Monday, November 16, 2009

Top 10 biggest companies in the world.

Top 10 biggest companies in the world.
Scores based on their rankings for sales, profits, assets and market value. General Electric ended HSBC Holdings’ one-year reign as the world’s largest company. Here are the 25 biggest companies in the world.
No. 1: General Electric 
Industry: Conglomerate, U.S.


Ranked second last year, General Electric is now the world’s largest company, based on its composite score for sales, profits, assets and market value.
No. 2: Royal Dutch Shell 
Industry: Oil and gas operations, U.K.




Its $458 billion in revenues puts this integrated petroleum company in first place in sales and second in our Global 2000 composite ranking based on sales, profits, assets and market value.
No. 3: Toyota Motor 
Industry: Consumer Durables, Japan




Japan’s Toyota Motor, with a market capital of $102 billion, is the world’s highest-ranked auto company on the Global 2000.
No. 4: ExxonMobil 
Industry: Oil and gas operations,U.S.




Despite record profits of $45.2 billion at ExxonMobil, the U.S. company slipped behind Royal Dutch Shell in its overall Global 2000 ranking. The reason: Royal Dutch ranked higher in both revenues and assets.
No. 5: BP 
Industry: Oil and gas operations, U.K.




This U.K. petroleum giant is in fifth place worldwide for profits as well as its Global 2000 composite ranking
No. 6: HSBC Holdings 
Industry: Banking,U.K.




After a one-year reign at the head of the Global 2000, this international banking giant fell back to the sixth position.
No. 7: AT&T 
Industry: Telecom services, U.S.




Last year, AT&T scored a 7.7% increase in profits on only a 4.3% gain in revenues
No. 8: Wal-Mart Stores 
Industry: Retailing, U.S.



The economic downturn worked in favor of the world’s largest retailer, which climbed from 16th last year to the eighth this year on its Global 2000 ranking.
No. 9: Banco Santander 
Industry: Banking, Spain



Its acquisition of Alliance and Leicester of the U.K. helped this bank, headquartered in Madrid, shoot up in rank on the Global 2000.
No. 10 : Chevron 
Industry: Oil and gas operations,U.S.



This U.S. integrated oil giant ties with Banco Santander of Spain for ninth place on a composite ranking of sales, profits, assets and market value.

1 comment:

  1. Oh yes, isn't that nice.

    Let's start with Shell, and more specifically it's logo. Just think of all the atrocious human and environmental track record that has been achieved - with precisely this logo. It symbolizes far more than a Loewy design - it symbolizes a complete lack of ethical understanding, it symbolizes sadness and death. It symbolizes greed and destruction. From the Nigerian Delta, all the way down to South Africa right now, where enough payoffs to the government would cause irrevocable damage through fracking.

    Cancer, sickness, radiation in water, economic devastation, plant and animal death, the list goes on and on. Watch the film Gasland for start.

    And lastly, the logo and most of the others here, symbolizes short-sightedness - sustainable energy sources are the future.

    People wake up. It may happen in your backyard next. Or wouldn't you mind that?

    ReplyDelete

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