Top 10 Largest Companies by Market Cap (1979-2021)

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2021
  • This video will compare the largest companies in the world by market cap from 1979 to 2021.
    Market capitalization is the market value of a publicly traded company, calculated by multiplying the share price by the number of total shares. Private companies are not included in this video.
    Datasources: Forbes, Fortune500, YCharts, individual company’s annual reports
    Music: Carnival Overture by Dvorak

Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @RankingCharts
    @RankingCharts  Před 2 lety +547

    This video will compare the largest companies in the world by market cap from 1979 to 2021. Enjoy!

    • @user-yx4yc2vk8k
      @user-yx4yc2vk8k Před 2 lety +8

      Awesome keep it up
      Note: “We want a video about the countries that have won the most Nobel Prize, and thank you

    • @johnmanno2052
      @johnmanno2052 Před 2 lety +6

      Excellent, and terrifying, video. Thank you for the musical choice. Orders of magnitude better than what one usually must mute on CZcams.

    • @adamkuzee3213
      @adamkuzee3213 Před 2 lety +2

      Hi RankingCharts, could you share where this data is from?

    • @larryc1616
      @larryc1616 Před 2 lety +12

      You forgot Tesla is also a $1T company in 2021

    • @lavoieeric
      @lavoieeric Před 2 lety

      please update :)

  • @QuantumBraced
    @QuantumBraced Před 2 lety +2552

    Until 2010: Oil and finance
    After 2010: Tech

    • @chewinggum5550
      @chewinggum5550 Před 2 lety +198

      Saudi Aramco is an oil company but yea most of them are Tech

    • @kennethkho7165
      @kennethkho7165 Před 2 lety +87

      Oil and finance and telecommunications

    • @robguevara7
      @robguevara7 Před 2 lety +49

      And drugs and cigars

    • @heins6157
      @heins6157 Před 2 lety +35

      Shows China not very innovative😸😸😸

    • @southernhippie9058
      @southernhippie9058 Před 2 lety +48

      Because tech is the future and oil is slowly being replaced by non fossil fuels in many countries

  • @riesjart3874
    @riesjart3874 Před 2 lety +3535

    Shell making sure the top 10 isnt just American companies for like half the video lol

    • @fireshadowdark5462
      @fireshadowdark5462 Před 2 lety +208

      Go Netherlands!!

    • @kreuger2027
      @kreuger2027 Před 2 lety +119

      @@fireshadowdark5462 British-Dutch

    • @yourcasual_dude23
      @yourcasual_dude23 Před 2 lety +10

      But what about BP?

    • @sebys1414
      @sebys1414 Před 2 lety +23

      @@yourcasual_dude23 british

    • @thomasklinge7691
      @thomasklinge7691 Před 2 lety +60

      @@kreuger2027 I'd say that Dutch Royal Shell would be called Dutch-British more, unless you're talking about recent events

  • @skipbechtold3735
    @skipbechtold3735 Před rokem +4

    That was super cool, thanks for putting it together.

  • @andyo5220
    @andyo5220 Před rokem +2

    I love these videos. Fascinating.

  • @erickrobertson7089
    @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety +3309

    I see that in 1987 Japanese companies really take off and dominate this list for a short while. I think this was preceeded by an agreement to devalue the dollar relative to other major currencies via the Plaza Accord of 1985. This is also shortly before there was an asset bubble in Japan which resulted in something like stagflation.

    • @nanilama7016
      @nanilama7016 Před 2 lety +35

      Obviously bcz of US policies in there...

    • @riser7795
      @riser7795 Před 2 lety +63

      the Plaza Accord was a very sinister move by the US that totally killed off the Japanese economy. Even till date its economy is still suffering from the aftermath.

    • @erickrobertson7089
      @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety +119

      @@riser7795 The same could be said for the US economy as jobs and manufacturing left the US to Japan, Hong Kong, the other Asian "Tiger" economies and most recently, China, throughout the 1990's to now.

    • @CoolMan-ig1ol
      @CoolMan-ig1ol Před 2 lety +71

      @@riser7795 well, US was affected by the previous system and after 1985 as there was no need for usa to subsidize Japan due to cold war ending it was made equal.

    • @erickrobertson7089
      @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety +14

      @Arieta These figures are a bit dated (2017) but I think they are interesting nonetheless:
      JAPAN DEBT VS GDP 236%
      US DEBT VS GDP 103%
      I'm sure given the recent spending of the past several years, this has changed significantly, especially for the USA. It reminds me of an old saying... "A rising tide does not lift all boats." If this is or is not true I do not know but I would bet a falling tide lowers them all.

  • @ojasaklecha
    @ojasaklecha Před 2 lety +2026

    Countries that dominated the entire chart atleast once in this video -
    1. USA
    2. Japan

  • @TheRealStructurer
    @TheRealStructurer Před rokem

    I did enjoy! Thanks for sharing 👍🏼

  • @Trad63
    @Trad63 Před rokem +1

    Excellent work!!!

  • @Sempuukyaku
    @Sempuukyaku Před 2 lety +884

    Microsoft stays winning. Never left the top 10 when they hit it.
    That's super impressive.

    • @StillLoading777
      @StillLoading777 Před 2 lety +8

      that’s crazy

    • @skygge1006
      @skygge1006 Před 2 lety +7

      They did for a short second

    • @libertatumautmori4506
      @libertatumautmori4506 Před 2 lety +57

      They have a monopoly on computer OS’s.

