logo
The World's Largest Retailers 2025: Amazon Tops List Of Global Retailers Ahead Of Tariff Impact

The World's Largest Retailers 2025: Amazon Tops List Of Global Retailers Ahead Of Tariff Impact

Forbesa day ago

Tariffs are all anyone in retail can talk about. But as global retailers prepare for higher prices and decreased consumer spending the world's largest companies can bank on a past year of growth.
Jeff Bezos' Amazon ranked fifth in Forbes' Global 2000 and reigned up top for retailers for the second year in a row after being briefly displaced by Walmart in 2023. The company saw a healthy growth in overall sales to $638 billion, up 8% from last year.
Holding strong are competitors Walmart (18), Alibaba (33), Home Depot (67) and Costco (93), which round up the five largest retailers on the Global 2000. Forbes uses data from FactSet research to create its annual list of the largest public companies based on assets, market value, sales and profit. Companies are ranked over their market value as of April 25, 2025.
All largely benefitted from the increase in consumer spending over the year, which rose 5.2% to $724.1 billion from April 2024 to April 2025 in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce.
But not all benefitted equally. Pharmacy retailers CVS and Walgreens dropped 10 (now ranked 74th) and 167 (ranked 856th) slots respectively due to profit decreases. Both firms have suffered from a pullback in retail pharmacy shopping, with Walgreens posed to go private in a by Sycamore Partners, a private equity firm specializing in consumer investments. Including debt and possible future payouts, the deal is valued at $23.7 billion. The company saw a net loss of $6 billion last year. CVS suffered losses from high medical payments in health insurance subsidiary Aetna, leading the company to change up its leadership and wind down its Affordable Care Act business. Still, its profit decreased 37% to $4.6 billion on $37.3 billion in revenue.
Forbes leading retailing company Amazon, has its own pharmacy aspirations. The company launched a new medication support package for Medicare patients on top of its online pharmacy offering as it tries to take market share away from the legacy players.
Among the 80 retail companies that made this year's Global 2000 list sit five newcomers. Pet marketplace Chewy, the sole new American company, climbed 755 spots (now ranked 1,554) thanks to a final quarter of customer growth after two years of decline. Pet parents' one-time purchases and subscriptions to necessities like food and medicines pushed revenues to $11.8 billion, up 6.4% from last year.
International newcomers include Brazilian retail chain Lojas Americanas ( think Target) which has slowly turned the company around after filing for bankruptcy in 2024 due an accounting scandal. Now valued at $206 million, the company is looking to launch a credit card program and a new loyalty program as part of its post-bankruptcy restructure. German retailer Zalando, known among GenZ and Millennial consumers for its tech-forward approach, has enjoyed a 4% growth in sales to $11.4 billion last year.
Still, the impact of tariffs are looming on retailers globally. U.S. retailers Target (242), Best Buy (907) and Macy's (1,327) have already revised revenue and profit guidance down for the year as companies and consumers have frontloaded their spending in the first half of the year.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

You Can Get These Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro for Just $95 Today
You Can Get These Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro for Just $95 Today

CNET

time33 minutes ago

  • CNET

You Can Get These Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro for Just $95 Today

If you want high-quality tech, then going with Samsung is a very smart move. The company excels in several areas, including making some of the best wireless earbuds you can buy. Of the options they have available right now, the Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro are some of the best, and thanks to a great deal today, you can save $155 on them. Woot is having a birthday sale at the moment, and that means you can use the code BIRTHDAY at checkout, for today only, to get the Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro for just $95. That's an amazing amount of money off. These are the international version of the earbuds, but that shouldn't impact anything about how you use them. We can't vouch for how long this deal will last, which means you should definitely consider ordering soon. It's a limited-time deal, so it won't last forever. Hey, did you know? CNET Deals texts are free, easy and save you money. You'll definitely regret missing out if you're too late, too. These earbuds have a redesigned fit, which is said to offer a more comfortable listening experience. They're IPX7 water-resistant, so you can use them when out in the rain and whatnot, and the noise cancellation features make them a perfect companion for loud offices and noisy commutes. In terms of battery life, Samsung says you can look forward to up to 8 hours, depending on whether you're using ANC or not, while the included charging case bumps that to 18 hours. Fast-charging tech ensures you can get a battery boost when needed, too. Because of all of this, this is easily one of the best wireless earbuds deals around right now. Why this deal matters Getting great features often means spending great sums of money, which is why we're always keen to share deals like this one. If you'd eyed these wireless earbuds in the past but balked at their $250 price tag, now's your chance to pick them up for less. Just make sure you do it before Woot calls time on this deal.

