Apple, the company Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak founded in 1976 in possibly not a garage, became the most valuable company in the world in 2012, passing Microsoft as iPhone sales pushed the company into the stratosphere. Today, Apple’s dominance of the financial world has reached a new milestone—the company has now topped $ 1 trillion in market capitalization, the collective value of all its shares of stock.
With a “market cap” of $ 884.01 billion, Amazon is Apple’s closest rival; Google parent Alphabet trails Bezos’ technology and retail giant with a market cap of $ 854.86 billion. Microsoft, from which Apple snatched the title of most valuable company in 2012, is at $ 827.53 billion today.
Apple’s value pushed past $ 1 trillion as the value of shares rose 3 percent earlier this week following the company’s quarterly earnings report and aided by Apple’s move in May to begin buying back up to $ 100 billion worth of stock with its stockpile of cash. The company’s stock is now valued at about $ 207 per share. Some of the boost also comes from Apple’s swelling services sales—collectively, Apple’s Apple Pay, iTunes, iCloud, and Apple Care services brought in $ 9.55 billion in revenue for the company in the most recent quarter, up from $ 9.19 billion in the previous quarter of the year and $ 7.27 billion in the same three-month period last year.