    • @Civsuccess2
      @Civsuccess2 Před 2 lety +11

      Even the current MS window is inferior product, but the consumers have no choice.

    • @dislikebutton1799
      @dislikebutton1799 Před 2 lety +111

      @@Civsuccess2 You can get an overpriced Apple or use Linux if you don't like Windows.

  • @shawnmcmurray7651
    @shawnmcmurray7651 Před rokem

    That was well done. Thanks

  • @annishenko
    @annishenko Před rokem

    Great visual 👌 I really enjoyed this

  • @sergpie
    @sergpie Před 2 lety +1286

    That brief moment in 2009-2011 where Petrobras made it to like #5, I was in Brazil. The economic and social environment was so different than what it was when I returned for a trip in 2019. It’s so insane how quickly and abruptly economic cycles take hold in Latin America. The relative prosperity that one company’s revenues managed to bring to a nation the size of Brazil, in two years, was palpable (the dollar was almost 1/1 against the real, and gas was super-cheap!), to then see that same population slipping into lower HDI and GDP indexes lower than before the 2010s, and gasoline going up to near American prices. Gnarly

    • @JohnSmith-wx9wj
      @JohnSmith-wx9wj Před 2 lety +86

      Surges like that are generally indicative of shenanigans.

    • @bconni2
      @bconni2 Před 2 lety +79

      there's a reason why the U.S is such a world power. Americans know how to do business.

    • @brunocaieirassp
      @brunocaieirassp Před 2 lety +24

      Gasoline is cheaper in the US than in Brazil today (March, 19th, 2022). In Brazil, 1 gallon of gas in around US$ 5.64. This is different of the American price of US$ 4.26.

    • @caiomansourcastilho4614
      @caiomansourcastilho4614 Před 2 lety +34

      Near American? We pay more for our gas than in the US, if you use the wages in Brazil as comparison. But about the rest, you are basically right, the 2010s were a lost decade and we are still trying to recover from it

    • @macicoinc9363
      @macicoinc9363 Před 2 lety +1

      @@caiomansourcastilho4614 Really, why do Brazilians pay so much for gas?

  • @SU-dy1ch
    @SU-dy1ch Před 2 lety +1240

    The momentum of Japan in the latter half of the 1980s was great. Currently, Toyota and Sony are the only Japanese companies in the top 100.

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez Před 2 lety +321

      People really forget how crazy japans economy was back then. Literally was the only country to rival the US gdp in a 100+ years

    • @spartanparty3894
      @spartanparty3894 Před 2 lety +11

      @@JaKingScomez China rivals the US in GDP now. Though the Chinese are dirt poor on a person to person basis compared to Americans.

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez Před 2 lety +111

      @@spartanparty3894 ehh 5-7 trillion off isnt really rival. Japan was less then 2 trillion away from surpassing the Us and people thought they would

    • @snsd685
      @snsd685 Před 2 lety +38

      And also company called keyence.

    • @Martin-wt9co
      @Martin-wt9co Před 2 lety +17

      @@JaKingScomez Yeah but given inflation, 2 trillions in 1880s is basically 5-7 today

  • @kyleredzinak5206
    @kyleredzinak5206 Před 11 měsíci

    I have no clue how the economy works but it’s sure cool seeing which businesses come out of no where!

  • @ToddBoyle
    @ToddBoyle Před rokem +258

    A shout-out to any American, Brit or Australian expats who lived in Japan through the 1980s-mid 1990s, in the financial sector. What a wild ride it was. Watching this video brings up more memories, feelings and emotions than any movie.

    • @bme0983
      @bme0983 Před rokem +24

      Nerd

    • @2639theboss
      @2639theboss Před rokem +8

      What the fuck happened? I was in finance, and i know the general trend of japanese finance but ive never heard wbat happened in 89 to their financjal sector.

    • @billbusen
      @billbusen Před rokem +45

      As a computer science major then, I took Japanese assuming it would be invaluable.
      NARRATOR: It was not invaluable.

    • @johnwiebe4293
      @johnwiebe4293 Před rokem +2

      The gdp in Japan has been stagnant for over 30 years.

    • @shashianand250
      @shashianand250 Před rokem +24

      It's immigrants 😂
      Don't have to use a fancy name

  • @JackMiner746
    @JackMiner746 Před rokem +920

    Microsoft's consistency is amazing. Once they made it to this list, they stayed there.

    • @TitusRex
      @TitusRex Před rokem +166

      The business world pretty much runs on Microsoft software.

    • @DemPilafian
      @DemPilafian Před rokem +84

      Microsoft's monopoly is amazing. Microsoft's stranglehold on the desktop held software progress back for two decades, and it enabled the disaster known as IE plus lead to the easy spreading of malware.

    • @ninjapurpura1
      @ninjapurpura1 Před rokem

      Bill Gates é reptiliano.

    • @thatpillowguy773
      @thatpillowguy773 Před rokem +29

      7:03 it’s all *AMERICA*

    • @suhcheuy268
      @suhcheuy268 Před rokem +6

      Well microsoft systems dominate the world

  • @truthsmiles
    @truthsmiles Před 2 lety +622

    If anyone else was wondering about NTT:
    “The Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, commonly known as NTT, is a Japanese telecommunications company headquartered in Tokyo, Japan.” - wikipedia

    • @nallis01
      @nallis01 Před 2 lety +19

      Thank you

    • @danielnixon9614
      @danielnixon9614 Před 2 lety +36

      How the hell was it worth 250 billion dollars in 1988!!!

