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10 Companies With the Highest Total Share Values

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You might say that the best way to grade companies would be based on their revenue or total assets, since they seem quite easy to understand. Unfortunately, this method doesn‘t work as well with giant, multi-billion dollar companies. Stock shares are by far the best way to judge them.

The total value of all shares of a company can be calculated by multiplying share prices by the number of stocks owned by investors. This number gives a pretty accurate value of the company, since it represents the value of all investments in the company. In this list we present the 10 companies with the highest total value of all outstanding shares that are publicly traded. While there are companies that far exceed the value of companies in this list, they‘re either private or owned by the state.

10. Berkshire Hathaway Inc.: $227 billion

Berkshire Hathaway Inc

Best known for being controlled by Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway Inc., located in Omaha, Nebraska, is a company that owns and maintains other companies. These include Dairy Queen, Fruit of the Loom, GEICO and many others. The company also owns 50% of Heinz and has invested sizable amounts into American Express, Coca-Cola, Wells Fargo and IBM. Berkshire Hathaway‘s share value reached $200.00 a piece for the first time in August last year and has been growing by 20% annually ever since. Forbes Global 2000 by Forbes magazine ranks Berkshire Hathaway Inc. as the 5th largest public company with revenue of over $180 billion and market capitalization of $227 billion in 2013.

9. Walmart: $246.8 billion

Walmart

Walmart is one of the best known multi-billion dollar multinational companies, for it is the largest retail chain on the planet with over two million employees worldwide. It‘s also the largest private sector employer in the world. The company has already made over $475 billion this year alone. It‘s still owned by the founder Sam Walton‘s family ever since he started it in 1962. Walmart‘s market capitalization has reached $250 billion in 2014, with shares valued around $76 and rising.

8. General Electric: $257.2 billion

General Electric

This legendary company is the only one remaining from the original 12 listed on the Dow Jones Industrial Average to be publicly traded to this day. With it‘s revenue of $146 billion, assets at $650 billion and market capitalization reaching $257 billion, this company rightfully takes it‘s place as the 4th largest company in The Forbes 2000 and 26th largest according to Fortune 500. Though General Electric had trouble in 2013, they‘re likely to make a return to the top in the near future.

7. Hoffmann-La Roche: $258.5 billion

Hoffmann-La Roche

Hoffman-La Roche is based in Switzerland, but has locations in Europe, North and South America, Asia, Africa and the Middle East. This pharmaceutical company with pharmaceutical and diagnostic research divisions, owns subsidiary companies Chugai Pharmaceuticals, Vantena and Ganetech. This pharmaceutical giant has grown by about $16 billion since last year and continues to command a bigger and bigger part of their industry.

6. Wells Fargo: $261.2 billion

Wells Fargo Reports Quarterly Earnings Rise 13 Percent

This bank has solidified it‘s position as one of top banks in the world with 70 million clients over 35 different countries being serviced in 100.000 establishments. Wells Fargo proudly and rightly calls itself one of the ,,Big Four“ banks in the U.S. . Based on market capitalization of $261.2 billion, this bank takes the number one spot in the world, while being the fourth largest bank in U.S. based on total assets, which have reached a whopping $1.5 trillion. In 2013, Wells Fargo gained profit of $21 billion and continues to keep it‘s place as one of the top banks in the post-2008 crisis market.

5. Johnson & Johnson: $302 billion

Johnson & Johnson

This company is responsible for popular consumer brands such as Tylenol, Band-Aid, Neutrogena Skin Care, Acuvue contact lenses, Clean and Clear and, of course, Johnson & Johnson baby products. As if that‘s not enough, they have a well developed pharmaceutical division, which produces medicines to treat tuberculosis, Crohn‘s disease and Colitis. This division alone racks up 30% of the total $71.3 billion of company revenue. Johnson & Johnson‘s market capitalization is over $300 billion, with market shares going for $107.10 a piece.

4. Microsoft: $382.4 billion

Microsoft

This company is well known for it‘s huge innovations in the computer market, and billionaire employees, so it‘s no surprise that Microsoft is on this list. Founded by Bill Gates in 1972, the company floated for initial public offering in 1986, so there‘s no doubt that this company has played a huge role in developing the industry they‘re in, and billions of people are using one of their many operating systems for PCs today. Trying not to fall off in this highly competitive market, Microsoft has tried diversifying into home gaming and smart phone fields, with varying success. With all their ups and downs, the company still reported total revenue of over $88 billion and assets valued at $172.38 billion in 2014, and has a $382.4 billion market capitalization.

