Largest Publishing Companies

Market Capitalization
Market CapitalizationEfficiencyMarket RiskExp Return
1NWS News Corp B
14.51 B
(0.09)
 1.74 
(0.16)
2NWSA News Corp A
13.82 B
(0.06)
 1.77 
(0.11)
3NYT New York Times
13.26 B
 0.27 
 1.57 
 0.42 
4PSO Pearson PLC ADR
8.15 B
(0.01)
 2.01 
(0.03)
5WLY John Wiley Sons
1.61 B
(0.08)
 2.08 
(0.16)
6SCHL Scholastic
872.4 M
 0.16 
 2.28 
 0.36 
7DJCO Daily Journal Corp
723.58 M
 0.10 
 3.37 
 0.35 
8LEE Lee Enterprises Incorporated
28.81 M
 0.25 
 6.46 
 1.60 
9ADBN Americana Distribution
269.09 K
 0.00 
 0.00 
 0.00 
10SALN Salon City
596
(0.13)
 12.80 
(1.64)
1189420GAE9 TRAVELERS PPTY CAS
112
(0.11)
 0.33 
(0.04)
12248019AU5 US248019AU57
100
(0.16)
 3.44 
(0.54)
1347216FAA5 US47216FAA57
98
(0.13)
 0.83 
(0.11)
1447216QAB9 JDEPNA 1375 15 JAN 27
97
(0.13)
 0.66 
(0.08)
The analysis above is based on a 90-day investment horizon and a default level of risk. Use the Portfolio Analyzer to fine-tune all your assumptions. Check your current assumptions here.
Market Capitalization is the total market value of a company's equity. It is one of many ways to value a company and is calculated by multiplying the price of the stock by the number of shares issued. If a firm has one type of stock its market capitalization will be the current market share price multiplied by the number of shares. However, if a company has multiple types of equities then the market cap will be the total of the market caps of the different types of shares. In most publications or references market cap is broken down into the mega-cap, large-cap, mid-cap, small-cap, micro-cap, and nano-cap. Market Cap is a measurement of business as total market value of all of the outstanding shares at a given time, and can be used to compare different companies based on their size.