There are over 889,000 multinational corporations (MNCs) worldwide. The top three MNCs in 2009 were Citigroup, Allianz, and ABN AMRO. The economic power of MNCs is growing relative to national economies - the top 200 corporations' revenue equaled 25% of global GDP in 1983 and 29.3% in 2005. Some of the largest MNCs include Royal Dutch Shell, Walmart, Exxon Mobil, and Volkswagen. Transparency rankings consider reporting of anti-corruption programs and country-by-country reporting.
Etude PwC sur le Top 100 des entreprises les mieux valorisées au monde en 201...PwC France
La dernière étude du cabinet d’audit et de conseil PwC « Global Top 100 Companies by market capitalisation » révèle que plus de la moitié (53) des 100 entreprises les mieux valorisées au monde sont américaines, contre seulement 4 entreprises françaises. Apple reste en tête du classement établi par PwC, avec une capitalisation boursière de 725 milliards de dollars, en hausse de 54% (+256 milliards de dollars) par rapport à 2014.
Dans sa dernière étude « PwC Golden Age Index : how well are OECD economies adapting to an older workforce ? », le cabinet d’audit et de conseil PwC compare l’emploi des seniors (travailleurs âgés de plus de 55 ans) dans 34 pays de l’OCDE.
Top 100 des capitalisations boursières mondiales (2014)PwC France
http://bit.ly/GlobalTop100Companies
L’étude "Global Top 100 companies by market capitalisation", menée par l’IPO Centre de PwC, montre qu’entre 2009 et 2014, la capitalisation boursière totale des 100 plus grandes entreprises au monde a augmenté de plus de 6 000 milliards de dollars, soit une hausse moyenne de 60 milliards de dollars par société.
Etude PwC Top 100 des capitalisations boursières européennes (2013)PwC France
http://pwc.to/1aFx0jn
PwC a classé les 100 plus grandes entreprises européennes en fonction de leur capitalisation boursière, et a comparé leur progression annuelle entre 2008 et 2013.
Etude PwC sur le Top 100 des entreprises les mieux valorisées au monde en 201...PwC France
La dernière étude du cabinet d’audit et de conseil PwC « Global Top 100 Companies by market capitalisation » révèle que plus de la moitié (53) des 100 entreprises les mieux valorisées au monde sont américaines, contre seulement 4 entreprises françaises. Apple reste en tête du classement établi par PwC, avec une capitalisation boursière de 725 milliards de dollars, en hausse de 54% (+256 milliards de dollars) par rapport à 2014.
Dans sa dernière étude « PwC Golden Age Index : how well are OECD economies adapting to an older workforce ? », le cabinet d’audit et de conseil PwC compare l’emploi des seniors (travailleurs âgés de plus de 55 ans) dans 34 pays de l’OCDE.
Top 100 des capitalisations boursières mondiales (2014)PwC France
http://bit.ly/GlobalTop100Companies
L’étude "Global Top 100 companies by market capitalisation", menée par l’IPO Centre de PwC, montre qu’entre 2009 et 2014, la capitalisation boursière totale des 100 plus grandes entreprises au monde a augmenté de plus de 6 000 milliards de dollars, soit une hausse moyenne de 60 milliards de dollars par société.
Etude PwC Top 100 des capitalisations boursières européennes (2013)PwC France
http://pwc.to/1aFx0jn
PwC a classé les 100 plus grandes entreprises européennes en fonction de leur capitalisation boursière, et a comparé leur progression annuelle entre 2008 et 2013.
F-Prime Capital prepared a market analysis for 2018's year-end discussion. We are sharing it with our broader community in the hope that someone will find in informative, interesting or at least entertaining.
Marc Penzel from Startup Genome presented Frankfurt as part of the Startup Cities Stage at SXSW 2019.
https://schedule.sxsw.com/2019/events/PP102792
Hosted by Sam Michel, Chinwag.
What happened in Tech M&A during the first quarter of 2019? How has the rapid market recovery impacted valuations? Are private equity deals still soaring? Who are the new buyers making waves? Listen in as Corum Group gives the most in-depth look available at Q1 of 2019 for mergers and across all six technology sectors and 30 subsectors. Plus, we’ll get a special report on succession planning for tech company owners and executives, and a report from a special series of M&A conferences across Europe.
