Mid-Cap Stock
Mid-Cap Stock
A publicly traded equity security of a company with a market capitalization between $2 billion and $10 billion. Mid-cap stocks offer a balance between the growth potential of small-cap stocks and the stability of large-cap stocks, with moderate liquidity and volatility. Often considered a sweet spot for investors seeking both growth opportunities and relative stability.
A technology company with a market capitalization of $5.2 billion would be classified as mid-cap. An investor purchasing shares might benefit from the company's expansion into new markets (growth potential) while enjoying more established operations and better liquidity than a $500 million small-cap competitor.
Students often confuse market cap ranges, thinking mid-cap is $1B-$5B or fail to recognize that mid-cap stocks can shift to large-cap or small-cap categories as their market value changes. The $2B-$10B threshold is the standard classification for Series 65 exam purposes.
How This Is Tested
- Identifying appropriate client suitability for mid-cap stock investments based on risk tolerance and investment objectives
- Comparing characteristics of mid-cap stocks versus large-cap and small-cap stocks in terms of growth, stability, and liquidity
- Recognizing the market capitalization threshold that defines mid-cap classification ($2B-$10B)
- Understanding how mid-cap stocks fit into diversified portfolio construction and asset allocation strategies
- Evaluating the risk-return profile of mid-cap stocks relative to other equity classifications
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mid-cap market capitalization range | $2 billion to $10 billion | Industry standard classification; companies outside this range are classified as small-cap (below $2B) or large-cap (above $10B) |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Jennifer, a 45-year-old investor with moderate risk tolerance, currently holds a portfolio weighted heavily toward large-cap stocks in established sectors. She wants to add growth potential while avoiding the high volatility of small-cap stocks. Her investment adviser is considering mid-cap stocks for portfolio diversification. Which statement best describes the suitability of mid-cap stocks for Jennifer's objectives?
B is correct. Mid-cap stocks ($2B-$10B market capitalization) are well-suited for Jennifer's situation. They offer stronger growth potential than her existing large-cap holdings while providing more established operations, better liquidity, and lower volatility than small-cap stocks. This aligns with her moderate risk tolerance and desire for portfolio diversification without excessive volatility.
A is incorrect because mid-cap stocks typically offer better growth potential than large-cap stocks, as mid-cap companies are often in expansion phases with room to grow. C is false. small-cap stocks have the highest volatility, not mid-caps. Mid-cap stocks fall between small-cap (highest volatility) and large-cap (lowest volatility) on the risk spectrum. D is incorrect because mid-cap stocks are appropriate for moderate investors like Jennifer, not just aggressive investors. Aggressive investors typically focus on small-cap or speculative growth stocks.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to match investment vehicles to client profiles based on risk tolerance and investment objectives. Understanding where mid-cap stocks fit on the risk-return spectrum between small-cap and large-cap stocks is essential for making suitable recommendations and portfolio diversification decisions.
What is the market capitalization range that defines a mid-cap stock?
C is correct. The industry standard classification for mid-cap stocks is companies with market capitalizations between $2 billion and $10 billion. This range represents the middle ground between small-cap stocks (typically under $2 billion) and large-cap stocks (typically above $10 billion).
A ($500M-$2B) represents the small-cap range, though definitions vary slightly by source. B ($1B-$5B) uses an incorrect lower threshold and upper threshold. some sources use $1B as the small/mid-cap dividing line, but $2B is the Series 65 standard. D ($5B-$20B) is too high. companies above $10B are generally classified as large-cap, and $5B is well within the mid-cap range, not the minimum.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests knowledge of market capitalization thresholds for equity classifications. Knowing the $2B-$10B range for mid-cap stocks is essential for answering questions about portfolio construction, equity characteristics, and client suitability recommendations.
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Access Free BetaAn investment adviser is constructing a diversified equity portfolio for a client. The portfolio currently includes $300,000 in large-cap stocks and $100,000 in small-cap stocks. The adviser recommends adding $200,000 in mid-cap stocks. Which of the following best describes the expected impact of this allocation?
B is correct. Adding mid-cap stocks to a portfolio with large-cap and small-cap holdings enhances diversification by filling the middle ground on the market cap spectrum. Mid-cap stocks typically offer better growth potential than large-caps (as mid-cap companies are often in expansion phases) while exhibiting lower volatility than small-caps. This allocation balances the stability of large-caps with the growth of small-caps, potentially smoothing overall portfolio returns.
