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Middle-market company

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Authorities provide differing definitions of the middle-market or mid-market companies.[1][2] While some authorities look to revenue generated by companies to define the middle market, other sources regard either asset size or number of employees[3] as a better metric for comparing company sizes.

Definitions of the middle market are generally derived by dividing the United States economy into three categories: small business, middle-market, and big business. According to figures collected by the U.S. Census Bureau, the total revenue of all U.S. businesses in 2012 was roughly $32.6 trillion.[4] The largest of these companies, which are big businesses with revenue of over $3 billion,[5] make up roughly one-third of that total, and businesses with a revenue of under $100 million made up about another third of the total revenue. The middle market can thus be defined as the companies larger than small businesses but smaller than big businesses that account for the middle third of the U.S. economy’s revenue. Each of these companies earns an annual revenue of between $100 million and $3 billion.[6]

Other authorities define middle-market firms differently. The National Center for the Middle Market at the Ohio State University Fisher College of Business[7] as well as Dun & Bradstreet’s proprietary database of commercially-active U.S. firms[8] define middle market businesses as those companies with revenues between $10 million and $1 billion per year. The definition is defined in reference to small businesses, which earn less than $10 million in annual revenue, and big business, which earn at least $1 billion in revenues and are generally the smallest eligible for a credit rating by one of the "major" credit-rating agencies. Investopedia considers middle market firms to be those with sizable annual revenues, ranging from $50 million to $1 billion,[9] which straddle the market between smaller companies and billion-dollar giants.

In the United States of America

The 200,000 plus US-based mid-market companies are essential to America’s economic success. They account for $10 trillion annually of the $30 trillion U.S. private sector gross receipts and 30 million jobs.[10] If the U.S. middle market were a country, its GDP would rank it as the fourth-largest economy in the world.[11] While there are good sources of information about CEOs of large companies and small businesses; there is relatively little information about mid-size companies and their CEOs. As a consequence their issues and needs are underrepresented in policy and economic discussions.

In Europe

Mid-market companies—companies that are too big to be considered SMEs, but smaller than big, exchange listed businesses—play a key role in the UK and in the other top European economies.

According to an in depth report by ESSEC Business School and GE Capital, across the UK, Germany, France and Italy (the EU-4), the mid-market represents a relatively small number of companies (ranging from a low of 1.2% in Germany to 1.7% in France) and yet it generates about one third of private sector revenue and employs about a third of each country’s workforce. Combined, the middle market in the four European countries contributes €1.11 trillion ($1.48 trillion) to the EU-4 GDP. This makes the middle market in the EU-4 one of the top 10 economies in the world, ahead of India and Russia.

In the study, Professor Ashwin Malshe of ESSEC defined the middle market differently for each country. For example, Italy has 3.7 million firms with revenue of less than€5 million, while Germany has only 1.7 million companies this size this means that applying a single European or global definition of a mid-market firm is difficult. In the UK, mid-market firms are those with between £15m and £800m of annual revenues.

The average UK middle market firm has revenue of £78 million (€98 million) and employs 500 people, similar in size to its German counterparts but larger than the typical mid-market firm in France or Italy.

Middle-Market Organizations

Entities have evolved to serve businesses in the middle market, including for-profit and institutions of higher learning. In the latter category, the Graziadio School of Private Capital Markets at Pepperdine University produces quarterly and annual data on the middle market via their Private Capital Markets Project.[12] Other entities include the Association for Corporate Growth (ACG), which provides a global community for mergers, acquisitions, and corporate growth professionals. ACG's stated objective is to drive middle-market growth.[13] ACG publishes Middle Market Growth online.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://chrismercer.net/middle-market-companies
  2. ^ http://www.cnbc.com/id/44639661
  3. ^ http://www.forbes.com/sites/sage/2014/06/25/why-business-is-booming-for-mid-market-companies/#297fb2c8c35b
  4. ^ http://www2.census.gov/econ/susb/data/2012/us_6digitnaics_r_2012.xlsx
  5. ^ http://fortune.com/fortune500/2012
  6. ^ CEO Connection Mid-Market Definition
  7. ^ https://fisher.osu.edu/blogs/middlemarket/files/2012/01/Middle_Market_Research.pdf
  8. ^ http://about.americanexpress.com/news/pr/2015/middle-market-companies-vital-u-s.aspx
  9. ^ http://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/middle-market-firms.asp
  10. ^ NASDAQ Mid-Market Definition
  11. ^ National Center for the Middle Market
  12. ^ http://bschool.pepperdine.edu/about/people/faculty/appliedresearch/research/pcmsurvey/
  13. ^ "LEARN: Middle Market Voice". middlemarketvoice.org. ACG: Association for Corporate Growth. Retrieved 2014-10-10. ACG encourages the growth and development of middle-market companies by supporting policies that foster and incentivize private capital investment.
  14. ^ Middle Market Growth