Chart of the Day: Apple's Cash to Market Cap Ratio
By
RiskReversal.com
Feb 22, 2013 1:10 pm
The ratio is currently at 33%, near the high end of the past five years. That should offer some comfort for the long-term bulls in the stock.
One of the longstanding arguments for owning Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) shares has been the stock’s excess cash on the balance sheet. Hedge fund manager David Einhorn has been rattling the executive office to get the company to pay out some of that excess cash.
The Bespoke Investment Group had a stellar chart in a post yesterday, displaying AAPL’s cash as a percentage of its market cap since the year 2000:

When AAPL was a much smaller company, trying to get back off the mat, its cash as a percentage of market cap was near 100% (similar to a company like BlackBerry (NASDAQ:BBRY) when it traded near $6 this fall). However, I think the more relevant comparison is the past five years, as AAPL is now a much larger company and a different beast than it was 10 years.
In that regard, the cash / market cap ratio is currently at 33%, near the high end of the past five years. That should offer some comfort for the long-term bulls in the stock. However, excess cash on the balance sheet for a company as large as AAPL also indicates a dearth of good investment opportunities. Cash by itself does not generate earnings or business expansion.
I view this chart as simply one more piece of evidence that AAPL is transforming from a growth stock into a value stock, similar to Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) from 10 years ago. Growth is difficult to achieve for a $400 billion market cap company (just ask Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM)). But it can offer decent investment value for those willing to be patient in the long run.
This item by Enis Taner was originally published on RiskReversal.com.
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The Bespoke Investment Group had a stellar chart in a post yesterday, displaying AAPL’s cash as a percentage of its market cap since the year 2000:

When AAPL was a much smaller company, trying to get back off the mat, its cash as a percentage of market cap was near 100% (similar to a company like BlackBerry (NASDAQ:BBRY) when it traded near $6 this fall). However, I think the more relevant comparison is the past five years, as AAPL is now a much larger company and a different beast than it was 10 years.
In that regard, the cash / market cap ratio is currently at 33%, near the high end of the past five years. That should offer some comfort for the long-term bulls in the stock. However, excess cash on the balance sheet for a company as large as AAPL also indicates a dearth of good investment opportunities. Cash by itself does not generate earnings or business expansion.
I view this chart as simply one more piece of evidence that AAPL is transforming from a growth stock into a value stock, similar to Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) from 10 years ago. Growth is difficult to achieve for a $400 billion market cap company (just ask Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM)). But it can offer decent investment value for those willing to be patient in the long run.
This item by Enis Taner was originally published on RiskReversal.com.
More from RiskReversal.com:
Chart of the Day – $DAL : Potential Long-Term Breakout?
Chart of the Day – $FB, Like, Poke or Unfriend?
Chart of the Day – Comical $SPX Earnings Expectations
No positions in stocks mentioned.


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