    • @SlofSi
      @SlofSi Před 2 lety +4

      shimatta

    • @taroutanaka9638
      @taroutanaka9638 Před rokem +29

      Japanese AT&T

    • @bsherman8236
      @bsherman8236 Před rokem +22

      @@danielnixon9614 it's mostly speculation because they made cellphones a lot more affordable and easy to use just like apple made smartphones.

  • @criticalanalysis4210
    @criticalanalysis4210 Před rokem +2

    Amazing video, very inciteful. Although it also highlights the limited scope of Market Cap in assessing comany. For example black rock that is he control shareholder of 7 out of 10 of the top comoanies in the last few years of this diagram.

  • @reviewdata
    @reviewdata Před rokem +1

    Awesome. i like visualization

  • @NAPAPQ
    @NAPAPQ Před 2 lety +45

    Japan: I used to rule the world

  • @williamtoad8040
    @williamtoad8040 Před 2 lety +322

    1986-93 you can really see the Japanese real estate bubble go full force

    • @hachigo2485
      @hachigo2485 Před 2 lety +18

      It popped in 1991.

    • @MyBelch
      @MyBelch Před 2 lety +20

      I lived in Tokyo 84-88 and again 92-96. It was a wild ride. My rent was a roller coaster (I was paid in US dollars).

    • @warzone669
      @warzone669 Před rokem +1

      @@MyBelch my father also told me about this they used to live in Japan back then now we in us.

  • @petertwiss356
    @petertwiss356 Před rokem +16

    I loved this! Educational and fun!

    • @mbsesv
      @mbsesv Před rokem

      Hopefully correct as well! ;)

  • @mkxair
    @mkxair Před rokem

    Very cool to see this graphically… So well done !

  • @carterzhang2977
    @carterzhang2977 Před 2 lety +257

    Holy crap it was almost all Japanese companies in the 80s

    • @channelofstuff6662
      @channelofstuff6662 Před 2 lety +53

      They had a giant crash in the 90's because of all the banks.

    • @anooppillai9621
      @anooppillai9621 Před 2 lety +33

      @@channelofstuff6662 becoz of giant plaza act 🤡

    • @anooppillai9621
      @anooppillai9621 Před 2 lety +4

      @Sahil Singh just like us indians 🤡 who never takes criticism

    • @enasosa1612
      @enasosa1612 Před 2 lety +20

      @@channelofstuff6662 Yes, Japan just had banks in the top, obviously something wrong would occurs

    • @riser7795
      @riser7795 Před 2 lety +39

      @Sahil Singh what happen to Japan with the plaza accord is what every developing economy need to learn, lest the US tried to pull the same shit again.

  • @LukeL007
    @LukeL007 Před 2 lety +637

    The past 3-5 years show how overinflated the market really is.

    • @MAmanchester
      @MAmanchester Před 2 lety +47

      Bubbly right 😣

    • @rs3performance515
      @rs3performance515 Před 2 lety +64

      Mind blowing. I think it will be time for a crash like 2008

    • @hardleecure
      @hardleecure Před 2 lety +2

      @@rs3performance515 that's the thing. typically there was a recession every 7 years. We're overdue for 15 years. Something bad is going to happen big time, when? I don't know. One thing is for sure, western governments printed 40% of all currency in the history of humanity over the last 18-24 months to 'help' people during the grossly mismanaged pandemic. With economies at scale so large, it will take some time before the hyperinflation hits, but once it does, it'll be like the titanic hitting the iceberg.

    • @BeedrillYanyan
      @BeedrillYanyan Před 2 lety +5

      How so?

    • @MAmanchester
      @MAmanchester Před 2 lety +7

      @@BeedrillYanyan looks too me like big tops are in across the board. Monetary systems are getting found out

  • @kaviator
    @kaviator Před rokem +12

    This is so informative, you have done a truly excellent job, bravo!

  • @Amelia-Elizabeth
    @Amelia-Elizabeth Před 6 měsíci +267

    I'm 54 and my wife and I are VERY worried about our future, gas and food prices rising daily. We have had our savings dwindle with the cost of living into the stratosphere, and we are finding it impossible to replace them. We can get by, but can't seem to get ahead. My condolences to anyone retiring in this crisis, 30 years nonstop just for a crooked system to take all you worked for...

    • @Amelia-Elizabeth
      @Amelia-Elizabeth Před 6 měsíci

      @@rachealhubert74 That's actually quite impressive, I could use some Info on your FA, I am looking to make a change on my finances this year as well

    • @Amelia-Elizabeth
      @Amelia-Elizabeth Před 6 měsíci

      @@rachealhubert74 I will give this a look, thanks a bunch for sharing.

