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super rank name sales rank profits rank assets rank market val rank employees (thou)
1 General Electric 5 1 6 2 312.5
2 Citigroup 6 2 1 6 261.3
3 ExxonMobil 3 3 27 3 95.2
4 American International Group 9 14 7 9 81.0
5 Bank of America 21 7 5 13 138.3
6 Wal-Mart Stores 1 8 38 4 1,341.5
7 Fannie Mae 16 16 2 28 4.5
8 Verizon Communications 10 17 25 16 239.9
9 International Business Machines 8 23 35 8 317.9
10 Altria Group 12 4 43 19 170.5
11 Berkshire Hathaway 25 19 24 14 128.3
12 Wells Fargo 46 13 12 18 123.6
13 SBC Communications 24 9 37 23 184.7
14 Freddie Mac 31 12 4 48 3.8
15 Microsoft 43 5 52 1 50.5
16 Merck 17 10 72 10 78.1
17 JP Morgan Chase & Co 23 53 3 40 95.1
18 Morgan Stanley 38 31 8 44 58.5
19 General Motors 2 50 10 61 355.5
20 Pfizer 40 6 76 5 90.0
21 Procter & Gamble 26 15 78 12 102.0
22 Johnson & Johnson 33 11 82 7 105.1
23 Wachovia 69 23 13 39 82.4
24 Merrill Lynch 47 36 9 57 54.0
25 ChevronTexaco 7 83 48 21 54.4

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Footnotes & Methodology: The Forbes 500s is compiled annually by Forbes. Companies are ranked from 1 to 500 by sales, assets, profits, and market cap. The Super Rank is an aggregate score based on where a company falls on each of the 500s lists. Enterprise value: Sum of market value of common, liquidation of preferred and all debt, minus cash and equivalents.
Data footnotes: NA: notavailable; * value is for less than 12-months; NM: not meaningful; D-D: deficit-to-deficit; D-P: deficit-to-profit; P-D: profit-to-deficit; 1 Graph shows daily closing prices, highs and lows are intraday. REITS are not taxed at the corporate level; Stock prices as of March 7, 2003. Sources: Forbes; FT Interactive Data, Multex and Thomson Financial First Call via FactSet Research Systems.