8 Indian companies on Fortune 500 list

July 11, 2010 05:10 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:20 pm IST - New York

Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries has found its place in the Fortune 500 list. Photo: Rajeev Bhatt

Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries has found its place in the Fortune 500 list. Photo: Rajeev Bhatt

Eight Indian companies, including oil major Indian Oil Corporation and Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries, have made the cut on the list of the world’s 500 largest companies compiled by Fortune.

The league of 500 elite companies for 2010 is topped by U.S. retailer Wal-Mart Stores, followed by oil giant Royal Dutch Shell and another oil major, Exxon Mobil, in that order.

Besides IOC and RIL, the other Indian companies in the list are steel-maker Tata Steel, auto company Tata Motors, oil entities Bharat Petroleum, Hindustan Petroleum and Oil & Natural Gas and public sector bank SBI.

Tata Motors has made an entry into the list for the first time this year, while seven other Indian entities, which were part of the list in the previous year as well, are also featured in this list.

The list also features Citigroup, ArcelorMittal, Pepsico and Motorola, four companies led by people with Indian roots.

IOC has the highest rank of 125 among the featured Indian companies, followed by RIL at the 175th spot, SBI (282), BPCL (307), HPCL (354), Tata Steel (410), ONGC (413) and Tata Motors (442).

According to the magazine, IOC had revenues to the tune of $ 54.28 billion, RIL $ 41.08 billion, SBI $ 28.21 billion, BPCL $ 26.59 billion, HPCL $ 23.88 billion, Tata Steel $ 21.58 billion, ONGC $ 21.44 billion and Tata Motors $ 19.5 billion.

Vikram Pandit-led Citigroup is at 33rd place, with revenues of $ 108.78 billion, while NRI billionaire L.N. Mittal’s ArcelorMittal bagged the 99th position with revenues worth $ 65.11 billion.

Pepsico, run by Indira Nooyi, was ranked at 171st place with revenues of $ 43.23 billion and Sanjay Jha’s Motorola is at the 391st place, with $ 22.06 billion in revenues.

Interestingly, American companies have cornered 139 seats in the list, followed by Japan with 71, and then China, with 46 seats. This year, there are 12 Fortune Global 500 companies run by women, compared to 13 last year.

The magazine said that Wal-Mart Stores had revenues to the tune of $ 408. 21 billion, while Royal Dutch Shell and ExxonMobil raked in revenues worth $ 285.12 billion and $ 284.65 billion, respectively.

Others on the list include BP at fourth place, followed by Toyota Motor (5th), Japan Post Holdings (6th), Sinopec (7th), State Grid (8th), AXA (9th) and China National Petroleum (10th).

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