AAPL, Dec 1984 – Jun 2026: by the numbers
Auto-generated from the price series — no named events, just what the chart did.
Across 168 trading days, AAPL rallied +370162.5% — a long green climb that ends near its highs. It opens at $0.08 and closes at $296.21.
The standout move is to the upside: off its low near Jun 1985, AAPL put together a 623440.0% run-up into Mar 2026 — the longest climb in the game. It isn't all one way, though: the sharpest pullback along the route is a 75.8% drawdown, the deepest valley you'll drop into.
Day to day the terrain is violent — closer to a roller coaster than a road: 106 up days against 54 down (more up days than down). The steepest single faces are a +92.3% jump on Sep 1, 2004 and a -72.5% drop on Sep 1, 2000 — near-vertical walls you'll need to boost up or launch over. Its longest unbroken climb runs 10 days; its longest slide, 4.
If you want a breather, the calmest stretch sits around Dec 2020–Dec 2024; the roughest, most technical section runs Sep 2004–Sep 2008, where you'll earn most of your air. Put together, this chart rides as a white-knuckle run — ★★★★☆.
| Period | Dec 1984 – Jun 2026 |
| Trading days | 168 |
| Start → End | $0.08 → $296.21 |
| High / Low | $311.77 / $0.05 |
| Max drawdown | 75.8% |
| Biggest up / down day | +92.3% / -72.5% |
| Up days / Down days | 106 / 54 |
| Longest win / loss streak | 10 / 4 days |
Is this real market data?
Yes — the terrain is built directly from AAPL's real closing prices for Dec 1984 – Jun 2026. Every peak and valley is an actual price.
How is the difficulty decided?
From the chart itself: how often direction flips, how deep the drawdowns get, and how steep the sharpest days are. This one scores 4/5 — a white-knuckle run.
Can I ride other charts?
Search any symbol up top. Each chart is its own track with its own leaderboard.