A is incorrect because mid-cap stocks have moderate volatility—higher than large-caps but lower than small-caps. They don't increase volatility to small-cap levels. C is absurd. no equity classification eliminates all portfolio risk. Mid-cap stocks carry market risk, company-specific risk, and liquidity risk (though less than small-caps). D is incorrect because mid-cap stocks have different return characteristics and risk profiles than large-caps, providing genuine diversification benefits through exposure to different company sizes and growth stages.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of how different equity classifications contribute to portfolio construction and diversification. Understanding the risk-return characteristics of mid-cap stocks relative to small-cap and large-cap stocks is critical for building appropriate asset allocations and explaining recommendations to clients.
All of the following statements about mid-cap stocks are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Mid-cap stocks do NOT remain permanently in the mid-cap classification. A company's market capitalization changes constantly based on its stock price and shares outstanding. A successful mid-cap company can grow beyond $10 billion and become large-cap, while a struggling mid-cap can fall below $2 billion and become small-cap. Market cap classifications are dynamic, not permanent labels.
A is accurate: The $2B-$10B range is the standard industry definition for mid-cap stocks used on the Series 65 exam. B is accurate: Mid-cap stocks are often called the "sweet spot" because they offer growth opportunities from companies still in expansion phases (unlike many mature large-caps) while having more established operations and stability than small-caps. D is accurate: Liquidity generally correlates with company size. Large-cap stocks have the highest trading volumes and tightest bid-ask spreads, mid-caps have moderate liquidity, and small-caps typically have the lowest liquidity and widest spreads.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding that market cap classifications are dynamic categories, not permanent designations. This matters for portfolio monitoring. a client's "mid-cap fund" will continuously adjust holdings as companies grow into large-caps or shrink into small-caps. Understanding this fluidity is important for explaining fund turnover and portfolio drift to clients.
A client asks her investment adviser to explain the characteristics of mid-cap stocks compared to large-cap and small-cap stocks. Which of the following statements accurately describe mid-cap stocks?
1. Mid-cap stocks typically offer higher growth potential than large-cap stocks
2. Mid-cap stocks have lower liquidity than small-cap stocks
3. Mid-cap stocks represent companies with market capitalizations between $2 billion and $10 billion
4. Mid-cap stocks generally exhibit lower volatility than small-cap stocks
B is correct. Statements 1, 3, and 4 accurately describe mid-cap stocks.
Statement 1 is TRUE: Mid-cap companies are often in growth and expansion phases, giving them higher growth potential than mature large-cap companies that may have already captured most of their addressable market. Mid-caps have "room to run" that large-caps often lack.
Statement 2 is FALSE: Mid-cap stocks have HIGHER liquidity than small-cap stocks, not lower. Liquidity increases with company size and trading volume. The correct hierarchy is: large-cap stocks (highest liquidity) > mid-cap stocks (moderate liquidity) > small-cap stocks (lowest liquidity).
Statement 3 is TRUE: The industry standard definition of mid-cap stocks is companies with market capitalizations between $2 billion and $10 billion. This is the threshold tested on the Series 65 exam.
Statement 4 is TRUE: Mid-cap stocks generally have lower volatility than small-cap stocks due to more established operations, better access to capital, more analyst coverage, and greater institutional ownership. However, they still have higher volatility than large-cap stocks. The volatility hierarchy is: small-cap (highest) > mid-cap (moderate) > large-cap (lowest).
The Series 65 exam tests comprehensive understanding of how mid-cap stocks compare to other equity classifications across multiple dimensions: growth potential, liquidity, volatility, and market cap thresholds. This multi-dimensional knowledge is essential for making suitable investment recommendations and explaining portfolio allocations to clients with different risk tolerances and investment objectives.
💡 Memory Aid
Think of market caps like Goldilocks and the Three Bears: Small-caps are too volatile (baby bear), large-caps are too stable with limited growth (papa bear), but mid-caps are just right ($2B-$10B)—the perfect balance of growth potential and stability (mama bear).
Related Concepts
This term is part of this cluster:
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Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:
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