Market capitalization
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Market capitalization, often abbreviated to market cap, is a measurement of corporate size that refers to the current stock price times the number of outstanding shares. This measure differs from equity value to the extent that a firm has outstanding stock options or other securities convertible to common shares. The size and growth of a firm's market capitalization is often one of the critical measurements of a public company's success or failure. However, market capitalization may increase or decrease for reasons unrelated to performance such as acquisitions, divestitures and stock repurchases.
Market capitalization is the number of common shares multiplied by the current price of those shares. The term capitalization is sometimes used as a synonym of market capitalization; more often, it denotes the total amount of funds used to finance a firm's balance sheet and is calculated as market capitalization plus debt (book or market value) plus preferred stock.
The total market capitalization of all the companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange is greater than the amount of money in the United States [link]. The global market capitalization for all stock markets was $43.6 trillion in March 2006 [link].
Valuation
Market capitalization is a function of the price of a firm's stock and may not accurately reflect intrinsic value because of varying future expectations held by investors. It is common for a firm's market capitalization to exceed "book value" (shareholders' equity) because market prices tend to increase at a quicker pace than earnings accumulate due to value placed on expected future growth. For instance, in the late 1990s the shares of Internet-related companies were highly valued by the market, and tiny companies with almost no sales (but high growth) generated market capitalizations in the billions of dollars.
\"Float\"
The amount of shares available on the open market, the "free float", is sometimes less than the total number of shares because a portion of the outstanding shares may be held by "insiders," and/or by the company as treasury stock. In addition to the float being perhaps much smaller than the total number of shares, a significant portion of the float may be owned by large institutional investors who rarely trade. As a result, on any given trading day, generally only a small percentage of shares are traded, as in the example of Yahoo!, about 1.5% (20,025,727/1,180,000,000).The sudden availability on the open market of all of a company's stock, as a result of both the insiders and the company selling all shares held, could cause a plummet in the stock price (if unexpected and not already priced in by the market).
Categorization of companies by market cap
While there are no strong definitions for market cap categorizations, a few terms are frequently used to group companies by capitalization.In the U.S., companies and stocks are often categorized by the following approximate market capitalization values:
- Small-cap: market cap below US$1 billion
- Mid-cap: market cap between US$1 billion and US$5 billion
- Large-cap: market cap exceeds US$5 billion
- Micro-cap: market cap under US$100 million
- Nano-cap: market cap under US$50 million
Examples
Examples of share valuation compared to market cap (price), and share ownership, from Yahoo! Inc. ([link], [link])Valuation measures
- Market Cap (intraday): 51.21B
- Enterprise Value (25-Dec-04): 49.04B
- Trailing P/E (ttm, intraday): 98.54
- Forward P/E (fye 31-Dec-05): 74.50
- PEG Ratio (5 yr expected): 3.66
- Price/Sales (ttm): 16.22
- Enterprise Value/Revenue (ttm): 15.51
- Enterprise Value/EBITDA (ttm): 71.99
- Average Volume (3 month): 20,025,727
- Shares outstanding: 1.37B
- % of shares held by Insiders: 14%
- % of shares held by Institutions: 74%
- Float: 1.18B
- % of float held by Institutions: 86%
- Treasury stock: $160M
Levels
Main article: Equity levels and flowsStock market capitalisation 2003 (compared with GDP converted to € through estimated purchasing power parity (PPP) exchange rates)
- EU: €6.0 trillion (59% of PPP GDP)
- Japan: €2.4 trillion (75% of PPP GDP)
- United States: €10.7 trillion (108% of PPP GDP)
Since 1991, all semblance to reality began to be lost in this particular measurement. By the 4th quarter of 1999 stock market capitalization had increased to an atmospheric and unprecedented 185% of total GDP. Even today the rate is still 104%.
See also
Lists
External links
- [Yahoo! Finance - Stock Screener - Market Cap]
- [ECB: Statistics pocket book]
- [SmallCapReview.com Education]
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