Annual listing by Forbes magazine of the largest U.S. Publicly-owned corporations ranked four ways: by sales, assets, profits, and market value. See also Fortune 500.
| Financial & Investment Dictionary: Forbes 500 |
Annual listing by Forbes magazine of the largest U.S. Publicly-owned corporations ranked four ways: by sales, assets, profits, and market value. See also Fortune 500.
| 5min Related Video: Forbes 500 |
| Wikipedia: Forbes 500 |
The Forbes 500 was an annual listing of the top 500 American companies produced by Forbes Magazine. The list was calculated by combining five factors: sales, profits, assets, market value, and employees. The list was last issued in March 2003 (based on 2002 data for the companies); it is no longer calculated each year and has been replaced by the Forbes Global 2000, which includes non-U.S. companies but is calculated on a similar basis as the old Forbes 500 (although it does not include employees).
The Forbes 500 was created to answer the question: What are the largest companies in the US?
The challenge is to decide how to define "large".
One way might be to simply add up the amount of stuff a corporation owns - how much money it has in the bank, how many buildings it owns, how much equipment, etc. Overall, these are called "assets". However, this is very misleading, as many companies do not own, but rent or lease most of their equipment and buildings. Most importantly, money owed to banks is called an "asset" of the bank, and by this measure alone, banks would be ranked as the largest companies by far.
Another method might be to look at how much profit a company makes. But this would rank a company like Fannie Mae, which has only around 9000 employees and is essentially purely intangible, as one hundred times bigger than a company like General Motors which has hundreds of thousands of employees and many factories and other fixed assets.
Another method might be to look at the revenue earned by the company. This is how the Fortune 500 ranks companies. This method is heavily biased towards distributors such as Walmart, which may have a high volume of sales but may be operating on very thin profit margins.
Another method might be to look at the market capitalization of the company, that is, the price to buy the entire company. However, this price is not set by any rule, but by how the people value the company and its prospects. Thus, in the late nineties, Cisco Systems would have been the biggest company by this measure. When the dot-com bubble crashed, Cisco's perceived value changed dramatically.
Recognizing such issues, Forbes used a balanced mix of these factors to rank companies.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Industrial (finance term) | |
| Cell Genesys, Inc. (Public Company) | |
| Gilbane, Inc. |
| The forbes 500 is the annual listing of the top 500 what? Read answer... | |
| How do you pronounce Forbes? Read answer... | |
| Where was forbes field? Read answer... |
| What is the answer for Penn Forbes examination 0506088? | |
| Who was Ida Forbes? | |
| What do forbes eat? |
Copyrights:
![]() | Financial & Investment Dictionary. Dictionary of Finance and Investment Terms. Copyright © 2006 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Forbes 500". Read more |
Mentioned in