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3. Google: $390.3 billion

Google

It‘s hard to belive that this company, with humble begginings as a search engine a mere decade ago, now essentially holds a monopoly on the Internet. Having branched-out to Gmail, Google+, Android devices and owning Youtube, Google surprisingly still earns most of its revenue through AdWords. The revenue has grown about $10 billion from 2012 to 2013. Add to that market capitalization of $390.3 billion and total assets reaching $110 billion last year, and this technology giant has nowhere to go but up.

2. Exxon Mobil: $407 billion

File photo of  the Belgian headquarters of oil giant ExxonMobil in Machelen

Irving Texas‘s Exxon Mobil is the largest gas and oil company traded publicly in the world, providing 3% of total world‘s oil. It claims it‘s title of the most profitable company in the world with total assets of $346 billion, 2013 revenues of $491 billion and market capitalization of $407 billion. Despite the many controversies of oil spills and business practices, which almost come naturally with the oil business, this company is one of the most powerful in the world.

1. Apple Inc: $603.3 billion

Apple Inc

Without a doubt, Apple gets the number one spot on the list. This company probably has the biggest brand loyalty and brand recognition, with billions of consumers lining up at launch events to buy every new Apple product, despite it sometimes not meeting expectations, like the iPhone 6. It‘s debatable if Apple deserves their consumer loyalty, but what‘s for sure is that it brings in huge profits annually. Shadowed only by Samsung in total revenue for a technology company, Apple‘s revenue was $170 billion in 2013, total assets reach $207 billion and market capitalization of $603.3 billion is something to behold of, since it‘s the biggest in the world and earns Apple this spot on the list. Apple’s founder was Steve Jobs.

Started with Net Worth Post in September 2014. Before that, Senior Writer at Creative Horizons. Earned a Journalism degree from Northwestern University.

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Billionaires

ExxonMobil Net Worth

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The largest company in the world by market capital valuation is now ExxonMobil, a gas and oil multi-national conglomerate formed in 1999, with headquarters in Irving, Texas USA, which was actually the brainchild of founder – and a very familiar person in the ranks big business and ‘the richest’ – John D. Rockefeller back in the late 1800s, himself being one of the richest people to ever live.

So just what is the net worth of ExxonMobil? Of course the net valuation of the company varies almost daily, according to the stock market prices of gas and oil in particular, but as of early 2017 it stands at $365 billion, although it has been as high as $450 billion, now constantly vying with Apple and more recently Alphabet (Google) as the highest valued company in the world.

ExxonMobil Net Worth $365 Billion

Most importantly, ExxonMobil is ranked by Fortune 500 as the second most profitable world company, regardless of recent volatility in oil prices; its revenue has apparently diminished little, still estimated to be the world’s 8th largest. Probably as equally important, the company’s shares remain sort-after by investors – as a publicly traded company it’s the fifth largest by market capitalization.

How did ExxonMobil grow into such a highly-valued company? The answer lies initially in the discovery, expansion of production, refinement, control of distribution, and sales of oil and its derivatives, beginning in 1870, promoted most energetically by John D. Rockefeller. Originally the company was called the Standard Oil Company of Ohio, soon amalgamating with the New York and New Jersey arms of Standard Oil in 1882 to form Standard Oil Trust. However, the Sherman Anti-Trust Law of 1892 decreed that the company had to be broken-up – it was too successful, too powerful in the oil industry, which presumably meant little competition at the points of sale.

The anti-trust process actually took nearly 20 years; one of the resulting 34 individual companies became Socony – an acronym for Standard Oil Company of New York – which subsequently became Mobil, and another became Jersey Standard, later Exxon, the two much later amalgamating into the conglomerate we know today. (‘The more things change, the more they stay the same!?’)

However, even then, not to be ‘outlawed’ or sidelined, several of the companies went about expanding by acquiring assets internationally, thus extending their overall influence on the market – the US legal authorities had little influence over companies domiciled outside their jurisdiction, even though controlled from within the US. Asia, including China, was incorporated into the New York company, and Canada into New Jersey; other companies established in the UK, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy and Belgium were also under the auspices of ‘Standard Oil’, so that by the early 1900s, Standard Oil was collectively stronger than ever.

Jersey Standard moved into South America, in Colombia in the form of Tropical Oil Company in 1920, and in Venezuela of Standard Oil Company (1921), and Creole Petroleum Company (1928). Oil was also found, and subsequently exploited and refined, in Indonesia, and in conjunction with Vacuum Oil Company – an early industry leader – effectively controlled the oil industry from East Africa to the south Pacific area.

