People choose certain stocks for many different reasons – business location; sector strength; product innovation – but some investors choose what to buy based on company size, or market capitalization [believing that size does matter. Yes,] understanding the difference between small-cap, medium-cap and large-cap companies is the first step to making the right choice. [Let me explain.]
There are three categories of market capitalization, or “market cap,” and all have different characteristics. Even if size doesn’t matter to you, it’s important to know how a small company versus a big one will affect your portfolio. Here’s a market cap primer.
What is market capitalization?
A company’s “market cap” is the market value of its outstanding shares (those held by investors). To figure this out, just multiply the stock price with the number of shares outstanding…
Leaning on Large-caps
Large-cap stocks — usually, companies with a market cap of $5 billion or more — are, generally, the safest investments. These are major global conglomerates. They do business in multiple countries and have built up a stable base of customers.
Maintaining with Medium-caps
If you want a combination of growth and safety, consider medium-caps. These companies have a market cap of between $1 billion and $5 billion and they usually have some characteristics of both small-cap and large-cap companies. If you only care about growth, you’ll likely want smaller companies; if you want to play it safe, then buy larger businesses. If you’re willing to take on some risk, but don’t want the potential of losing everything, then pick up some medium-cap stocks.
Sizzling with Small-caps
Small-caps are companies with a market cap of between $250 million and $1 billion. These are small businesses — often start-ups or young operations — with a ton of growth potential. In fact, that’s the main reason people invest in the small-cap space – they want their money to grow significantly. If it all works out, returns could be huge.
Buying a small, unknown tech business that either creates a hot product or gets bought by another company such as Google could result in serious returns but the opposite can happen, too — and often it does. Since these companies are so new, they can go bust. It is why during a recession, the small-cap space does much worse than large-caps. People get scared so they dump their risky companies and buy big ones. When the economy is strong, small-caps usually outperform large-caps, because investors are willing to take on more risk. Only buy small-caps if you have a high risk tolerance.
Micro- and Mega-caps
There are other market cap classifications — micro-cap for the really small companies and mega-cap for the huge ones — but most businesses fall into [the above] 3 baskets.
Conclusion
The size of the company you will want to buy should depend on your risk tolerance and on how much you want your money to grow. Some people invest across all sizes for balance — the stable businesses protect capital, while the small ones grow it.
The above comments are edited [ ] and abridged (…) excerpts from an article by Bryan Borzykowski
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