16 Most Profitable Small-Cap Stocks Now

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In this piece, we will take a look at the 16 most profitable small-cap stocks now. If you want to skip our overview of small cap companies, stocks, and investing, then you can skip ahead to 5 Most Profitable Small-Cap Stocks Now.

Small cap stocks and companies are among the fastest growing sectors of the stock market. Investing, when we look at the best performing returns, is often about buying low and then holding for years. Some of the biggest companies in the world today, namely the big technology mega cap stocks, were once small cap companies too. Investors or employees who were lucky or smart enough to have gained control of their equity back then have become some of the richest people in the world over the course of just a couple of decades.

Yet, just as it the case with every other investment vehicle, small cap stocks also come with their associated risks. Before firms become big, they are vulnerable to the same risks as every other company. Some of these risks include the inability to remain profitable to either invest in future growth or see market share loss accelerate and make accountants and financial planners unable to fund existing operations. For instance, the world's biggest technology company in terms of market value is the Cupertino, California consumer electronics giant Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL). Apple's latest market value is a whopping $3 trillion, and since 1998, the shares have gained quite a bit in terms of percentage returns. Apple's shares were trading at $27 in May 1998, and since then, the stock has undergone four separate splits. Whether we account for these or not, the end result is a multi hundred thousand percent return for a stock that even Warren Buffett most likely wishes that he had bought earlier.

But while Apple's stunning stock returns almost make the firm seem infallible in 2023, the fact is in 1998 it wasn't quite popular. Back then Apple did not have the comfort of a mega cap stock and had to cut down non performing business divisions to ensure that it had a shot at generating sales at all. The rest is history, but Apple's journey on the stock market is different from most other small cap stocks that are available for trading right now. Apple's shares went public in 1980, and the day of the IPO saw its market value sit at $1.8 billion, which is quite sizeable when we consider the impact of inflation. However, despite IPO'ing at a value that sits right at the cusp of the upper end of small caps, Apple was nevertheless less than ten times as valuable as Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) whose value sat at $261 billion in September 1998. Now, the picture is different, and those who even owned a mere $1,000 of Apple's stock in 1998 have seen their money become worth hundreds of thousands of dollars more.