Socony concentrated more on domestic production, including transportation by pipeline through the acquisition of Magnolia, very significant given the rising importance of the vehicle industry, but also ventured into Iraq through an association with the Turkish Petroleum Company in the late 1920s. By the late ‘40s, an interest had been acquired in Saudi Arabia – an area with the world’s largest known oil reserves – through Aramco (Arab-American Oil Company).

As can easily be seen, the various elements of what became ExxonMobil were way ahead of the field in the oil industry, especially at a time when usages of oil and refined products were approaching a peak.

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Several name changes and amalgamations occurred during the ‘50s and ‘60s, and acquisitions continued into further primary sources, including of coal and the refining of this mineral into various products. Libya became another important oil source, but concurrently Socony and Jersey both branched out into solar and nuclear power, the former briefly as its usefulness was seen as too long-term to be profitable, and mining and processing of uranium ore began in the early ‘70s.

ALSO In the early ‘70s, oil shale deposits were also acquired and developed, including in Australia, obviously with an eye to the long-term future. This was also the time when Exxon was adopted as the company’s over-riding name, and became very visible at points of sale. Consolidation was the order of the day, but Mobil European Gas was established too, followed by amalgamation with British Petroleum (BP), so becoming one of the big players in Europe for oil and natural gas.

Finally, in 1999 both the European Commission and US Federal Trade Commission approved the merger of Exxon – at that time the largest energy company in the world – and Mobil, the second biggest gas and oil company in the US. One may well wonder what happened to the anti-trust laws implemented a century earlier? Well, Mobil had to divest itself of BP, its share of the German Aral company, and MEGAS. In the US, almost 2500 gas stations had to be sold, as well as refineries in California, New England and Washington D.C., plus Mobil’s interest in the Trans-Alaska Pipeline among other lesser assets.

However, ExxonMobil certainly did not stagnate, and more recent operations have seen sales to franchisees of gas stations in the US, cessation of coal-mining, but still further oil exploration in Central Asia – apparently linked with the interest of CEO Rex Tillerson, now nominated as US Secretary of State – plus an arrangement he allegedly concluded with the Russian company Rosneft, but stymied somewhat by sanctions imposed on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine. Interests in the Middle East (Sudan, Syria, Iran) have also continued to develop – not, supposedly, in contravention of various sanctions imposed.

Clearly there is power in strength, both commercially and politically, and ExxonMobil is one of the prime examples – to coin a phrase, the company is ‘too big to fall/fail’; that has been quoted before, but not always accurately.

Significantly, there have been many accidents particularly involving oil spillage, eg the oil tanker Exxon Valdez running aground in Alaska in 1989, which eventually cost the company $500 million in damages, apart from the cost of the clean-up; but the penalties of such incidents the company is easily financial enough to withstand. Most such cases have occurred within the USA.

Regardless, ExxonMobil remains a giant in the power production industry, if perhaps waning a little as reliance on oil and its derivatives diminishes somewhat around the developed world at least. However, given the company’s wider interests aside from oil, there is every possibility that its financial strength may well see it being a significant player in various other sources of power in the near future.

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Billionaires

Intel Net Worth

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Intel Corporation should be well known to anyone who has access to a computer, as by value it is the world’s biggest manufacturer of microprocessors – the ‘engine’ for many computers – and is the supplier of these and other parts to such companies as Dell, Hewlett Packard and Lenovo (formerly IBM), not to mention Apple.

So just what is the net worth of Intel? Authoritative sources estimate that the value of Intel is now over $150 billion, as of early 2017, with almost two-thirds of its current $55 billion total revenue coming from sales of hardware components for use in laptop, notebook and desktop computers.

Intel Net Worth $150 Billion

Intel is a technology company, now multi-national, as it has expanded considerably since its foundation in the now familiarly-named Silicon Valley, California USA in 1968 by Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore. These two were pioneers in the development of semiconductors, and were joined early by engineer and businessman Andrew Grove – an émigré Hungarian – who is widely credited with the business management and subsequent growth of the company until well into the 2000s. (The name ‘Intel’ was formulated from integrated and electronics.)

The company went public within a couple of years, raising an impressive amount at that time of $6.8 million, over $23 per share. For the first decade of its existence, the company concentrated on bipolar 64-bit static random-access memory (SRAM), double the speed of competitors products, then the bipolar 1024-bit read-only memory (ROM), followed by the silicon gate SRAM chip, the 256-bit 1101. Improvements in and expansion of the range of products during the 1970s, plus modernised manufacturing processes meant that Intel’s business grew exponentially during the 1970s, but still concentrating on memory devices. The net worth of the company as well as its profits increased significantly.

