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Apple Market Capitalization Tops $500 Billion

By BY PETER SVENSSON 02/29/12 06:11 PM ET AP

Apple Market Capitalization
Workers and shoppers at the Apple store at Grand Central Station February 9, 2012 in New York. (DON EMMERT/AFP/Getty Images)

NEW YORK — Apple's market capitalization topped $500 billion Wednesday, climbing to a mountain peak where few companies have ventured – and none have stayed for long.

Apple was already the world's most valuable company. The gap between it and No. 2 Exxon Mobil Corp. has widened rapidly in the past month, as investors have digested Apple's report of blow-out holiday-season sales of iPhones and iPads. And, more recently, Apple has raised investors' hopes that it might institute a dividend.

The company's market capitalization was near $506 billion at the market close. Shares rose $7.03, or 1.3 percent, to close at $542.44 Wednesday.

On Tuesday, the Cupertino, Calif., company sent out invites to reporters for an event in San Francisco next Wednesday, apparently to reveal its next iPad model. The launch of the new model was expected around this time, a year after the launch of the iPad 2.

Apple is in rare company. It is the sixth U.S. corporation to reach the $500 billion milestone, and the only one to be worth that much at current prices.

Exxon, now worth $411 billion, was worth just over $500 billion for two short stretches at the end of 2007.

Apple's arch-nemesis Microsoft Corp. was worth just more than $500 billion briefly at the end of 1999, and again in early 2000. It even shot up above $600 billion for one day. The company is now worth $267 billion.

Cisco Systems Inc., Intel Corp. and General Electric Co. also peaked just above $500 billion in early 2000. Cisco and Intel are now worth a bit more than $100 billion each, while GE is worth $200 billion.

Exxon's ascent to the $500 billion level was propelled by record oil prices. Cisco, Intel, Microsoft and GE were boosted by the general stock mania of 1999 and 2000, and the hunger for technology stocks in particular.

Apple's rise, by contrast, is powered by its mammoth sales and profits, which are growing at rates unheard of for a company its size. And despite its sky-high market capitalization, Apple's shares aren't expensive compared to its earnings. It's worth 15 times its earnings for the last year. That compares to 21 times earnings for Google Inc. and 14 times for the S&P 500 overall. Yet few companies in the index grow their earnings as fast as Apple does: In its latest quarter, its earnings rose 118 percent from a year ago, to $13.06 billion.

Analysts expect the Apple rally to have some legs. The 35 analysts who have reported to FactSet since Apple's latest earnings report have set an average price target of $592 per share, or 8 percent higher than Wednesday's level. That implies a market capitalization of $552 billion.

Apple has been helped by a general recovery in the stock market after the doldrums of the financial crisis and the recession. The S&P 500 index has posted its best February performance in 14 years, and on Tuesday, the Dow Jones industrial average closed above 13,000 for the first time since May 2008.

Apple's stock accounts for 3.8 percent of the value of the S&P 500, according to Standard & Poor's, and it made up 6 percent of the operating income of the 500 companies in the fourth quarter.

Analysts say Apple's sheer size works against its stock price. Apple stock already makes up a large share of the holdings of technology and growth-focused funds, and they have little appetite for more. Meanwhile, value-focused funds are often prevented from buying the shares because the company doesn't pay a dividend.

However, the company has been signaling that a dividend is under consideration, and several analysts now consider it a given that one will be announced this year. Last week, CEO Tim Cook told shareholders at the annual meeting that the company has more money than it needs, and the board and management are thinking "very deeply" about ways to use the cash.

Former CEO Steve Jobs, apparently haunted by the company's lean years in the 90s, had a policy of accumulating cash. The company now sits on $97.6 billion.

China's largest oil company, PetroChina, was briefly worth $1 trillion after it listed on the Shanghai stock exchange in 2007, but only based on its price on that exchange. Its shares also trade in Hong Kong and on the New York Stock Exchange. Based on trading there, its market capitalization has never reached $500 billion.

