Google
will beat Apple to become the first company to reach market
capitalization of $1 trillion, despite the latter's current status as
the world's most valuable company, according to an analyst. Colin Gillis
of BGC Partners said in a research note Google would reach 13 figures
by 2020, if not sooner.
Google will achieve that number first despite the past five
years during which Apple’s stock price grew twice as fast as Google's,
increasing 274 percent compared to the search giant's 115 percent
growth.
“Google is positioned to be the first company on a U.S.
listed stock exchange to have a market capitalization exceed $1
trillion,” Gillis said in a research note to clients Friday. He
attributed the fast pace of growth to Google’s investments in moonshot
projects like robotics, machine learning and self-driving cars.
As of Monday, Apple is worth $598.73 billion, significantly
more than Google’s $364.99 billion, according to each’s market
capitalization, or the price of a share in a company’s stock multiplied
by the number of shares outstanding. Google needs to grow at roughly 35
percent per year for the next five years to achieve a $1 trillion market
capitalization by 2020. Apple needs a growth rate of just 13.4 percent
to get there.
Apple, however, faces slowing growth. The iPhone-maker’s
stock declined so much at one point in 2013, CEO Tim Cook decided to use
its cash to buy back $130 billion worth of shares over three years in
the biggest buyback in its history.
Not all market watchers agree with Gillis’ bold claims:
Apple will eat much of Google’s market share in the cell phone market,
and is easily worth double its current share price, according to
billionaire and activist investor Carl Icahn. Apple should already be
worth roughly $1.2 trillion, Icahn said in a letter to the company
Thursday, requesting it increase its buyback program.
Apple will produce greater earnings growth in 2015 with
Apple Pay and the release of the company’s first wearable, the Apple
Watch, Icahn said, predicting even greater growth in 2016 and
2017. Apple could also boost its revenues further should it enter
another category, like televisions, according to Money Morning’s David G. Zeiler. Apple could reach $1 trillion by 2018, Zeiler predicts.
No comments:
Post a Comment