Although the microprocessor had been created in the early ‘70s, there was no significant market until a decade later, when PCs became more widely in demand, and in any case when Japanese competition in memory products had also considerably increased. Moore and Noyce decided to concentrate on the further development of a micro-processor, which miniaturized the CPU of a computer, enabling much smaller machines to perform calculations formerly the province of only significantly larger machines.

Supplying major companies such as IBM with microprocessors for PCs, and eventually laptops and tablets, saw a rapid growth in Intel’s business during the 1990s, and then into the new millennium. Of course competition, and consequent legal accusations over intellectual property rights and industrial espionage ensued, plus converse arguments over anti-trust issues, but Intel still managed to stay at the head of the field in the development of micro-processing, and therefore profitability saw the company’s net worth at least maintained.

Intel undoubtedly regained its pre-eminent position in 2006, when its Core microarchitecture was released, to general critical acclamation, as the product was a huge advance in processor performance. This was followed in 2008 by Penryn micro-architecture, and later that year, Nehalem architecture, both positively received and maintaining Intel’s leadership in micro-processing.

However, Intel has also spread its wings somewhat in recent years. Among other acquisitions, it purchased computer security technology company McAfee in 2010, and in the same year Infineon Technologies, integrating Intel’s silicon chips with its wireless modem. In 2011 the specialist network switches company Fulcrum Microsystems was bought, and in 2012, a stake in ASML Holding, to assist Intel in research into wafer technology and extreme ultra-violet lithography. Other acquisitions have included such companies as – or parts of – Indisys, Password Box, Vuzix, Lantiq, and more recently design company Altera for over $16 billion.

From a business perspective, the company still produces three-quarters of its products in the US, but 75% of its revenue come from overseas. Additionally, companies such as Achronix, Microsemi, Tabula, Netronome and Panasonic are utilising leased excess Intel manufacturing capacity for their own products.

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Intel’s headquarters are still in California, but its largest facility is in Washington County, Oregon, employing 18,600 workers, the biggest employer in the state and the same in New Mexico. 10,000 are employed in Arizona, and complexes are also located in California, Colorado, Massachusetts, Texas, Washington and Utah. Internationally, Intel facilities are now in 63 countries, including China, India, Russia, Israel, Argentina, Vietnam, Costa Rica, Malaysia and Ireland.

Finally, in what can be seen as a philanthropic effort, Intel is a member of the Alliance for Affordable Internet (A4AI), which also includes Google, Facebook, and Microsoft, the aim of which is to make internet access more affordable worldwide, as currently just 31% of people in developing countries are online –with the aim of reducing costs to under 5% of family income.

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Companies

Net Worth Of The World’s Richest Families

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The richest individuals around the world are constantly in the headlines, partly out of fascination for just how much they are worth – amounts unimaginable to the average person, regardless that 80% of ‘the richest’ are actually self-made billionaires. However, during this period of stock markets’ volatility in early 2016, they are just as newsworthy for how much they can lose, or gain, in one day, which can markedly effect their ranking on the ‘richest list’.

Not so well-known are families with accumulated net worth which puts them close to the aforementioned richest individuals, perhaps unsurprisingly if there are three, four or five relatively ‘super-rich’ relatives who pool their energies, business interests and their net worth. Many are indeed consistently linked in a family business or conglomerate, as can be seen in this list which authoritative sources estimate comprise the richest in the world, share markets allowing! Very few are built on ‘new’ money, but mostly the result of steady growth over, in some cases, hundreds of years.

10. Cox family Net worth: $34.5 billion


[one_half]coxss family[/one_half][one_half_last]From: USA

James M. Cox was firstly a social reforming politician, being twice elected Governor of Ohio, but also built a considerable business empire in the media and communications industries beginning before the turn of the 20th century, so now well over100 years old. Now under the control of James’ daughter Anne Cox Chambers and his grandchildren James Cox Kennedy – current chair of Cox Enterprises – and Blair Parry-Okeden who are all heirs to a considerable fortune, the company is now expanding its interests into the automotive industry.[/one_half_last]

9. Bernard Arnault & family Net worth: $37.7 billion


[one_half]Bernard Arnault33[/one_half][one_half_last]From: France

World renowned names Moet Hennessy and Louis Vuitton (LVMH) are just two of the business interests of the Arnault family, which also has interests in retail, yachts and web companies as well as in Christian Dior, a prominent fashion brand. CEO and chairman is still Bernard, but Executive VP at LVMH is daughter Delphine, and CEO of Berluti, a subsidiary of LMVH, is his son Antoine. The company made initial inroads into business through real estate, but smart investing saw it reach its current prominent position in several industries.

