Nano Cap

Nano Cap

Nano cap refers to small, publicly traded companies with a market capitalization below $50 million and is as small as you can get in terms of market capitalization. Nano cap stocks are prone to these problems because they are not as rigidly regulated as larger cap stocks that trade on reputable exchanges like the NYSE or NASDAQ. Nano cap companies are considered the smallest stocks by market cap. Nano cap refers to small, publicly traded companies with a market capitalization below $50 million and is as small as you can get in terms of market capitalization. Small cap stocks, which start at $300 million in market capitalization and go up to $2 billion, are considered a risky place for investors to dabble in order to capture aggressive growth.

Nano caps are publicly traded companies with small market capitalizations of $50 million or less.

What Is Nano Cap?

Nano cap refers to small, publicly traded companies with a market capitalization below $50 million and is as small as you can get in terms of market capitalization.

Nano caps are publicly traded companies with small market capitalizations of $50 million or less.
Nano cap companies are considered the smallest stocks by market cap.
Also referred to as "penny stocks," nano caps are highly risky investments due to their size, stability, and potential for manipulation.

Understanding Nano Cap

The next step up from nano caps is micro cap stocks. Nano caps are very risky because they are such small companies and are particularly prone to manipulation. These stocks are often referred to as penny stocks and are quite popular with traders who have a large appetite for risk. Many people new to trading may look for higher-risk investments like nano caps.

Keep in mind that classifications such as large cap or small cap are only approximations that change over time. Also, the exact definition of the various sizes of market cap can vary between brokerage houses. Technically a stock can be a nano cap without being a penny stock. If the float of available shares is low enough, the market cap will still be under $50 million even if the actual price of the shares is higher than the penny stock threshold.

Of course, penny stocks aren't even necessarily penny stocks. The definition of a penny stock was formerly a stock trading for under one dollar per share, but the Securities and Exchange Commission has moved that up to count all shares trading below five dollars per share. In short, these definitions are fluid at the best of times.

For example, if there is enough global growth and increased investment across the world, the nano cap of the future may be redefined as $100 million or more. 

Risks and Rewards of Nano Cap

Investors looking to invest in nano-cap companies should be aware that these small firms are often associated with a very high risk of failure. Small cap stocks, which start at $300 million in market capitalization and go up to $2 billion, are considered a risky place for investors to dabble in order to capture aggressive growth.

Nano caps ratchet up that risk versus reward even more. Short-term returns in the double and triple digits do happen in nano cap stocks, but so do a lot of outright failures. On top of the legitimate failures, there is no shortage of pump and dump schemes. Nano cap stocks are prone to these problems because they are not as rigidly regulated as larger cap stocks that trade on reputable exchanges like the NYSE or NASDAQ. Some nano cap stocks will have reporting gaps, unaudited documents, and other red flags that should discourage even the most risk seeking of investors.

Related terms:

Cats and Dogs

The phrase "Cats and Dogs" refers to speculative stocks that are lightly regulated and traded over the counter (OTC). read more

Float

The float is essentially double-counted money: funds within a financial or banking system that are briefly accounted for twice due to the time gap in processing deposits or withdrawals that are often in the form of paper checks. read more

Investor

Any person who commits capital with the expectation of financial returns is an investor. A wide variety of investment vehicles exist including (but not limited to) stocks, bonds, commodities, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, options, futures, foreign exchange, gold, silver, and real estate. read more

Large Cap (Big Cap)

Large cap (big cap) refers to a company with a market capitalization value of more than $10 billion. read more

Manipulation

Manipulation is the artificial inflating or deflating of the price of a security or otherwise influencing the market's behavior for personal gain. read more

Market Capitalization

Market capitalization is the total dollar market value of all of a company's outstanding shares. read more

Micro Cap

A micro-cap is a small company that has a market capitalization between $50 million and $300 million and is considered riskier than a large-cap stock. read more

Mid-Cap

Mid-cap is the term given to companies with a market capitalization—or market value—between $2 and $10 billion. read more

Penny Stock

A penny stock typically refers to a small company's stock that trades for less than $5 per share and trades via over-the-counter (OTC) transactions. read more

Pump-and-Dump

Pump-and-dump is a manipulative scheme to boost the price of a security through fake recommendations based on false, misleading, or exaggerated statements. read more