This is not a screen – these are the top publicly traded companies in the world (by market cap), and also where some of our companies rank. All market caps and ranks are approximate and I’m sure this leaves out some large companies on non-US exchanges. But I believe there are several things we can glean from this:
Approx
Mkt Cap Rank Company
2,486 1 Apple
2,177 2 Microsoft
1,866 3 Amazon
1,828 4 Alphabet (Google)
1,056 5 Facebook
638 6 Berkshire Hathaway
634 7 Tesla
599 8 Taiwan Semiconductor
539 9 Alibaba
534 10 Visa
360 17 Paypal
245 27 Oracle
229 34 Salesforce
227 36 Netflix
200 **48 Shopify**
120 ~100 Snap
119 ~100 Square
116 ~100 Zoom
115 ~100 ServiceNow
69 ~170 Twilio
64 ~200 Docusign
63 ~200 Crowdstrike
38 ~350 Datadog
36 ~350 Cloudflare
12 ~800 Upstart
11 ~900 Lightspeed
There are only about ten 500b+ companies in the world (again this may leave out some non-US public companies, and some private companies – but it gives a rough but fairly accurate sense of how rare this is).
Some of our companies have become quite large. Shopify is a top 50 company now. Crowdstrike and Docusign are top 200.
What does this mean? Well, it’s obvious that Shopify will have a hard time 10x-ing from here. It would have to become pretty close to the top company in the world. But a double or triple or more isn’t so hard to imagine, because they are only 10% the size of Apple, after all. And all companies that aren’t dying are actually growing over time, so there will be more trillion dollar companies in the future than there are today.
Our companies are still relatively small compared to the giant enterprises of our day. Especially little Upstart and Lightspeed – With almost 1,000 companies being larger than they each are, that’s a lot of room for growth! Of course, they have to do the things (e.g. grow their revenues) to become larger over time.
Anyway, this is mostly a reminder – many of you know this like the back of your hand. But if you don’t, I encourage you to learn it. This is the stock market 101, and yet I encounter investors who don’t understand it. Market cap is the price at which we buy companies. The share price at which we execute the trade is just a derivation (based on how many shares are outstanding).
It’s important to understand where we are. It won’t tell you where we’re going, but at least it can give you a clear picture of reality.
Here are a few other posts I’ve done on Market cap:
https://discussion.fool.com/market-cap-thinking-34004504.aspx The first in the series – look how tiny things were back then!
https://discussion.fool.com/the-key-est-numbers-34077907.aspx Market cap and Revenue…boy I was wrong about New Relic (NEWR)
https://discussion.fool.com/market-cap-example-wix-34282764.aspx… An example
https://discussion.fool.com/market-cap-thinking-pt-2-34568635.as… A more recent update
Bear