Bernard Arnault Net Worth

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8. Liliane Bettencourt & family Net worth: $42.7 billion


[one_half]Liliane Bettencourt333[/one_half][one_half_last]From: France

The French are certainly still one of the fore-runners in the world of cosmetics and perfumes, as proven by their leading lengevity in the industry. The world-dominating cosmetic company L’Oreal is now run by Liliane Bettencourt’s daughter Francoise and grandson Jean-Victor Meyers, but she is still the richest woman in the world and principal shareholder of the company her father Eugene founded in 1907. She only retired from active involvement in 2011, aged 89.

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7. Cargill-MacMillan family Net worth: $45 billion


[one_half]Cargill-MacMillan family13[/one_half][one_half_last]From: USA

Cargil Inc. outranks Koch enterprises in being the largest private company in the USA, with and 88% of it still owned by family members, in fact currently boasting 14 billionaires. William Wallace Cargill founded the company based on grain storage in 1865, which was split among his four children when he died in 1909. The company’s interests now include trading commodities as well as food products. In-laws the MacMillans are billionaires, the total wealth of the expanded family being an estimate because of the privacy attendant to the conglomerate.[/one_half_last]

6. Carlos Slim Helú & family Net worth $77.1 billion


[one_half]Carlos Slim Helú & family33[/one_half][one_half_last]From: Mexico

Son Carlos is now the chairman of Grupo Carso, and with three siblings is ready to take over completely the conglomerate built-up by the second richest person in the world. The ‘Warren Buffett of Mexico’, Carlos Slim Helú is so important to Mexico – accounting for 40% of the listings on the Mexican stock exchange – made from scratch largely from his development of telecoms, that there is a strong chance of the Mexican economy collapsing if the stock exchange took a real dive.

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Carlos Slim Helu Net Worth

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5. Mars family Net worth: $80 billion


[one_half]The Mars Family51[/one_half][one_half_last]From: USA

Mars Bars and M & Ms were developed more than 80 years ago, and are still going strong. Franklin Mars obviously knew his candy, and the money to be made out of it. As with other rich families, the family and the business are still private. Franklin founded the business in 1911, and son Forrest Sr. joined the company in 1929; children, Forrest Jr., Jacqueline and John continue to own the whole of Mars Inc., which now also makes pet foods as well as pasta sauces, and which means that they are now worth almost $30 billion each.

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4. Koch family Net worth: $89 billion


[one_half]multinational corporation22[/one_half][one_half_last]From: USA

In the country with the world’s largest GDP, Koch Industries is now the second-largest privately-held company in the USA. Charles and David Koch had the nous to buy-out their two other brothers in the early 1980s, and now control the oil and refining company founded by their father Fred C. Koch in 1940. Subsidiary interests in finance, manufacturing, trading and real estate have ensured the continued growth of this multinational corporation, with the brothers net worth now approaching $50 billion each.

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3. Walton family Net worth: $152 billion


[one_half]walton family3[/one_half][one_half_last]From: USA

Jim, Rob, and Alice are direct heirs of Sam and James Walton, who had the foresight to establish Walmart in the southern USA in 1962. Christy is the widow of his son John who died in a ‘plane crash in 2005, and with her children the six Waltons control 54% of the shares of the world’s largest retailer. The company’s revenue regularly hits $500 billion, through 11,500 stores in 28 countries, so the present owners sum value is usually over $160 billion – share market machinations permitting!

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2. The House of Saud Net worth: $1.4 trillion


[one_half]The House of Saud Net worth1[/one_half][one_half_last]From: Saudi Arabia

The al-Saud family have been in control of at least part of the Arabian peninsular since the early 1700s, and like the Rothschilds, their wealth is now distributed through so many family members that the total can only be estimated. Saudi Arabia is now run as an absolute monarchy, effectively established under the patronage of the British following the break-up of the Ottoman empire after World War One. Of course their main source of wealth is oil, the price of which has a very significant effect on the al-Saud family wealth, and the budget of the country! Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud has been king since early 2015.

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1. Rothschild family $350 billion – $700 trillion


[one_half]Rothschild family2[/one_half][one_half_last]From: Germany (originally)

The name itself is fascinating, but more so because the family is now so widespread, with all their wealth effectively ‘private’, so the total of their net worth is always open to conjecture. However, since Mayer Amschel Rothschild established his banking company in Frankfurt, now Germany, in the 1700s, and distributed his five sons to the five centres of European finance, the family has had a finger in virtually every pie – business, industry, enterprise, exploration, war – over the last 250 years. Their influence has been such that descendents have been elevated to royal rank in countries such as Austria and the UK. The family fortune is therefore only an estimate, but even at the lower end it is still extremely impressive!

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