    • @MaryOlson7
      @MaryOlson7 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Amelia-Elizabeth Alice Marie Coraggio her trading strategies is working for me for more than a year now and I’m making good profit from the stock market and she's 100% honest, reputable and trustworthy

    • @user-sk2fh5cl8y
      @user-sk2fh5cl8y Před 6 měsíci +1

      Did you vote for Trump?….if not , you will get another chance

    • @epicmonkeydrunk
      @epicmonkeydrunk Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​@@Amelia-Elizabethits a scam

  • @andrewevans5750
    @andrewevans5750 Před 2 lety +409

    1982 IBM: we have the same market cap as Yugoslavia. 2022 IBM: We almost have the same market cap as Yugoslavia.

    • @Whyanonymity
      @Whyanonymity Před rokem +8

      Dude really 😂😂😂

    • @brb4903
      @brb4903 Před rokem +24

      '2022 IBM: We almost have the same market cap as Yugoslavia' You mean 0$?

    • @San_Deep2501
      @San_Deep2501 Před rokem +32

      @@brb4903 that's the joke

    • @kuls43
      @kuls43 Před rokem +1

      @@brb4903 probably he knew some will take that joke seriously and that's why he put "almost". But you still showed up 🤣🤣

    • @Nn-3
      @Nn-3 Před rokem +9

      @@San_Deep2501 What's also funny is that it's still true (if we combine the former member states), despite there now being companies 10x the size.
      (IBM's market cap today is $150B, which is about 75% the $200B GDP of Serbia + Croatia + Slovenia + Bosnia Herzegovina + North Macedonia + Montenegro)

  • @apogena
    @apogena Před rokem +84

    *Japan was the only country that almost completely kicked the USA off this list.*

    • @jisooislove988
      @jisooislove988 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Not even China was capable of that with 13 times the population of Japan.... the japanese were truly something at that time. If Japan was as big as China with a billion population, the world would see nothing else but JAPAN.

    • @kevinyoliveira68
      @kevinyoliveira68 Před 7 měsíci +4

      They are Japan is really amazing

    • @Arkham-kq9uf
      @Arkham-kq9uf Před 6 měsíci +3

      But for only 1-5 years, USA has humongous dominance over world's wealth

    • @charlesbrown4483
      @charlesbrown4483 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@Arkham-kq9uf I mean it’s not “the world’s wealth,” it’s our wealth. We played by the same rules as everyone else, we just happened to be the best at this capitalism stuff.

    • @Arkham-kq9uf
      @Arkham-kq9uf Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@charlesbrown4483 bro your wealth is also world's wealth as you are also part of this world, I was saying that most of the big corporations are owned by Americans and a country only grows if American investors invest on it, examples are china, korea, even Japan grew by USA's support.

  • @dashphonemail
    @dashphonemail Před rokem +7

    Cool visual. Props to the data analyst and programmer who built this 👏

    • @toddsecor288
      @toddsecor288 Před rokem

      There is no programming lol. All they did was insert stock market data.

    • @dashphonemail
      @dashphonemail Před rokem

      @@toddsecor288 Insert stock market data into what?

    • @toddsecor288
      @toddsecor288 Před rokem

      @@dashphonemail The market cap is simply the value of the companies stock.

  • @samdl1436
    @samdl1436 Před 18 dny

    Most informative video on CZcams

  • @mokshagnavarma5659
    @mokshagnavarma5659 Před 2 lety +85

    7:39 hacker joins the chat🤣

    • @happya4901
      @happya4901 Před 2 lety +1

      Aramco was listed on the Saudi stock market in 2019
      Only 4% of the company's value has been allocated

    • @ziyad2554
      @ziyad2554 Před 2 měsíci +2

      what? is this a joke?

    • @ziyad2554
      @ziyad2554 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Saudi Aramco is an Oil Company which is owned by the Saudi Government, that's why it is very rich

    • @SaudiArabianball
      @SaudiArabianball Před 2 měsíci +2

      no one laughed kiddo

    • @mokshagnavarma5659
      @mokshagnavarma5659 Před 2 měsíci

      @@ziyad2554 I know that, that's why I said hacker joined the chat at they became the richest in a quick amount of time

  • @ryanm7263
    @ryanm7263 Před 2 lety +62

    "I miss the 80s." -- Japan

    • @user-cb8lh1ls7x
      @user-cb8lh1ls7x Před 2 lety +8

      ほんまにそれ笑

    • @STAYDIVINE1111
      @STAYDIVINE1111 Před 2 lety +7

      I'm 16 years old japanese and still feeling nostalgia for those days, good old days

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem

      It I don't miss the 80s and I don't think Japan does either but I think what we and Japan miss about the 80s solely lands on the AESTHETIC

    • @user-uw3no9kk8e
      @user-uw3no9kk8e Před rokem +3

      これから日本はより衰退していくだろうが、生きている間にまた80年代のように優越感に浸りてぇなぁ

    • @ra1993ir
      @ra1993ir Před rokem +1

      @@user-uw3no9kk8e
      Stupid Japanese,English please

  • @austinmaloy1266
    @austinmaloy1266 Před rokem +2

    You have a good taste in music

  • @tomspettigue8791
    @tomspettigue8791 Před rokem +59

    Blown away how long it took for Apple to get to $1T, and then in like a year it was up to $2T

    • @Jay1787
      @Jay1787 Před rokem +12

      Just mindless zombies are willing to pay anything because they think apple is a status symbol

    • @StuMarston
      @StuMarston Před rokem +18

      @@Jay1787 That's right. Stick with your Nokia.

