Midcap vs Midgap - What's the difference?
midcap | midgap |
(finance) Having medium market capitalization, often defined as between 2 and 10 billion US dollars
*{{quote-news, year=2007, date=April 8, author=Tim Gray, title=Yes, It’s a 7-Year Streak, but No, They’re Not Bragging, work=New York Times
, passage=“You could’ve gone down to midcap stocks,” said Bruce T. Herring, group chief investment officer overseeing Fidelity Blue Chip Growth, the largest fund on the list. }}
As nouns the difference between midcap and midgap
is that midcap is (finance) a stock with medium market capitalization while midgap is the middle of a gap (often used attributively).As an adjective midcap
is (finance) having medium market capitalization, often defined as between 2 and 10 billion us dollars.midcap
English
Adjective
(-)citation
