Apple’s market capitalisation topped $3 trillion (€2.8 billion) last week, regaining that threshold for the first time since August.
Apple made history in June when it became the world’s first $3 trillion company. It remains the only company to have done so, although Microsoft, valued at $2.75 trillion, isn’t too far behind.
Despite having gained more than 50 per cent this year, Apple shares have lagged all but one of the so-called magnificent seven mega-cap tech stocks in 2023 (Google parent Alphabet, which is up “only” 46 per cent, is in last place).
Not that shareholders will be complaining. The remarkable thing about Apple is the sheer longevity of its time at the top. Apple first became the most valuable US company in 2011, when it was valued at less than $340 billion.
Coffee drinkers face new price hikes and the latest Trump tariff twists
If planning laws were changed, obsolete offices could be converted into housing to ease Dublin’s rental crisis
Johnny Lappin: ‘I got scammed by a rogue so-called roofing contractor. I foolishly paid him in cash’
The silence of the CEOs in the face of Donald Trump’s tariff chaos
Historically, the biggest companies have tended to underperform going forward – the winner’s curse, as it’s known – but not Apple. Since 2012, it has ended the year as the biggest US company on all but one occasion (Microsoft briefly took top spot in late 2018). This year looks unlikely to be any different.
- Sign up for Business push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
- Find The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date
- Our Inside Business podcast is published weekly – Find the latest episode here