    • @Jay1787
      @Jay1787 Před rokem +5

      @@StuMarston I have an OPPO but I get what you're trying to say 😂

    • @leroyrobertson5221
      @leroyrobertson5221 Před rokem +3

      Welcome to "transitory" inflation.

    • @Croissant69_
      @Croissant69_ Před rokem +5

      @@Jay1787 That just means that they are really good at marketing.

  • @pipe3marez789
    @pipe3marez789 Před 2 lety +5

    Great stuff. Kudos!!! Would’ve like to see one of the by asset class, including gold, silver, palladium etc.🙏🏼

  • @MrData3DStats
    @MrData3DStats Před 2 lety +3

    wonderful dear sir

  • @ibefilmin
    @ibefilmin Před rokem

    Awesome infographic! Do CEO Pay scales over 50 years.

  • @FJB_TheBigGuy
    @FJB_TheBigGuy Před rokem

    Fascinating

  • @wilhelmbittrich88
    @wilhelmbittrich88 Před rokem +244

    One thing I've learned from this is that USA is really good at producing hugely successful businesses. Amazing.

    • @pepsicherry6389
      @pepsicherry6389 Před rokem

      the reason is, americans live with big debts. they buy buy buy with credit debt and be slaves till life ends. + they are good at advertising pumping their stock. Look at tesla. sells dirt low cars and is worth more the severel biggest car companies world wide combined.

    • @bathecat9834
      @bathecat9834 Před rokem +39

      Yaa they make really good products

    • @yoopally4136
      @yoopally4136 Před rokem +63

      We just have a business friendly country. All other countries could do the same

    • @dieterdietert7232
      @dieterdietert7232 Před rokem +57

      @@yoopally4136 LOL yeah and almost no rights for workers.
      So be "proud" of living in that country.
      Thats more friendly to business than to its population.

    • @yoopally4136
      @yoopally4136 Před rokem +45

      @@dieterdietert7232 All countries have to go through a transition phase. The U.S had little workers rights when it was developing. A necessary step to be competative.

  • @globetukker2510
    @globetukker2510 Před 2 lety +7

    mooi man.

  • @Fools_Requiem
    @Fools_Requiem Před rokem +53

    1984 was when AT&T was forced to break up their monopoly. Late 80s saw a massive boom in the Japanese economy, hence the sudden explosion of Japanese banks.

  • @srjsamsam
    @srjsamsam Před rokem +3

    I was half expecting to see game stop hop in for a split second lol

  • @thisisshy8177
    @thisisshy8177 Před 2 lety +13

    Wow,it’s so cool to see the development of country and industry in a time order

  • @gishileh
    @gishileh Před rokem +30

    In the final moment, I see TSMC in the board. It's amazing and it stands for Taiwan!

    • @Madzguy007
      @Madzguy007 Před rokem +2

      Yeah not for so long... The current Taiwan government is busy transferring its production to the USA... I feel bad for the local Taiwanese, who only stand to lose in the long run

    • @leoccc
      @leoccc Před rokem +4

      @@Madzguy007 you’re worry too much, TSMC just lunch it’s 3 nm mass production chip production lines in southern Taiwan last week, 12000 well trained engineers are working like right now!

  • @troop73oo
    @troop73oo Před rokem +1

    Viewing a changing world.

  • @elonmust7470
    @elonmust7470 Před rokem

    I forgot about the video about 90 seconds in due to the excellent music!

  • @Jacob.C.9397
    @Jacob.C.9397 Před 2 lety +36

    TSMC
    I'm proud to be a Taiwanese!

    • @gringadoor5385
      @gringadoor5385 Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately you might be forced to be Chinese in the near future.

    • @erictsai4277
      @erictsai4277 Před 2 lety

      笑死

    • @Jacob.C.9397
      @Jacob.C.9397 Před 2 lety +1

      @@erictsai4277 為什麼?我是臺美混血,雙重國籍,有問題嗎?
      羨慕還是嫉妒?

    • @xuexuejun3210
      @xuexuejun3210 Před 2 lety

      @@Jacob.C.9397 他已经死了

    • @Jacob.C.9397
      @Jacob.C.9397 Před 2 lety +1

      @@xuexuejun3210 笑到死嗎?

  • @azharmomin1
    @azharmomin1 Před rokem +5

    That Aramco Jump Though! 😱

    • @shibinps
      @shibinps Před rokem +2

      Aramco was listed the year it appeared

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před rokem

      Whoop you found oil big deal, Stop being so patriotic over being lucky.

  • @NiceGuyEddy00
    @NiceGuyEddy00 Před rokem

    Great video! Could be improved by adding company logos.

  • @Spawny500
    @Spawny500 Před rokem +1

    Nice animation. Almost forgot about how IBM dominated for so long.

  • @ToddJHammond
    @ToddJHammond Před rokem +71

    Ahh that brief moment post GFC that Australia made it to no.4 with BHP Billiton due to the mining boom we had. Didn't realise how powerful they became at that time.

    • @AndrewinAus
      @AndrewinAus Před rokem +5

      And ironically the vast majority of their growth in that period was China's economy accelerating like crazy.

    • @linkinparkundrground
      @linkinparkundrground Před rokem +12

      To be fair, BHP is still the largest mining company in the world, and I believe Rio Tinto is still 2nd, so Australia is still a dominant player in mining.

