With Tuesday's crash, Amazon was kicked out of the trillion-dollar club; here are the remaining members.

Tuesday's stock decline of over 5.5% caused Amazon.com, Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) to exit the trillion dollar club.

Tuesday's knockout blow: Amazon shares ended the day 3.2% below the psychologically significant $100 level at $96.79. On Tuesday, the shares fell to a new 52-week low of.51.

As a result, the market value of the Jeff Bezos-founded company, which has 10.202 billion shares outstanding, is close to $987.45 billion.

Who's Still Standing: Despite Amazon being expelled from the group of companies with trillion-dollar valuations, there are still four others. Of those, three are unquestionably tech behemoths.

The market value of Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL), as of Tuesday's closing price of $150.65, was $2.4 trillion. Saudi Aramco is another firm with a market valuation of more than $2 trillion.

As of Tuesday, the publicly traded oil and gas company headquartered in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, is valued $2.04 trillion.

The market value of Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) was $1.7 trillion as of Tuesday's close of $228.17 per share.

On Tuesday, the Class A and Class C shares of Alphabet Inc., the parent company of Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG), fell 4.3% and 4.4%, respectively, to $90.47 and $90.50. The market value of the dominant search engine is $1.17 trillion. However, that trillion-dollar estimate could not be accurate.

Why The Free Fall: In their respective third-quarter results, Amazon and Alphabet both missed revenue projections.

Since the company announced its third-quarter earnings on October 27, Amazon shares had fallen 12.8%. Since Google's third-quarter results, its Class A and Class C shares have fallen 13.41% and 13.75%, respectively.

Fyana PachecoComment