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What Is Market Capitalization?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 9, 20264 min read
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Market capitalization (market cap) is the total market value of a company's outstanding shares of stock, calculated as stock price multiplied by total shares outstanding.

Calculation

Market Cap = Stock Price × Shares Outstanding

Example: Apple

  • Stock price: $150
  • Shares outstanding: 16 billion
  • Market cap: $150 × 16 billion = $2.4 trillion

This means the market values Apple at $2.4 trillion.

Market Cap Categories

Mega-cap: >$200 billion

  • Examples: Apple ($2.4T), Microsoft ($2.1T), Nvidia ($1.1T)
  • Dominant, established companies
  • Largest market share
  • Slowest growth but most stable

Large-cap: $10B-$200B

  • Examples: Bank of America ($200B), Coca-Cola ($250B)
  • Established, blue-chip companies
  • Significant market impact

Mid-cap: $2B-$10B

  • Examples: Restaurant chains, regional manufacturers
  • Growing but established
  • More volatile than large-cap

Small-cap: $300M-$2B

  • Examples: Niche businesses, growing companies
  • Higher growth potential
  • Higher volatility and risk

Micro-cap: <$300M

  • Examples: Penny stocks, startups
  • Highest growth potential
  • Highest risk; many go bankrupt

Importance in Indices

Indices are weighted by market cap:

S&P 500 (500 largest U.S. companies)

  • Weight by market cap
  • Apple: ~7% of index (largest holding)
  • Microsoft: ~6% of index
  • Bottom 100 companies: ~5% combined

This is why mega-cap movements dominate index returns. When Apple moves 10%, the entire S&P 500 moves roughly 0.7%.

Comparing Companies

Market cap helps compare companies across industries:

Example: Tech companies

  • Apple: $2.4T (largest by market cap)
  • Microsoft: $2.1T
  • Google: $1.5T
  • Amazon: $1.4T

Investors can see which tech company the market values most.

Market Cap and Growth

Market cap doesn't determine growth:

Mega-cap companies (Apple, Microsoft):

  • Slow growth (5-10% annually)
  • Mature markets
  • Stable, predictable

Small-cap companies:

  • High growth potential (20-50% annually)
  • Emerging markets
  • Volatile, risky

A small-cap stock growing 40% annually and a mega-cap stock growing 5% annually both have a place in portfolios.

Limitations of Market Cap

1. Doesn't account for debt: Company A: $1 trillion market cap, $500B debt = $500B equity value Company B: $1 trillion market cap, no debt = $1T equity value

Market cap alone doesn't show leverage.

2. Doesn't reflect profitability: Unprofitable company: $10B market cap, losing $500M annually Profitable company: $10B market cap, earning $500M annually

Same market cap, vastly different investment quality.

3. Irrational prices: During bubbles (Dot-Com, crypto), companies with no revenue reach billion-dollar valuations. Market cap becomes detached from reality.

4. Currency effects: International companies' market cap changes if their home currency strengthens/weakens relative to the dollar.

Enterprise Value vs. Market Cap

Market cap: Equity value only

Enterprise value (EV): Market cap + debt - cash

Example: Company with $1T market cap, $200B debt, $100B cash

  • Market cap: $1T
  • Enterprise value: $1T + $200B - $100B = $1.1T

Enterprise value is often more relevant for valuation comparisons because it includes what you'd actually pay for the company (must assume existing debt).

Market Cap and Index Funds

Market-cap-weighted index funds (like S&P 500) are weighted by market cap:

Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO):

  • 500 stocks
  • Weighted by market cap
  • Apple: ~7% of fund
  • Smallest stocks: ~0.01% each

This means investing in a market-cap-weighted fund gives you more exposure to large-cap companies (more weight on Apple than small-cap stocks).

Alternative: Equal-weight funds weight all stocks equally, giving small-caps more exposure.

Historical Perspective

Market cap leaders change over decades:

1980: Exxon Mobil, AT&T (oil and telecom dominated) 2000: Cisco, GE, Microsoft (tech bubble peak) 2010: Apple, MSFT, JPMORGAN (Apple rising) 2024: Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia (mega-cap tech)

The companies dominating today may not dominate in 20 years. This is why diversification is important.

The Bottom Line

Market cap is a useful metric for understanding company size and index composition. But it's incomplete:

  • Doesn't reflect profitability
  • Doesn't account for debt
  • Can be irrational (bubble prices)
  • Changes over time

Use market cap to understand company size, but combine it with other metrics (P/E ratio, debt levels, growth rates) for investment decisions.

◆ Sources

  1. Market Capitalization Explained — Investopedia
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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