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#[[Wal Mart]]- [[United States]] (retail)
#[[Wal Mart]]- [[United States]] (retail)
#[[ExxonMobil Corporation]] - [[United States]] (oil/retail)
#[[ExxonMobil Corporation]] - [[United States]] (oil/retail)
#[[Royal Dutch Shell]] - [[Netherlands]] and the [[United Kingdom]] (oil)
#[[Royal Dutch Shell]] - [[Netherlands]] <ref> While ''Fortune'' lists Shell as a Dutch company, the company itself asserts that it is both Dutch and [[United Kingdom|British]]. [http://www.shell.com/home/content2/investor-en/contact.html Source]</ref> (oil)
#[[BP]] - [[United Kingdom]] (oil)
#[[BP]] - [[United Kingdom]] (oil)
#[[General Motors Corporation|General Motors]] - [[United States]] (automobiles)
#[[General Motors Corporation|General Motors]] - [[United States]] (automobiles)
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===2007 breakdown by country===
===2007 breakdown by country===
Only countries with five or more Global 500 companies are listed.<br />
Only countries with five or more Global 500 companies are listed.<br />

- [[European Union]] (163 companies)<br />
- [[European Union]] (163 companies)<br />
1 [[United States]] (162)<br />
1 [[United States]] (162)<br />

Revision as of 13:02, 10 May 2008

The Fortune Global 500 is a ranking of the top 500 corporations worldwide as measured by revenue. The list is compiled and published annually by Fortune magazine.

Until 1989 it listed only non-US industrial corporations under the title "International 500", while the Fortune 500 contained and still contains exclusively US corporations. In 1990, US companies were added to compile a truly global list of top industrial corporations as ranked by sales. In 2005, more than 450 of them were headquartered in the United States (176), Europe (195), and Japan (80).[1]

Since 1995, the list has had its current form, listing also top financial corporations and service providers by revenue.

2007 list

This is the top 10 as published in July 2007. It is based on the companies' fiscal year ended on or before 31 March 2007.[1]

  1. Wal Mart- United States (retail)
  2. ExxonMobil Corporation - United States (oil/retail)
  3. Royal Dutch Shell - Netherlands [2] (oil)
  4. BP - United Kingdom (oil)
  5. General Motors - United States (automobiles)
  6. Toyota Motor - Japan (automobiles)
  7. Chevron - United States (oil)
  8. DaimlerChrysler - Germany (automobiles)
  9. ConocoPhillips - United States (oil)
  10. Total - France (oil)

The top ten includes six oil companies, three automobile manufacturers and one retailer. The complete list is available online.

2007 breakdown by country

Only countries with five or more Global 500 companies are listed.
- European Union (163 companies)
1 United States (162)
2 Japan (67)
3 France (38)
4 Germany (37)
5 United Kingdom (34)
6 China (24)
7 Canada (16)
7 The Netherlands (16)
9 South Korea (14)
10 Switzerland (13)
11 Italy (10)
12 Spain (9)
13 Australia (8)
14 Belgium (6)
14 India (6)
14 Sweden (6)
14 Taiwan (6)
17 Brazil (5)
17 Mexico (5)

2007 breakdown by city

Breakdown by cities proper (not metropolitan areas) as provided by Fortune Magazine ([2]). Only cities with five Global 500 companies or more are listed.

Rank City Country Number of Global 500
companies
Global 500
revenues ($ millions)
1 Tokyo Japan 50 1,725,362
2 Paris France 26 1,240,919
3 New York United States 22 1,174,439
3 London United Kingdom 22 1,085,187
4 Beijing China 18 711,186
5 Seoul South Korea 10 412,535
6 Toronto Canada 9 201,394
7 Madrid Spain 8 294,314
8 Zürich Switzerland 7 352,830
8 Houston United States 7 352,201
9 Munich Germany 6 390,017
9 Osaka Japan 6 180,901
10 Rome Italy 5 235,231
10 Atlanta United States 5 199,447

Notes

  1. ^ "PDF-Human Rights Policies and Management Practices: Results from questionnaire surveys of Governments and Fortune Global 500 firms" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-03-06.
  2. ^ While Fortune lists Shell as a Dutch company, the company itself asserts that it is both Dutch and British. Source

See also