market or possibly grow even more than that.