  • @lalachan9658
    @lalachan9658 Před 2 lety +14

    Late 80's early 90's
    Japanese Companies: hohoh im so rich

  • @kurtdewittphoto
    @kurtdewittphoto Před rokem +2

    7:39 Reminds me of the time when I was a kid, and I showed up to a party where there was a squirtgun fight, and I brought my Super Soaker ZX2000 with a backpack tank of water, and all the other kids just had small, basic super soakers.

  • @bellenvideo5629
    @bellenvideo5629 Před rokem

    Outstanding 🥰

  • @tigris8235
    @tigris8235 Před 2 lety +4

    Came for the charts, stayed for the music

  • @calum5975
    @calum5975 Před rokem +16

    Few weird things about this.
    Firstly, "Shell Oil" and "Royal Dutch Shell" are shown as two companies. "Royal Dutch Shell" isn't the name of any company, the modern company is simply called Shell (changed in 2021), it formed from the Royal Dutch Petroleum Company and Shell Logisitics in the early 1900s. It's also not Dutch, it's British - the Dutch part of the company became absorbed by the larger British half. Still, the "Royal Dutch" part doesn't indicate it's nationality - it's simply a legacy.
    So are ExxonMobil and Mobil (Mobil merged with Exxon to form ExonMobil, they never existed at the same time).

    • @knijert
      @knijert Před rokem +4

      Correct except for the fact that the Dutch part was the bigger one. Royal Dutch represented 60% and Shell transport and trading 40%

  • @thomaspickup3304
    @thomaspickup3304 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Is there a site or tool to create these animation / charts. Got a work assignment and would be super cool to have one in there.

  • @stovetopicus
    @stovetopicus Před rokem +5

    That 1987 stock market crash really hurt... OUCH!

  • @Kyqoz
    @Kyqoz Před 2 lety +16

    Saudi Arabia just teleports to the finish line

  • @stevenbell721
    @stevenbell721 Před rokem +196

    The growth during the pandemic for the top 5 companies was substantial.

    • @jimboorins5038
      @jimboorins5038 Před rokem +65

      Biggest transfer of wealth in history.

    • @Porphyrios1
      @Porphyrios1 Před rokem +42

      @@jimboorins5038 by design, not coincidence.

    • @spooneater9001
      @spooneater9001 Před rokem +6

      Shut it down

    • @juzoli
      @juzoli Před rokem +3

      @@jimboorins5038 Yeah, middle and lower class people have never got so much money before…
      I don’t think this is a bad thing though.

    • @anonnyanonymous4800
      @anonnyanonymous4800 Před rokem +36

      @@juzoli no. The wealth was transferred to corporations and the wealthiest. Those one-time checks were just a fraction of what went on.

  • @fulcrum6008
    @fulcrum6008 Před rokem +4

    Once again, W 🇺🇸

  • @jamesdesmond6496
    @jamesdesmond6496 Před 5 měsíci

    Wish the content creator continued these charts!

  • @shuangshuang3837
    @shuangshuang3837 Před 2 lety +3

    The perfect Plaza Accord!

  • @davidbernadine
    @davidbernadine Před 2 lety +17

    Very interesting, especially seeing the number of non-American companies I'd never heard of.
    Thanks for putting this together.

  • @slackthompson6984
    @slackthompson6984 Před rokem

    very interesting

  • @kittyflier8338
    @kittyflier8338 Před rokem +27

    Once upon a time, Japanese companies almost had occupied the whole list. I see why the US government waged the trade war against Japan at the time.

    • @hukuuchi
      @hukuuchi Před 4 měsíci

      The US government will once again wage a trade war, against China.
      I don't like the Chinese Communist Party, but the US government's approach is not fair.

  • @A_a_A_a_A_a_A
    @A_a_A_a_A_a_A Před 2 lety +37

    This is why USA bashed Japan

    • @tysonhudson2486
      @tysonhudson2486 Před 2 lety +8

      yup the united states always wins in the end

    • @dddddh1
      @dddddh1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tysonhudson2486 It depends on who the opponent is. If it's China, the US can only lose

    • @RobinLundqvist
      @RobinLundqvist Před 2 lety +3

      @@dddddh1 +100 social credit points to you sir

    • @dddddh1
      @dddddh1 Před 2 lety

      @@RobinLundqvist 感谢认可😊

  • @EloTimeYT
    @EloTimeYT Před 2 lety +5

    Can you tell me where you took the data from?

  • @DragonJCS
    @DragonJCS Před rokem

    That was cool because of the plot I expected more from china and I didn't expect Saudi Aranco appearing out of nowhere taking the top spot

  • @jean-fabl6187
    @jean-fabl6187 Před rokem +3

    I was hoping to see my grandfather’s sweet shop and the list!

  • @rickl.7084
    @rickl.7084 Před 2 lety +13

    1980 to 2015: "300 billion is a lot of money!" 2016 to 2022: "Hold my beer we're gonna hit warp speed"

  • @orionmedivh5859
    @orionmedivh5859 Před rokem +4

    This chart shows exactly where the bubbles are at a given time. Not some of the companies, but ALL of them, no matter where they’re from.

