Reliance with sales of $45.3 billion is ranked 121st in the list with three public State Bank of India Group
(136, $29.1 billion), Oil & Natural Gas Corp. (172, 22.6 billion)
and Indian Oil (243, $52.1 billion) taking the next three places among
the Indian firms.
Other companies in India's top
ten were ICICI Bank (288, $13.2 billion), NTPC (348, $10.8 billion),
Coal India (418, $10.4 billion), Bharti Airtel (453, $9.3 billion), Larsen & Toubro(499, $9.8 billion) and Tata Motors (512, $20.2 billion).
JPMorgan Chase is in the top spot for the second consecutive year as the world's largest company followed by HSBC, up six spots fuelled by a 121 percent growth in profits in the past fiscal year.
In total, the Global 2000
companies now account for $32 trillion in revenues, $2.4 trillion in
profits, $138 trillion in assets and $38 trillion in market value. These
firms also employ 80 million people worldwide.
The Asia-Pacific region led The
Global 2000 again this year with 701 companies, including the most
additions (11) to the list of the regions - Asia-Pacific, Europe, Middle East & Africa-EMEA, the Americas and the US - with doubled profits, by far the biggest increase.
The biggest profit centre was China, as 121 companies, including PetroChina, ICBC
and Sinopec, returned an aggregate profit of $168 billion. Japan and
South Korea also showed impressive gains in profits and assets.
With the US economy back on its
feet, growing at a steady 3 percent clip over the past 12 months,
American firms on The Forbes Global 2000 are growing far faster. Total
sales were up 12 percent in 2010 over 2009, and profits continue to
rise-up 69 percent, versus 56 percent for the S&P 500.
Still, the US grip on The Global
2000 has been slipping since 2004, when the number of US constituents
was 751. It's now 536. The US still accounts for the most firms among
the top 100 with 28.
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