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Defined: Small Cap, Mid Cap and Blue Chip

Defined: Small Cap, Mid Cap and Blue Chip. In the financial media, you'll often hear the words, 'small cap', 'mid cap' and 'blue chip', so it's important to understand what they mean.

In this financial guide:

Defined: Small Cap, Mid Cap and Blue Chip

In the financial media, you’ll often hear the words, ‘small cap’, ‘mid cap’ and ‘blue chip‘, so it’s important to understand what they mean.

Firstly, what do we mean by ‘cap’?

‘Cap’ is short for market capitalisation, which is a measure of the size of a company. It is simply the number of shares a company has issued, multiplied by their price. For example, a company with 100 shares at a market price of $1,000 would have a market cap of $100,000.

Small Cap Defined

Small caps are companies which (yep, you guessed it) have a smaller market capitalisation. What makes a small cap varies from market to market, and depending on who you ask.

For example, in the United States, a small cap company might have a market cap of anywhere between $500 million and $2 billion. In Australia, a much smaller financial market, that number may stretch from $200 million to $500 million.

Mid Cap Defined

A ‘mid cap’ company might be a company with a market cap anywhere between $500 million and $2 billion in Australia. However, there are no hard and fast rules.

Blue Chip

Blue chips are those companies with a large market capitalisation. While there are no hard and fast rules of what makes a ‘blue chip’, a typical blue chip company may have the following features:

  • A market-leading position
  • A strong consumer brand
  • Inclusion in a leading market index, such as Australia’s ASX 200 or the USA’s Dow Jones
  • A national or international presence

The phrase ‘blue chip’ comes from the game of poker, in which the ‘blue chips’ were the most valuable a player could hold. 

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Owen Raszkiewicz

Owen is the Chief Investment Officer of Rask Invest and Founder of Rask. Since founding The Rask Group in 2017 in the hillside suburb of Upwey, Victoria, Owen has overseen the growth of the Rask platform to over 200,000 investor followers. Today, Owen oversees the Rask Analyst team, which helps more than 4,000 Aussies build core portfolios from ETFs and shares, he hosts Australia's biggest investing podcast, The Australian Investors Podcast, appears on Rask's other channels, covering Property, Business and Finance; and leads Rask Education - our education platform which has enrolled over 25,000 Australians into free finance courses. Prior to founding Rask, Owen was an investment analyst at the highly regarded managed funds research business and a writer/analyst for one of the most well-known share market publications. Owen’s formal qualifications include a Master of Applied Finance and Master of Financial Planning from Kaplan Professional, Bachelor of Technology (Information Systems) from Swinburne University of Technology, Advanced Diploma of Financial Services (Financial Planning) and Diploma of Mortgage Broking Management. He's also completed level 1 of the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) program.

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