Sunday, May 30, 2010

Apple More Valuable Than Microsoft

Microsoft has, for the first time, been beaten in market cap by Apple. At the close of the market today, Apple sat at $222.12 billion, a gain of 1.8%, while Microsoft went down 1% to $219.18 billion. That makes Apple, according to market cap, the most valuable tech company in the world. Yet compared to Microsoft, Apple has both less cash on hand ($23 billion vs. $35.7 billion) and less revenue ($42.9 billion vs. $58.4 billion). So the fact that the market has valued Apple higher is big news indeed.
That Apple has, improbably and at long last, passed Microsoft in market value has everyone looking more closely at the two companies. Apple is startlingly narrow in their scope, at least in comparison. More focused on both hardware and the consumer (rather than enterprise) side of tech than Microsoft, Apple's product lines are thus much easier to understand. You can take a glance at the homepages of the two companies to see the difference; Microsoft's list of products runs to the dozens and includes several I've never heard of, while Apple has seven buttons corresponding to their products, all of which (MacBook, iPod, iMac, etc) are instantly distinctive and familiar. Despite a couple duds (I'm looking at you, Apple TV and Mac Mini), Apple's philosophy is both simple and focused on simplicity: "Get rid of the crappy stuff."
Apple isn't as big as Microsoft, and probably never will be. They don't make or have as much money. But that the market has valued Apple higher is an affirmation that at the moment, Apple is leading the tech world (via fastcompany).

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