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GM slips to number four on the Fortune 500

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 by admin

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General Motors has fallen once again on the Fortune 500 list of America’s top-grossers. The General had once stood strong atop the rankings, having fallen from the top spot in 2001 at which time Wal-Mart took over. For the last few years, Exxon-Mobil and the big box retailer have battled for the first two positions on the list with GM claiming third place. This year, soaring demands for energy have allowed Chevron to nudge past GM on its way to a third place finish. General Motors, at number four on the list, is bracketed by another energy company, ConocoPhillips, at number five. Ford finds itself sitting at number seven, the same as last year.

Fortune’s 500 list is based on company revenue, not profit. If profit were the main criteria, GM and Ford wouldn’t be making any appearances on the list at all. Exxon Mobil would easily claim the top spot as the most profitable company around with GM posting nearly as much in losses over the same period of time.

[Source: Fortune]

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Apple makes a nice jump on the Fortune 500

Monday, April 21st, 2008 by admin

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Apple’s headed straight to the top with a bullet — they went from 159 to 121 in last year’s Fortune 500 ranking, and this year, they’ve pushed their way up to 103. On the list of the “20 most profitable tech companies,” they are solidly at number eight — Fortune says that the introduction of the iPhone and “record sales of Mac computers” have Apple on a rocket trajectory.

Of course, Google’s sitting upstairs at number 7, and you-know-who (not the Harry Potter villain, but close) is up at number one.

But yes, there’s no question that Apple has really been hitting it out of the park lately, and considering the future (the fruits of the SDK, another possible iPhone iteration, and whatever else they’re brewing up in Cupertino), the trends will continue.

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