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Apple is world's most valuable company ever, market value at $624 bn

Apple is world's most valuable company ever, market value at $624 bn

Apple is Wall Street's all-time Most Valuable Property. On Monday, Apple's surging stock propelled the company's value to $624 billion, the world's highest, ever.

A March 2012 photo of Apple employees welcoming hundreds of customers in front of an Apple store in Germany, as the new iPad went on sale. PHOTO: Associated Press A March 2012 photo of Apple employees welcoming hundreds of customers in front of an Apple store in Germany, as the new iPad went on sale. PHOTO: Associated Press
Apple is Wall Street's all-time Most Valuable Property. On Monday, Apple's surging stock propelled the company's value to $624 billion, the world's highest, ever.

It beat the record for market capitalization set by Microsoft Corp in the heady days of the Internet boom. Microsoft's 1999 peak was $620.58 billion, according to Standard & Poor's.

After a four-month dip, Apple's stock has hit new highs recently because of optimism around what is believed to be the impending launch of the iPhone 5, and possibly a smaller, cheaper iPad.

Apple's stock closed at $665.15. That was an all-time high, up $17.04, or 2.6 per cent, from Friday's close.

Apple Inc has been the world's most valuable company since the end of last year. It's now worth 54 per cent more than No. 2 Exxon Mobil Corp.

The comparison to Microsoft does not take inflation into account. In inflation-adjusted dollars, the software giant was worth about $850 billion on December 30, 1999. Microsoft is now worth $257 billion.

Analysts believe Apple's stock has room to grow. The average price target of 38 analysts polled by FactSet is $745.80.

Despite the surge, Apple's stock is not particularly expensive compared to its earnings for the last twelve months. The company's "price-to-earnings ratio" is 15.6, compared with 16.1 for the S&P 500 overall. That suggests investors, unlike analysts, don't believe the company can grow its profits much from current levels.

Microsoft had a price-to-earnings ratio of 83 at the 1999 peak. The stock was caught up in the Internet mania of the time and investors believed it could boost its future earnings massively.

Analysts believe the launch of a new iPhone in a month or two will be Apple's biggest product introduction yet.

They also speculate that a "mini iPad" could expand the number of people who can afford one of Apple's tablets. The cheapest iPad cost $399, compared to $199 for the latest Google and Amazon tablets.

Analysts are speculating - based on rumours - that Apple plans to make a TV set to complete its suite of consumer electronics products.

Apple usually doesn't comment on its future product plans until a few weeks or days before a launch.

Apple's stock surge has made it a major part of many investment portfolios, often without the investors realising it. The company makes up 4.7 per cent of the value of the S&P 500 index, which is used as the basis for many mutual funds.

China's largest oil company, PetroChina, could lay claim to having hit a market capitalisation even higher than Apple's, because of the particularities of the Chinese stock market.

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, which is isolated from the rest of the financial world because of Chinese laws on foreign investment. PetroChina's shares also trade in Hong Kong and on the New York Stock Exchange. Based on prices there, its market capitalization never went as high as $500 billion.

By coincidence, the peak price for one Apple share is now less than $2 away from the retail price of the Apple I computer in 1976. It sold for $666.66.

With inputs from Associated Press

Published on: Aug 21, 2012, 9:51 AM IST
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