Money | SEC SEC Looking Into Apple's Health Disclosures on Jobs Non-public inquiry doesn't necessarily indicate wrongdoing By Kevin Spak Posted Jan 21, 2009 9:55 AM CST Copied Apple's chief operating officer, Tim Cook, left, talks with CEO Steve Jobs, center, and Vice President Phil Schiller, right, during a meeting at Apple headquarter in Cupertino, Calif., Oct. 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) The SEC is taking a long hard look at Apple’s disclosures about Steve Jobs’ health, a source tells Bloomberg. The inquiry isn’t supposed to be public knowledge, and doesn’t indicate that the SEC has seen evidence of wrongdoing. But the agency wants to be sure that Apple didn’t mislead investors about its CEO’s health, which has been a hot topic on Wall Street since June. Investors began pressing for information when Jobs appeared conspicuously thin at a June event. Last month he said it was an easily treatable nutritional problem; then, 9 days later, he said the problem had become “more complex” and announced a 5-month leave. Bloomberg reported that Jobs is considering a liver transplant. “The good news flipped by the bad news makes one wonder what Apple knew,” says one law professor. “It’s not surprising for the SEC to come in and look afterward.” Read These Next Arizona governor wants answers on Grand Canyon fire. Trump reportedly asked Zelensky if Ukraine could strike Moscow. Democrats happily pile on over the Epstein fallout. They played husband and wife on TV, are now married. Report an error