The US has 20 of the
largest 50 companies on the planet. But the growth rates of these US companies
are low except for Oil and Gas. Growth continues to be strong in Energy and
Commodities.
The US is expanding
its Energy industries with oil, gas and coal and needs to expand Commodities
with private sector forestry and mining. We are also attempting to return
manufacturing to the US. The US government needs to privatize the industries
they have nationalized. We need to expand our private sector economy.
See Wikipedia data
below:
This list comprises the
world's largest companies
by consolidated revenue as of 2018, according to the Fortune Global 500 tally. American retail corporation
Walmart has been the world's
largest company since 2014.
The list is limited to 50
companies, all of which have annual revenues exceeding $110 billion US dollars.
21 companies are from North America, 17 from Asia and 12 from Europe.
Only companies that
publish financial data and report figures to a government agency are
included. Therefore, this list may be incomplete as it excludes large
companies such as Saudi Aramco that don't publish
financial data.
The following are the
largest 50 companies on the planet by revenue.
The percentage of growth is lower in the US.
Walmart
$500.3 billion, Retail, 3% US
State
Grid $348.903 billion, Electricity, 10.7% China
Sinopec
$326.953 billion Oil & Gas, 22.2%, China
China
National Petroleum, $326.008 billion, Oil & Gas, 24.2%, China
Royal
Dutch Shell, $311.870 billion, Oil & Gas, 29.9%, Netherlands & UK
Toyota,
$265.172 billion, Automotive, 4.1%, Japan
Volkswagen,
Automotive, $260.028 billion, 8.2%, Germany
BP, $244.582
billion. Oil & Gas, 31.1% UK
Exxon
Mobil, $244.363 billion, Oil & Gas, 17.4%, US
Berkshire
Hathaway, $242.137 billion, Financials, 8.3% US
Apple,
$229.234 billion, Electronics, 6.3%%, US
Samsung,
$211.940 billion, Electronics, 21.8%, South Korea
McKesson,
$208.357 billion, Healthcare, 4.9%, US
Glencore,
$205.476 billion. Mining & Commodities, 18.2%, Switzerland & UK
United
Health, $201.159 billion, Healthcare, 9.3%, US
Daimler,
$185.235 billion, Automotive, 9.3%, Germany
CVS
Health, $184.765 billion, Healthcare, 4.1%, US
Amazon,
$177.866 billion, Retail, 30.8%, US
Exor,
$161.677 billion, Financials, 4.4%, Italy
AT&T,
$160.546 billion, Telecom, 2%, US
General
Motors, $157.311 billion, Automotive, 5.5%, US
Ford,
$156.776 billion, Automotive, 3.3%, US
China
State Construction, $156.071 billion, Construction, 8%, China
Foxconn,
$154.699 billion, Electronics, 14.5% Taiwan
AmericourseBergen,
$153.144 billion, Pharma, 4.3%, US
Industrial
& Commercial Bank of China, $153.021 billion, Financials, 3.6% China
AXA,
$149.461 billion, Financials, 4%, France
Total,
$149.099 billion, Oil & Gas, 16.6% France
Ping An
Insurance, $144.197 billion, Financials, 23.7%, China
Honda,
$138.594 billion, Automotive, 7.3%, Japan
Trafigura,
$136.421 billion, Commodities, 39.1%, Singapore
Chevron,
$134.533 billion, Oil & Gas, 25.1%, US
Cardinal
Health, $129.976 billion, Pharma, 6.9%, US
Costco,
$129.025 billion, Retail, 8.7%, US
SAIC
Motor, $128.819 billion, Automotive, 13.1%, China
Verizon,
$126.034 billion, Telecom, 0%, US
Allianz,
$123.532 billion, Financials, 1.1%, Germany
Kroger,
$122.662 billion, Retail, 6.4%, US
Agricultural
Bank of China, $122.366 billion, Financials, 4.3%, China
Walgreens
Boots Alliance, $118.214 billion, Pharma, 0.7%, US
BNP
Paribas, $117.375 billion, Financials, 7.7%, France
Japan
Post Holdings, $116.616 billion, Conglomerate, 5.2%, Japan
Bank of
China, $115.423 billion, Financials, 1.5%, China
JPMorgan
Chase, $113.899 billion, Financials, 8%, US
Fannie
Mae, $112.394 billion, Financials, 4.9%, US
Gazprom,
$111.983 billion, Oil & Gas, 22.5%, Russia
Prudential,
$111.458 billion, Financials, 14.9% UK
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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