What are the biggest banks in America? That depends on what you mean by "big."

The traditional way to measure a bank's size is by its balance sheet -- that is, the cumulative value of its assets. But the flaw in this approach is that it doesn't actually reflect what a bank is worth.

Double exposure of city and graph on stacks of coins

Image source: Getty Images.

Banks are highly leveraged institutions, typically holding $10 worth of assets for every $1 dollar in capital. The latter, not the former, more closely approximates a bank's net worth.

Given this, another way to measure a bank's size is by looking at its shareholders' equity, or book value. But this too has shortcomings, as most banks don't trade for book value.

  • Bank of America (BAC 1.53%) and Citigroup (C 0.26%), for example, are currently priced at 35% discounts to their book values.
  • Wells Fargo (WFC 2.73%) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM 0.65%), meanwhile, trade for 29% and 7% premiums, respectively, to their book values.

So, how do you reconcile the fact that a bank's book value only roughly approximates its actual value? The answer is to look at its market capitalization.

What is this, you ask? According to The Motley Fool's knowledge center:

Market capitalization is one of the best measures of a company's size. Also known as market cap, market capitalization is the total market value of a company's outstanding shares of stock. For example, you may have heard Apple referred to as "the most valuable company in the world." That's because Apple currently has the highest market cap of any publicly traded company.

A company's market cap is thus derived by taking its shareholders' equity and then multiplying that by the premium or discount to book value that its shares currently trade at.

With this in mind, here are the nation's 10 biggest banks by market cap:

Bank

Market Capitalization (millions)

JPMorgan Chase

$241,461

Wells Fargo

$231,187

Bank of America

$159,909

Citigroup

$136,407

U.S. Bancorp

$74,007

PNC Financial

$44,600

Bank of New York Mellon

$43,257

Capital One Financial

$36,286

BB&T

$31,171

State Street

$27,711

Data source: YCharts.com.

As you can see, there's a clear difference between the four biggest banks in the country -- the "too big to fail" banks -- and the rest. JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have market caps above $200 billion, while Bank of America and Citigroup are the only other two that eclipse $100 billion.

It's also worth noting that these figures fluctuate in line with a bank's stock price. To this end, for the last few years, Wells Fargo was actually the biggest bank by market cap, despite the fact that its balance sheet is roughly a third smaller than JPMorgan Chase's. After Wells Fargo's recent troubles, however, it's fallen back to second place.

And while Bank of America and Citigroup lag far behind their bigger (by market cap) peers, the gap will undoubtedly narrow as their profits continue to improve from where they were eight years ago at the nadir of the financial crisis.

In short, while measuring the size of a bank by its market cap is only one way to do so, it's an important concept for investors to know.