TIWN
New Delhi, Aug 2 (IANS) The Fortune Global 500 companies experienced an overall 5 per cent drop in revenues in 2020, the largest since 2016, while their aggregate profits were down 20 per cent, the biggest decline since 2009.
Last year's list contained six airlines; with their revenues down 60 per cent in 2020, not a single one made it to the new list. The Global 500 shrank a little over the past year. After reaching a record high of $33.3 trillion in the 2020 edition, total revenues for the world's biggest companies fell 4.8 per cent to $31.7 trillion this year. Fortune said the culprit, of course, was Covid-19, which slammed huge swaths of the global economy as countries went into lockdown mode. Cumulative sales in both the energy and automotive sectors, for example, fell by more than 10 per cent. And all six of the airlines that appeared in last year's ranking failed to make the cut this year. Despite the setbacks, the heft of the Global 500 remains formidable: The combined sales of the companies on the list are equal to more than one-third of global GDP, Fortune said. This is the second year in a row in which mainland China (including Hong Kong) has had more companies on the list than the US.
- With April series having expired, expect markets to turn volatile
- IMF expects India to rev up global growth as China falters, backs Modi government's economic policies
- realme set to shake up market: Launching fastest entry-level 5G smartphone 'C65' under Rs 10k
- India's industrial production accelerates to 5.7pc in Feb
- India records 17 pc jump to become 4th largest exporter of digital services: WTO report