Apple first revealed it had amassed almost $98 billion in cash at its most recent earnings call, back in January. Until Tim Cook announces how the company will spend that money, we've got a few fun suggestions (below).
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NEW YORK — Apple's market capitalization topped $500 billion Wednesday, climbing to a mountain peak where few companies have ventured – and none have stayed for long. Apple was already th...
NEW YORK — Apple's market capitalization topped $500 billion Wednesday, climbing to a mountain peak where few companies have ventured – and none have stayed for long. Apple was already th...
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04:37 AM on 03/01/2012
I came in thinking that this was about the EDIBLE apple
11:03 PM on 02/29/2012
Worth to whom?
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09:42 PM on 02/29/2012
sure would be nice if FB & Apple would pay off Americas debt.....course the political monkeys would just get us right back there really quick...............
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theveggiedude
my body is a temple, not a living graveyard
09:55 PM on 02/29/2012
You are kidding right? Apple has a hundred billion, and it can barely pay the INTEREST on the deficit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
theveggiedude
my body is a temple, not a living graveyard
10:01 PM on 02/29/2012
Just looked it up, projected interest payments on the deficit in 2013 is gonna be $447 billion.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
keezze
08:55 PM on 02/29/2012
hyperinflation
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Game Changer 88
07:52 PM on 02/29/2012
"Complete Fraud"
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lhr1967
06:41 PM on 02/29/2012
The funny part is big Blue ( IBM ) and Xerox are worth far less then Apple . And it was those to that kinda gave it all away . Well Microsoft al so benefited from the big guys that were not intereted in PC's . Can't forget Bill Gates .
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theveggiedude
my body is a temple, not a living graveyard
09:57 PM on 02/29/2012
They never had it to give in the first place. The best Xerox could do was build a machine in the region of $100k. That's not a pc. Not even close.
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lhr1967
05:30 PM on 03/01/2012
Well they did . IBM thought that people would never want one of these things in their homes , and that the country would only need a handful of super computers . I bet my laptop is more powerful then they ever could have imagined .
chuckl4826
Give the Country away.. Vote Democrat.!
06:39 PM on 02/29/2012
Will the Lib/dems ask for a windfall tax on Apple like they ask for on big oil?
01:24 AM on 03/01/2012
That would make more sense than continuing to shower big oil with tax breaks/loopholes, despite year after year of record-breaking profits. Cons/repubs are perfectly happy to do that. Some are even foolish enough to think that oil from the Keystone Pipeline they want so bad would actually be used within our borders; it would be destined for nations where they could get the greatest profit.
chuckl4826
Give the Country away.. Vote Democrat.!
12:20 PM on 03/01/2012
Like our oil now?
06:23 PM on 02/29/2012
If you work your manufacterers for pennys, sell the finished product for big bucks, the bottom line is PROFIT out the butt. Any more questions?
10:40 PM on 02/29/2012
If you owned stocks in apple, you wouldn't be so quick to say that.
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
06:02 PM on 02/29/2012
Great products, great profits. It will be interesting to see what happens over the next five years now that SJ is gone to the Great Beyond....
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mgabrys
04:53 PM on 02/29/2012
Wait they're almost 100 billion ahead of Exxon ( in market cap )? Without huge taxpayer funds? This can't be right. I demand my oil subsidies are redirected to Apple. What's good for Apple is good for America. Come on congress, get with the program.
03:05 PM on 02/29/2012
You would think a nice sizeable patent portfolio would help generate some revenue for a company, but this clearly shows that you don't need one to come out ahead. Another milestone for Apple. http://bit.ly/x63gfk
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TFlint
02:31 PM on 02/29/2012
Apple is now worth more than Saudi Arabia! Fact!
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PizzaGuy1
Konnichiwa. Hajimemashite. Karasu desu.
02:08 PM on 02/29/2012
Don't you mean:

"iPad Rival Rival hits Huge Milestone"?
04:04 PM on 02/29/2012
No, of course not. Try to pay attention.
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philp71
chris
01:58 PM on 02/29/2012
Ohh man where is that computer teacher that told me apple was going out of business
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
06:01 PM on 02/29/2012
Probably working for Microsoft. LOL
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01:37 PM on 02/29/2012
Crazy, isn't it? Well, it's fun to watch, anyway ...

But, do keep it in perspective. Apple sells computers and phones and such.

Wall Street sells transactions.

Wall Street =loves= a crowd, and anything at all that draws a crowd. They love a bidding war almost as much as they love a new IPO. They are quite literally in the business of crowd psychology. In times like that, it pays to not be part of the crowd.
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03:24 PM on 02/29/2012
Apple is undervalued if anything.
Most tech companies trade at a higher value as a multiple of earnings.
Apple is worth that much because it has become That big.
It's profits are now over $1 billion per WEEK.
It's not some sort of "bubble."
The Chinese Middle Class, which is bigger than the US, prefer Apple products over all others.
And they are just becoming available to them.
Depending on what Apple may have up their sleeve it is not out of the question that the stock can double in less than 5 years.