  • @Dw-dx6wn
    @Dw-dx6wn Před rokem +5

    I didn’t know TSMC is this big! Kinda underestimated it

  • @studentoflife3149
    @studentoflife3149 Před rokem +13

    I’m super liking this video out of the simple recognition of what a nightmare it must have been making it… props

  • @rashakor
    @rashakor Před rokem +9

    This could almost be used as indicator for macroeconomic shifts. Every time tech or banks show up in mass vs oil or heavy industrials it results in a crisis. Another interesting view would be to use inflation adjusted dollars.

    • @ScrotieJohnson
      @ScrotieJohnson Před rokem +1

      Eh not always some of these such as att falling was due to gov intervention in the 1980s, creating the bell system, and gm fell not really due, and gm fell due to infighting with in the company and various projects being pushed back due to infighting and the billions they lost due to the new for 88 gm10 cars and ford being them to the punch with the taurus. So is can but there are outliers

  • @ikko4107
    @ikko4107 Před 2 lety +67

    栄枯盛衰…いつかまた日本がバブルまではなくても良い好景気が来ることも願う…

    • @jinkela1386
      @jinkela1386 Před 2 lety +5

      少子化不可避 残念

    • @nihon-university
      @nihon-university Před 2 lety +11

      バブルは弾けなければバブルではない!!
      今度は弾けないように注意しようw

    • @ci014070
      @ci014070 Před 2 lety +12

      どのセクターなら復活の望みがあるかねえ。情報技術は完敗。ヘルスケアで強くなれると良いな。

    • @leonardyap4703
      @leonardyap4703 Před 2 lety +7

      Unfair agreement was forced to sign

    • @okko3777
      @okko3777 Před 2 lety +10

      Nah ur america dad will not let that happen again😂

  • @Music-lx1tf
    @Music-lx1tf Před rokem

    Very interesting presentation very unique Very creative

  • @WayStedYou
    @WayStedYou Před rokem

    IBM: I AM INVINCIBLE!
    1986: Are you sure about that?

  • @3KPK3
    @3KPK3 Před 2 lety +225

    Microsoft managed to stay in the top 10 despite all the controversies. Amazing! Also, Aramco stunned me at the end.

    • @hoffmankipkurgat5949
      @hoffmankipkurgat5949 Před 2 lety +10

      After there IPO

    • @sodakk17
      @sodakk17 Před rokem +2

      Fool who said Microsoft would be a zombie company

    • @aakksshhaayy
      @aakksshhaayy Před rokem +38

      its just saudi shit... The value doesn't mean anything

    • @tfae
      @tfae Před rokem +7

      Microsoft is enterprise... all those corporate connections keep them afloat. Just like IBM before it.

    • @senurapathirana6735
      @senurapathirana6735 Před rokem +7

      They appeared once they went public if they did it earlier they'd have been their since the early 2000a

  • @greatcesari
    @greatcesari Před rokem +83

    Fun fact: TSMC is the most significant one on the list. If Taiwan is compromised, electronic devices will come to a halt.

    • @digitalclips
      @digitalclips Před rokem +5

      TSMC need to replicate their operation in the USA, Apple should help them.

    • @thundurr
      @thundurr Před rokem +11

      If TSMC is haulted then the USA, China or really any other economically stable country can just start producing them instead. Samsung already is trying to in the US.

    • @Syn410
      @Syn410 Před rokem +20

      @@thundurr Nobody can produce them which is why they're so valuable. The process is crazy. I'm sure this will change in the next few years tho. But yes luckily they're working with US to start producing them here

    • @ringmango4593
      @ringmango4593 Před rokem +8

      Its chinese not taiwan

    • @haruyanto8085
      @haruyanto8085 Před rokem +1

      @@thundurr rn only China can replicate what they do, they hold around 5-10% of the chip manufacturer share globally, TSMC holds the rest

  • @believerone2001
    @believerone2001 Před rokem

    enjoyed

  • @ibraibra9346
    @ibraibra9346 Před rokem +14

    1:37 You feel like the whole world economy is Japan's

  • @CarolinaGirl-it5gl
    @CarolinaGirl-it5gl Před rokem +203

    GE had a very good run under Jack Welch. The stock got as high as $180 a share. They did a 3/1 split and the shares were $60 each. By the time I retired in 2009 they were $42.50 (when I gave up and cashed in) and eventually got down to about $7 each.

    • @Yaivenov
      @Yaivenov Před rokem

      He did that by chop shopping the company. Neutron Jack Welch destroyed every major company he has touched. Enriched himself in the short term by liquidating the long term assets of companies established by other, better, people.

    • @CarolinaGirl-it5gl
      @CarolinaGirl-it5gl Před rokem +8

      @@Yaivenov You are so right. I heard that they called him Neutron Jack because he was like a bomb. When he dropped in nothing was left standing but the walls. Oddly enough I met him twice. Once when the annual shareholders meeting was held in our small town and he and his wife came out to the plant, and 2nd when we went to Fairfield Connecticut to present one of the "next best production ideas" to a team of CEOs.

    • @Yaivenov
      @Yaivenov Před rokem +7

      @@CarolinaGirl-it5gl A bomb isn't a bad analogy but neutron radiation is just highly destructive even not as a bomb; it takes stable useful matter (companies) and makes it unstable and unusable.
      Neutron Jack welched on his responsibility to the company.

    • @b0r0din988
      @b0r0din988 Před rokem +33

      Jack Welch sacrificed long-term growth for short-term profits and made a fortune for himself at the expense of shareholders years later (not to mention the catastrophic environmental damage). He's exactly what is wrong with the modern-day boardroom. No long-term outlook, cut everything and watch the number go up, then parachute away.