Hewlett Packard - Fundamental Research ReportUsman Riaz
Compiled a fundamental analysis report of a company. Its past performance and stock price was evaluated and all other factors were assessed. P/E ratios, stock prices, Sales and SWOT analysis was performed. Value line sheet for the company was analyzed to calculate the future performance f the company and a recommendation was made to buy, hold or sell the stock.
How to Source Digital Initiatives to Drive Revenue GenerationNeo Group Inc
This webinar shares practical case studies that illustrate how companies have successfully sourced digital initiatives to achieve sustainable revenue gains.
F-Prime Capital prepared a market analysis for 2018's year-end discussion. We are sharing it with our broader community in the hope that someone will find in informative, interesting or at least entertaining.
Marc Penzel from Startup Genome presented Frankfurt as part of the Startup Cities Stage at SXSW 2019.
https://schedule.sxsw.com/2019/events/PP102792
Hosted by Sam Michel, Chinwag.
What happened in Tech M&A during the first quarter of 2019? How has the rapid market recovery impacted valuations? Are private equity deals still soaring? Who are the new buyers making waves? Listen in as Corum Group gives the most in-depth look available at Q1 of 2019 for mergers and across all six technology sectors and 30 subsectors. Plus, we’ll get a special report on succession planning for tech company owners and executives, and a report from a special series of M&A conferences across Europe.
Hewlett Packard - Fundamental Research ReportUsman Riaz
Compiled a fundamental analysis report of a company. Its past performance and stock price was evaluated and all other factors were assessed. P/E ratios, stock prices, Sales and SWOT analysis was performed. Value line sheet for the company was analyzed to calculate the future performance f the company and a recommendation was made to buy, hold or sell the stock.
How to Source Digital Initiatives to Drive Revenue GenerationNeo Group Inc
This webinar shares practical case studies that illustrate how companies have successfully sourced digital initiatives to achieve sustainable revenue gains.
ARC's Andy Chatha's Current Business Drivers & Trends Presentation @ ARC Indu...ARC Advisory Group
ARC's Andy Chatha's Current Business Drivers & Trends Presentation @ ARC Industry Forum 2009 in Orlando, FL.
Today’s US Business Environment
US is currently facing many crises
• Housing, Financial, Healthcare, Energy, Manufacturing
Political & Social Pressure to:
• Go Green
• Develop alternative fuels
• Bring manufacturing jobs back
Aging Baby Boomers
• Shortage of Skilled Human Resources
Aging infrastructure
• Bridges, Water, Plants, Electric Grid
Industry-specific cloud solutions are the largest segment of the software market, or a $100B opportunity. By reducing or eliminating the need to customize, industry cloud solutions can deploy faster and they offer significant data advantages and insight as compared to vertical solutions.
This presentation offers insight into some of the fastest-growing industry cloud companies including:
-Veeva
-Guidewire
-Opower
2. MultiNational corporation(MNC)
How many MNCs are there in the world?
889,416.
The World Investment Report 2009, published by
the UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development), states there is a total of 889,416
multinational companies (MNCs) around the world:
82,053 parent corporations and 807,363 affiliates. In
2008, the 100 largest MNCs’™ sales combined
amounted to nearly $8.5 trillion. The top three
MNCs in 2009 (according to UNCTAD) are: Citigroup
Inc., Allianz SE and ABN AMRO holding NV.
