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For the first time, The Fortune Global 500 is now more Chinese than American

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For the first time, The Fortune Global 500 is now more Chinese than American
BY ALAN MURRAY
AND DAVID MEYER
August 10, 2020 6:11 PM GMT+8


The Fortune Global 500 list is out this morning, and you can find it here. Walmart once again tops the list, followed by three Chinese companies—Sinopec, State Grid and China National Petroleum. The big story is this: for the first time, there are more Fortune Global 500 companies based in Mainland China and Hong Kong than in the U.S.–124 vs. 121. Add in Taiwan’s companies, and the Greater China total jumps to 133.

It’s hard to overstate the significance of the change in the global economy that represents. As Fortune Editor-in-Chief Cliff Leaf points out, when the Global 500 list first came out in 1990, there were no Chinese companies on the list. In the intervening three decades, the Chinese economy has skyrocketed, powered by a global trade boom that expanded from 39% of global GDP to 59%.

So now what? That’s the question Geoff Colvin explores in his piece here. The U.S. and Chinese economies are intertwined in so many ways, it’s hard to imagine them ever truly “decoupling.” Yet powerful political forces on both sides seem to be propelling them in that direction.

It’s worth noting that the Global 500 ranking is based on revenues, and many of the Chinese companies on the list—like the three mentioned above—earned their spot not necessarily because of their business dynamism, but because they are state-supported monopolies in the world’s largest market.

And by the way, being on the list is no guarantee of profitability. The five biggest losers on this year’s list—Pemex, Schlumberger, Softbank, the U.S. Postal Service and Nissan—lost $52 billion in 2019. (Sixth and seventh in the money losers’ ranking were Deutsche Bank and General Electric, which together lost another $11 billion.) Saudi Aramco, on the other hand, netted $88 billion in profits and is Fortune Global 500’s most profitable company for the second consecutive year.

https://fortune.com/2020/08/10/fortune-global-500-china-rise-ceo-daily/
 
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Congratulations China.

You worked very hard and earned your way up. You did not colonise any nation to loot and plunder, neither installed any puppet Governments anywhere in world to steal their natural resources.

Very honourable. Absolutely amazing.
 
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China dominates Fortune Global 500 for first time
August 11, 2020 Ian Horswill

For the first time ever there are more Fortune Global 500 companies based in China and Hong Kong than in the US.

“It’s hard to overstate the significance of the change in the global economy that represents. As Fortune Editor-in-Chief Cliff Leaf points out, when the Global 500 list first came out in 1990, there were no Chinese companies on the list. In the intervening three decades, the Chinese economy has skyrocketed, powered by a global trade boom that expanded from 39% of global GDP to 59%,” Fortune Media CEO Alan Murray said.

“It’s worth noting that the Global 500 ranking is based on revenues, and many of the Chinese companies on the list — like Sinopec, State Grid and China National Petroleum — earned their spot not necessarily because of their business dynamism, but because they are state-supported monopolies in the world’s largest market.

“And by the way, being on the list is no guarantee of profitability. The five biggest losers on this year’s list — Pemex, Schlumberger, Softbank, the US Postal Service and Nissan — lost $52 billion in 2019 (sixth and seventh in the money losers’ ranking were Deutsche Bank and General Electric, which together lost another US$11 billion). Saudi Aramco, on the other hand, netted US$88 billion in profits and is Fortune Global 500’s most profitable company for the second consecutive year,” added Murray.

The world’s 500 largest companies generated US$33.3 trillion in total revenue and US$2.1 trillion in profits in 2019. Fortune Global 500 2020 companies employ 69.9 million people worldwide and are represented by 32 countries.

Walmart, which operates a chain of hypermarkets, discount department stores, and grocery stores, again topped the Fortune Global 500 list with revenue of US$524 billion. It has been top of the Fortune Global 500 for seven successive years.

Walmart, which has its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas, has become an e-commerce threat to Amazon in the US, with sales up 37% last year. Walmart’s 4,600 US stores have capitalised on the coronavirus pandemic by allowing curbside pickup for online orders. In the first quarter of the 2021 financial year, Walmart reported “unprecedented demand” for goods that drove up company sales by 10% and e-commerce sales by 74%. It also operates in China and India.

Sinopec Group, China’s state-owned petroleum and chemical giant, also remained at No. 2 with revenue of US$407 billion despite its profits falling 16.2% to US$6.8 billion. Beijing-based State Grid, China’s state-owned power company, was third with revenue of US$384 billion despite a fall in sales of just under 1% in 2019. Fourth on the Fortune Global 500 for the fourth successive year was China National Petroleum, the state-owned parent company of China’s second-largest oil producer, PetroChina, with US$379 billion. Despite a US$4.3 billion net loss in 2019.

https://news.theceomagazine.com/business/fortune-global-500-china/
 
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The real different between USA and Chinese companies.

USA companies mostly have much higher value than Chinese companies despite they aren't profitable or have lower income.

Many of USA companies are over-priced and fragile at the same time.

The fine example is WeWork, an office renting company, that is not yet profitable but the company value is much higher than the competitior who is profitable.
 
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Glad to see fortune is still the one defining who gets to what place.

Fortune as an american company is still free to do business free from ccp commie propaganda.
 
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