Okay, so...how do you differentiate between large cap, mid cap and small cap companies?
It’s all about the cap.
That’s market cap, or rather, the value that Wall Street investors are placing on the company’s future earning powers. Simply put, to make categorizing investing in these companies easier, mutual and index funds have somewhat arbitrarily created brackets for the three different sizes of companies. The presumption runs that smaller companies carry more risk, but grow faster than very large companies. Medium companies…yeah, they’re somewhere in the middle. Shockingly.
So what are the numbers? Well, here's how they were created. The first gradation was started at a billion dollars and ended at 5 billion. And many companies grow through all three phases. Take Netflix. (Please...for $9.95 a month.) Netflix came public at a valuation of around $300M. It then grew and grew and grew from being a small cap company to a mid cap when it passed a valuation of $5B, and then continued to grow into the large cap behemoth it is today, at $50B plus. It did well. So Netflix generally kept its number of shares outstanding about flat…but as its stock price rose, the market capitalization rose as well. Or said another way, investors valued the company more and more highly. So Netflix graduated from being a small cap to being a mid-cap a half dozen years or so after it went public, and a half dozen years later, it graduated past the 25 billion dollar threshold to being considered a large cap company.
There is another casual class called mega-cap, which generally comprises companies with market valuations over 100B. These companies are behemoths, like AT&T, Apple, Amazon, and many other companies that don’t start with the letter A.
So that's it...the difference between large, mid, and small cap companies. You'll have to make like Goldilocks and choose the one that's just right for you.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is the Dow Jones Industria...2710 Views
finance a la shmoop- what is the Dow Jones Industrial Average? well it's just
an index. it's a basket of 30 industrial stocks hence the catchy industrial word [list of the 30 stocks involved in the Dow]
in there and it was started in 1896 by Charles Dow and Edward Jones sort of the
Coke and Pepsi of stock averages in the day .worth noting is the fact that while
the Dow average is quoted often in the press it's not something that real Wall
Street traders really rely on that much as a market place holder anymore. why?
well because the Dow comprises only 30 stocks. it isn't really a broad market [Dow Jones in the trash]
representation, and you know the way the S&P 500 is the 500 is bigger than 30. Big
Brother has way more stocks and is thus way more liquid than the relatively
blippi set of 30 stocks that the Dow offers. over time the Dow has changed as
companies were bought and/or died and or just withered and became no longer
relevant. i.e. newspaper industry. which means that this thing has gone through
more faces than Kanye West .yeah. [Kanye West faces pictured]
Up Next
The general designated designation cut-off points for categorizing companies by market capitalization is as follows: Large Cap is $10 billion and a...