3. • 1. Google
• 40,178 employees
www.google.com
Industry: Information Technology // Internet
Service Provider
Headquarters: Mountain View, California,
United States
Listed in: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Switzerland,
India, Japan, Mexico, United States
Employee Growth: 17%
Global Revenues: $50.2 billion
1st Year on a Great Place to Work list: 200
• 3. NetApp
• 12,604 employees
www.netapp.com
Industry: Information Technology //
Storage/Data Management
Headquarters: Sunnyvale, California, United
States
Listed in: Australia, Canada, Switzerland, France,
Germany, Greater China, India, Japan, The
Netherlands, United Kingdom, United States
Employee Growth: 26%
Voluntary Employee Turnover: 9%
Employee Average Age: 40.5
Global Revenues: $6.3 billion
Women in Senior Management: 20%
1st Year on a Great Place to Work list: 2008
• 2. SAS Institute
• 13,732 employees
www.sas.com
Industry: Information Technology // Software
Headquarters: Cary, North Carolina, United
States
Listed in: Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada,
Switzerland, Finland, France, Germany, India,
Italy, Mexico, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain,
Sweden, The Netherlands, United States
Employee Growth: 4%
Voluntary Employee Turnover: 3%
Employee Average Age: 45
Global Revenues: $2.9 billion
Women in Senior Management: 33%
1st Year on a Great Place to Work list: 1993
4. Microsoft
• 100,517 employees
www.microsoft.com
Industry: Information Technology // Software
Headquarters: Redmond, Washington, United
States
Listed in: Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Brazil,
Canada, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Japan,
Mexico, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain,
Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Turkey,
United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United
States
Employee Growth: 4%
Employee Average Age: 37.8
Women in Senior Management: 29%
Global Revenues: $77.8 billion
1st Year on a Great Place to Work list: 1993
2013 World's Best Multinational Workplaces
4. Top 10 companies in the world 2013 by revenue
Rank 10-= TOTAL S.A
• Revenues: US$234,278 million;
change from previous year: 1.2 %
Profits: US$13,743 million; change
from previous year: -19.5 %
Assets: US$226,505 million
Stockholder's equity: US$96,113
million
CEO: Christophe de Margerie
Employees: 97,126
Headquarters: France
• Industry Oil and gas
5. Rank: 9
Volkswage
• Revenues: US$247,613 million;
change from previous year: 11.8%
Profits: US$27,909 million;
change from previous year: 30.3%
Assets: US$408,173 million
Stockholder's equity: US$102,180
million
CEO: Martin Winterkorn
Employees: 549,763
Headquarters: Germany
10. Rank: 4
Sinopec Group
• Revenues: US$428,167 million;
change from previous year: 14.1%
Profits: US$8,221 million; change
from previous year: -13.0%
Assets: US$314,082 million
Stockholder's equity: US$102,165
million
CEO: Fu Chengyu
Employees: 1,015,039
Headquarters: China
• Industry Oil and gas
12. Rank: 2
Wal-Mart
• evenues: US$469,162 million;
change from previous year: 5.0%
Profits: US$16,999 million;
change from previous year: 8.3%
Assets: US$203,105 million
Stockholder's equity: US$76,343
million
CEO: Michael T. Duke
Employees: 2,200,000
Headquarters: U.S.
13. Rank: 1
Royal Dutch Shell
• Revenues: US$481,700 million;
change from previous year: -0.6%
Profits: US$26,592 million;
change from previous year: -
14.0%
Assets: US$360,325 million
Stockholder's equity: US$188,494
million
CEO: Peter R. Voser
Employees: 87,000
Headquarters: Netherlands
14. Top most transparent MNC
Transparency International, a global organization leading the fight against
corruption
• Statoil
• Country: Norway
• Industry: Oil & Gas
• Market value: US$72.26
billion
• Reporting on anti-
corruption programs: 100%
• Organizational
transparency: 100%
• Country-by-country
reporting: 50%
• Rio Tinto
• Country: United
Kingdom/Australia
• Industry: Basic materials
• Market value: US$118.34
billion
• Reporting on anti-
corruption programs: 92%
• Organizational
transparency: 100%
• Country-by-country
reporting: 23.7%
16. The Economic Size of MNCs/economic power of
MNCs
measures the economic magnitude of the world’s largest firms is
increasing relative to the rest of the economy. The amount of
revenue received by the
world’s 200 largest corporations in 1983 was equivalent to 25.0%
of gross world product
but equal to 27.5% in 1999 and 29.3% in 2005. The growth is
proportionally larger
when we consider value added – in 1990 the world’s top 100
MNCs accounted for 3.5%
of world product but accounted for 4.3% in 2000.15 Again using
value added, in 1990
twenty-four of the world’s 100 largest economies were countries
2000 this had risen to twenty-nine.
19. Some Indian MNCs
# 3M India Ltd – Diversified
# ABB Ltd – Electric power &
automation
# Abbott India Ltd –
Pharmaceuticals
# Alstom Projects India Ltd -
Electric Power
# Bata India Ltd - Footwear
Bayer
Some Pakistani MNCs