    • @comebackkid44723
      @comebackkid44723 Před rokem +15

      And all it cost was environmental pollution, public healthcare catastrophes, and thousands of lost jobs. Love capitalism!

  • @peterschorn1
    @peterschorn1 Před rokem

    Next time try Spike Jones' "Veedelbaum" :-)

  • @daniellee8162
    @daniellee8162 Před rokem +1

    I saw AIG from a brief moment and was like "if they're there when 2008 comes, it's going to drop like a bag of bricks".

  • @alienlatino2945
    @alienlatino2945 Před rokem +7

    I once saw someone named Carlos Slim, a Mexican, be the richest man in the world in 2015, richer than Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, he wasn't into oil so I dug deeper to see how he made his fortune. He owns a telecommunications company that sells pre-paid phone cards to people, he had 90% of Mexico's population using his phone carriers, so tens of millions of Mexicans were buying "talk time" phone cards every day. Now I know how he made his money.

    • @jwjeieikwnwwn
      @jwjeieikwnwwn Před 11 dny +1

      American Movile His country is hated, why did he buy that company from a government privatization, and he also paid a lower price than it was worth, and its prices were very expensive.

  • @drakenkraken8455
    @drakenkraken8455 Před 2 lety +27

    Impressed by the resilience of US economy. Plenty of new kids jumping all around it all the time.

    • @Blownkingg
      @Blownkingg Před rokem

      @Naikomi I agree, the stock market valuation is speculative and isn't generally reflective of the real world performance.

  • @joeylawn36111
    @joeylawn36111 Před rokem +2

    *FYI*
    This list shown is about the total value of the stock for each company. Market Capitalization = Price of 1 share x Number of shares.
    So if a company had 1 Million shares and the stock price for 1 share was $100, then their market capitalization would be $100 Million. Therefore, large companies that are privately and wholly owned aren't on this list. Two examples: Koch Brothers is a privately owned conglomerate that's huge but privately owned. Secondly, Saudi Aramco appeared on this list out of nowhere in 2019. This was because they were government-owned, but they had a stock initial public offering.

    • @joeylawn36111
      @joeylawn36111 Před rokem

      Oh, and also I initially screwed up thinking 'why is AT&T still on this list after 1984' - AT&T was broken up in 1984, but their Stock was still around....

  • @changyuxia
    @changyuxia Před rokem

    wow, wonderful video, I didn't know NTT was a #1 company. But just 1 year, US companies are great because of innovation.

  • @jackson5116
    @jackson5116 Před 2 lety +8

    1:40 THAT is what I remember and why back then there was so much animosity toward Japanese companies at the time.

  • @user-sf6vi4uh7k
    @user-sf6vi4uh7k Před 2 lety +5

    80's Japan was crazy

  • @yootubeyootube
    @yootubeyootube Před 5 měsíci

    Very nice video. But after two years could be updated.

  • @DanielMircea
    @DanielMircea Před rokem

    I would love to see this adjusted for inflation

  • @cranker7754
    @cranker7754 Před rokem +20

    Very remarkable that switzerland had 3 different companies in the top 10 at 3 different, coming from such a small country and market (9mil population only!)

    • @finn6492
      @finn6492 Před rokem +13

      that's what happens when you launder the worlds dirty money

    • @midas1929
      @midas1929 Před rokem +9

      @@finn6492 Explain what money laundering has to do with these companies? Btw, the biggest money launderers are the USA (Delaware, Vegas, South Dakota, etc.)

    • @SmokingLaddy
      @SmokingLaddy Před 9 měsíci

      @@midas1929 What about the Jew money you stole?

    • @_F8.
      @_F8. Před měsícem

      Maybe he's suggesting that swiss investment funds who were invest in the swiss companies are full of proceeds from state crime from throughout history... And that's what the swiss economy is built on. ​@@midas1929

    • @farzana6676
      @farzana6676 Před 5 dny

      ​@midas1929 Loool, no dirty money goes to USA. The US Feds will be on you like a Hawk.

  • @hallo_arr4387
    @hallo_arr4387 Před 2 lety +65

    Watched this in my economics class, we were cheering for America like it was a horse race

    • @Hubcool367
      @Hubcool367 Před 2 lety +11

      Why? Does your class earn anything when american companies do good?

    • @aabbcc4270
      @aabbcc4270 Před 2 lety +48

      @@Hubcool367 Because it's their country lol

    • @czcz5149
      @czcz5149 Před 2 lety +35

      @@Hubcool367 it’s called having pride in your country.

    • @robguevara7
      @robguevara7 Před 2 lety +2

      I don't like oil companies, but as a latino, I cheered for Brazil when Petrobras entered the top

    • @nekogaming8461
      @nekogaming8461 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Hubcool367 You have a problem with someone loving their country?

  • @regeturbo4782
    @regeturbo4782 Před rokem +2

    Should we also include Vanguard and Blackrock? Since we have Berkinshire Hathaway on the list?

  • @alexhahn7987
    @alexhahn7987 Před rokem

    This video makes me want to invest in index funds...

  • @hachigo2485
    @hachigo2485 Před 2 lety +7

    バブルのNTTすげぇwww