Apple Is Old News: Here's The Next $1 Trillion Company
Now that Apple has become the first publicly traded company in the United States with a market capitalization exceeding $1 trillion, which company will join the iPhone maker as the next member of the four-comma club? Increasingly, it's looking like former favorites Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG), alongside new kid on the block Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), will lose to e-commerce giant Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) in the race to a $1 trillion market capitalization.
This article originally appeared in the Motley Fool.
The least-visible business will lead Amazon to the four-comma club
Amazon will join Apple not on the strength of its more-visible e-commerce division, but rather due to its higher-margin Amazon Web Services (AWS) segment. Last fiscal year, Amazon reported 24.8% operating income margins from its AWS division, versus 2.7% and -5.6% for North American and international retailing, respectively.
Thanks to AWS, the company has increased earnings per share 122% annually over the last two years. Look for this to continue: Last year, Amazon increased revenue attributable to AWS by 43% over the prior year, and the outlook continues to be strong for cloud computing. Gartner expects public cloud services to grow 58% in the next two years, which would give the company more than enough runway to increase more than the approximate 10% that it needs to become a trillion-dollar company.
The runners-up
Amazon's path was aided by Alphabet's recent stumbles. Earlier this year, it appeared that Alphabet was going to overtake Apple and become the first U.S. company to reach the four-comma club. As recent as February, only a few billion in market cap separated the two companies.
Since then, Alphabet's business model of digital advertising and data collection has faced scrutiny and tempered expectations, most notably because of Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal. Facebook was always going to be a long shot as the next member of the club, due to its relatively smaller market cap. But the company has struggled this year in particular, and shares are flat year to date as the stock endured the largest one-day loss in the history of the market.
After Microsoft set a market capitalization record of $619 billion during the technology bubble, then-CEO Steve Ballmer endured a lost decade, leaving the company with a market cap nearly half that total. New CEO Satya Nadella has taken steps to transition the company to compete against AWS in the cloud, and has succeeded at reversing its sluggish performance.
Just a number
Aside from the psychological component, the number's only significance is that Apple and Amazon (and the others, frankly) have continued to reward long-term investors. You should not invest in any company based on current market capitalization, but rather with an eye on future operations. That said, all four of these companies have long-term drivers intact to continue to outperform the overall market.
Although Amazon looks like it will be the next $1 trillion company, it certainly won't be the last.
John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Teresa Kersten is an employee of LinkedIn and is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. LinkedIn is owned by Microsoft. Jamal Carnette, CFA owns shares of Alphabet (C shares) and Amazon. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Alphabet (A shares), Alphabet (C shares), Amazon, and Facebook. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.