Fortune 500

The Fortune 500 is an annual list compiled and published by Fortune magazine that ranks 500 of the largest United States corporations by total revenue for their respective fiscal years.

The list includes publicly held companies, along with privately held companies for which revenues are publicly available. The concept of the Fortune 500 was created by Edgar P. Smith, a Fortune editor, and the first list was published in 1955. The Fortune 500 is more commonly used than its subset Fortune 100 or superset Fortune 1000.

Fortune 500
The July 24, 2006 issue of Fortune, featuring its Fortune 500 list

History

The Fortune 500, created by Edgar P. Smith, was first published in 1955. The original top ten companies were General Motors, Jersey Standard, U.S. Steel, General Electric, Esmark, Chrysler, Armour, Gulf Oil, Mobil, and DuPont.

Methodology

The original Fortune 500 was limited to companies whose revenues were derived from manufacturing, mining, and energy exploration. At the same time, Fortune published companion "Fortune 50" lists of the 50 largest commercial banks (ranked by assets), utilities (ranked by assets), life insurance companies (ranked by assets), retailers (ranked by gross revenues) and transportation companies (ranked by revenues). Fortune magazine changed its methodology in 1994 to include service companies. With the change came 291 new entrants to the famous list including three in the Top 10. There is a lag in creating the list, so for example, the 2019 Fortune 500 is based on each company's financial years ending in late 2018 (most commonly, on December 31), or early 2019.[citation needed]

Influence

As of 2020, the Fortune 500 companies represent approximately two-thirds of the United States' gross domestic product with approximately $14.2 trillion in revenue, $1.2 trillion in profits, and $20.4 trillion in total market value. These revenue figures also account for approximately 18% of the gross world product. The companies collectively employ a total of 29.2 million people worldwide, or nearly 0.4% of the world's total population.

Overview

The following is the list of top 20 companies.

Fortune 500 list of 2023
Rank Company State Industry Revenue in USD
1 Walmart Fortune 500  Arkansas General merchandisers $611.2 billion
2 Amazon Fortune 500  Washington Internet service and retailing $513.9 billion
3 ExxonMobil Fortune 500  Texas Petroleum refining $413.6 billion
4 Apple Fortune 500  California Technology $394.2 billion
5 UnitedHealth Group Fortune 500  Minnesota Health care: insurance and managed care $324.1 billion
6 CVS Health Fortune 500  Rhode Island Health care: pharmacy and other services $322.4 billion
7 Berkshire Hathaway Fortune 500  Nebraska Insurance: property and casualty (stock) $302 billion
8 Alphabet Fortune 500  California Internet services and retailing $282.8 billion
9 McKesson Fortune 500  Texas Wholesalers: health care $263.9 billion
10 Chevron Corporation Fortune 500  California Energy, oil and gas $246.2 billion
11 Cencora Fortune 500  Pennsylvania Wholesalers: health care $238.5 billion
12 Costco Fortune 500  Washington Wholesalers $226.95 billion
13 Microsoft Fortune 500  Washington Technology $198.2 billion
14 Cardinal Health Fortune 500  Ohio Healthcare $181.364 billion
15 Cigna Fortune 500  Connecticut Managed care, insurance $180.5 billion
16 Marathon Petroleum Fortune 500  Ohio Petroleum $180 billion
17 Phillips 66 Fortune 500  Texas Energy, oil and gas $175.7 billion
18 Valero Energy Fortune 500  Texas Energy, oil and gas $171.1 billion
19 Ford Motor Company Fortune 500  Michigan Automotive $158 billion
20 The Home Depot Fortune 500  Georgia Retail $157.4 billion

Breakdown by state

This is the list of the top 18 states with the most companies within the Fortune 500 as of 2021.

Breakdown by state
Rank State Companies
1 Fortune 500  California 53
Fortune 500  New York 53
3 Fortune 500  Texas 49
4 Fortune 500  Illinois 28
5 Fortune 500  Ohio 25
6 Fortune 500  Pennsylvania 24
7 Fortune 500  Virginia 22
8 Fortune 500  Florida 20
9 Fortune 500  Georgia 19
10 Fortune 500  Massachusetts 18
Fortune 500  Minnesota 18
12 Fortune 500  Michigan 17
13 Fortune 500  New Jersey 16
14 Fortune 500  Connecticut 14
15 Fortune 500  North Carolina 12
16 Fortune 500  Colorado 10
Fortune 500  Missouri 10
Fortune 500  Tennessee 10

See also

References

Tags:

Fortune 500 HistoryFortune 500 MethodologyFortune 500 InfluenceFortune 500 OverviewFortune 500Fortune (magazine)Fortune 1000Joint-stock companyPrivately held companyPublicly held companyUnited States

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