What is Market Capitalization?
Market capitalization (or “market cap”) is the total value of a company’s outstanding shares of stock. It represents what the market believes a company is worth and is calculated by multiplying the current stock price by the total number of shares outstanding.
Market Cap Formula
$$\text{Market Cap} = \text{Stock Price} \times \text{Shares Outstanding}$$
Example Calculation
If a company has:
- Stock price: $150 per share
- Shares outstanding: 1 billion shares
Market Cap = $150 × 1,000,000,000 = $150 billion
Market Cap Categories
Investors use market cap to classify companies by size:
| Category | Market Cap Range | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Mega-Cap | $200B+ | Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia |
| Large-Cap | $10B - $200B | Adobe, Netflix, FedEx |
| Mid-Cap | $2B - $10B | Etsy, Bumble, Duolingo |
| Small-Cap | $300M - $2B | Smaller public companies |
| Micro-Cap | Under $300M | Very small public companies |
Why Market Cap Matters
1. Risk Assessment
- Large-cap stocks are generally considered less risky with more stable prices
- Small-cap stocks tend to be more volatile but may offer higher growth potential
2. Portfolio Diversification
Investors often diversify across market cap categories to balance risk and return.
3. Index Inclusion
Major indices like the S&P 500 have minimum market cap requirements. Companies must maintain a certain size to remain in the index.
4. Institutional Investment
Many institutional investors have mandates to invest only in certain market cap ranges.
Market Cap vs. Enterprise Value
Market cap and enterprise value (EV) are related but different:
| Measure | What It Includes |
|---|---|
| Market Cap | Equity value only |
| Enterprise Value | Market Cap + Debt - Cash |
Enterprise value is often preferred for comparing companies with different capital structures.
Limitations of Market Cap
- Doesn’t reflect debt: Two companies with the same market cap may have vastly different debt levels
- Price volatility: Market cap changes daily with stock price movements
- Share count matters: Stock splits and buybacks affect shares outstanding but don’t change company value
Related Financial Terms
This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.