Stocks are sometimes categorized by their market capitalization, or market cap.
Market Capitalization = Stock Price x Number of Stocks Outstanding
While the divisions are indistinct, and will depend on inflation, a large-cap company is one with a market cap greater than $5 billion; a mid-cap company , $1 - $5 billion, and small-cap companies  are valued at less than $1 billion. Many of these companies can be  found by looking at the components of the various indexes, such as the  Russell Indexes.
The large-cap stocks consists of the  blue-chip, income, defensive, and cyclical stocks, since large companies  have little potential for growth. Capital gains can be earned, however,  by buying these stocks at the bottom of a business cycle and selling  them as the economy reaches full speed. Large-cap stocks have the best  price stability and the least risk.
Mid-cap stocks are  composed of most of the categories listed here, since their market caps  range from the top of the small-cap market to the bottom of the  large-cap market. A particular kind of mid-cap stock are the baby blue-chip stocks,  which are stocks of companies that, like the blue-chip companies, have  consistent profit growth and stability, and low levels of debt, but are  smaller in size than the large-cap blue-chips.
Small-cap stocks  are small companies that have the greatest potential for growth—hence,  most of these stocks are growth or speculative stocks, and most tech  stocks are also in this category, since many tech companies specialize  in a narrow niche of the market, or they were started to develop a new  product or service, such as the many Internet companies that sprouted  during the stock market bubble. In some cases, the small-cap stocks are  distinguished from the even smaller micro-cap stocks., such as  can be found in the Russell Microcap Index. Note that even the micro-cap  stocks include only those stocks that are listed on major  exchanges—they do not include OTC bulletin board securities or pink sheet stocks, which do not satisfy the requirements to be listed on a major exchange.
Small-cap  stocks tend to do better than other stocks at the beginning of an  economic expansion, unless their growth is constrained by the  availability of credit, since they rely more on banking financing than  larger companies that can sell bonds directly to the market.
 

 
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