What Does Market Cap Mean?

  • CFO

Market cap, short for market capitalization, refers to the total value of a company’s outstanding shares of stock. It is calculated by multiplying the current share price by the total number of shares that investors hold in the market.

Market cap is commonly used to measure a company’s size and overall value in the stock market. Companies are often grouped into categories such as small-cap, mid-cap, and large-cap based on their market capitalization. These categories help investors compare companies and understand the potential risk and growth characteristics of different investments.

Because market cap reflects how the market values a company at a given time, it can change as the company’s share price rises or falls. Investors often use market cap alongside other financial metrics when evaluating businesses and investment opportunities.

R&D Offer Quiz

Step 1 of 3

Answer to find out if you're eligible for R&D tax credits.

Do the activities performed relate to a new or improved business component’s function, performance, reliability, quality, or composition?(Required)
For Example: A mid-sized packaging company develops a slightly modified cardboard box design to improve its stacking strength (reliability) for warehouse storage, involving minor adjustments to the corrugation pattern to reduce collapse under standard weight loads.
Is your company trying to discover information to eliminate uncertainty concerning the capability or method for developing or improving a business component?(Required)
For Example: A furniture manufacturer investigates whether a cheaper wood adhesive can hold joints as effectively as the current one during assembly, testing bond strength to resolve doubts about its capability in standard production lines.
Do the activities performed constitute a process of experimentation?(Required)
For Example: An auto parts supplier runs a series of bench tests on different lubricant formulations to find one that reduces friction in engine bearings more effectively, systematically comparing wear rates over simulated operating cycles.