Options Signal Emerging-Market Stock Outperformance Could Fade
Options Signal Emerging-Market Stock Outperformance Could Fade

Bloomberg

time34 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Options Signal Emerging-Market Stock Outperformance Could Fade

For US traders, developing-country stocks have been a surprising source of returns as Donald Trump's trade war roiled the S&P 500 Index. But if options are any guide, that outperformance may soon be a thing of the past. With President Trump's 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs slated to end in early July, speculators are now bracing for more turbulence in emerging markets. An ETF tracking the segment has rallied 14% this year, beating the S&P 500 by the most since 2009. Open interest in put options on the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM) is hovering close to the highest since December relative to bullish call contracts. Rising open interest means new positions are being added in a particular contract.

Musk fires up the robotaxi hype machine as his MAGA spotlight dims
Musk fires up the robotaxi hype machine as his MAGA spotlight dims

CNN

time35 minutes ago

  • CNN

Musk fires up the robotaxi hype machine as his MAGA spotlight dims

Elon Musk has two key strengths: a bottomless well of money and an unmatched ability to hypnotize Wall Street with promises of a whizz-bang technological future. He's starting to run into the limits of both. On the hypnosis front, Musk is busy hyping the tentative launch on June 22 of Tesla's long-awaited robotaxi pilot program in Austin, Texas. Tentative, Musk said, because the company is being 'super paranoid about safety.' When even Musk says the date is iffy, do not hold your breath. The guy can deliver a game-changing EV, to be sure, but many of his more ambitious projects are notoriously behind schedule. In the meantime, Alphabet went ahead and began a taxi service using driverless Waymo cars in 2020, and now provides 250,000 paid rides a week in San Francisco, LA, Phoenix and Austin. (It is still a money-losing operation, sure, but the losses are essentially a rounding error for the tech behemoth.) If playing catch-up on robotaxis were Tesla's only problem, that'd still be a tall order. But the company is trying to usher in the future of transportation at the same time it is doing damage control on its reputation. What began as a kind of aspirational luxury car brand popular among well-to-do liberals has, for many, become synonymous with its erratic, authoritarian-adjacent CEO. Musk's MAGA turn wasn't the only reason Tesla sales started tanking globally, but it certainly didn't help. Chinese competitors have been eating Tesla's lunch in key markets around the world. The Cybertruck is — relative to Musk's original high-flying predictions — a flop, and the rest of the company's lineup is dated. Some disappointed drivers say they can't offload their Teslas because demand and resale prices have fallen so dramatically. In sum: Tesla, whose stock (TSLA) has tumbled 30% since its all-time high in December, needs its robotaxi event, whenever it happens, to really knock investors' socks off. Of course, in the past, Musk has been known to lean into the flash and somewhat gloss over the substance. Last fall, Tesla shares fell 9% the day after its 'Cybercab' unveiling, which offered few details about how Tesla plans to improve its still-unfinished 'Full Self-Driving' tech and featured robot staff that, unbeknownst to people who attended, were being operated remotely by humans. The Austin event will be a 'proof of concept exercise, not a rollout or a testing of a commercial asset for sale,' GLJ Research analyst and prominent Tesla critic Gordon Johnson said in a note this week. Part of the Musk mystique has to do with just how unfathomably rich he is — like, how could he possibly fail with all that wealth? And to be sure, Musk's money affords him a boundless budget to buy just about anything and sue just about anyone, in perpetuity. But Musk's foray into politics has shown that even Muskian wealth has its limits when Elon Musk is involved. For example, Musk dropped nearly $300 million on campaign spending for Donald Trump and other Republicans last year, only to blow up his relationship with the president a few months later with a series of outbursts on social media. He shelled out $44 billion on Twitter with the intent of building it into some kind of 'everything app' — an internet hub for commerce and a global town hall. The platform saw an exodus of users and advertisers as Musk took down speech guardrails, and it now more closely resembles the notorious message board 4chan. Musk's $20 million gamble on a conservative candidate for the Wisconsin Supreme Court was seen as a test of his newfound political power. But that one also backfired, putting Musk and his unpopular DOGE layoffs at the center of the narrative and enabling the liberal candidate to secure a 10-point victory. Bottom line: After torching Tesla's brand with his MAGA turn, Musk went and did something even more unthinkable and turned on Trump, straining (if not dooming) his status as 'first buddy.' Musk is now in damage control mode, and he's reviving an old playbook, revving up the self-driving hype machine, for a bit of redemption. 'He's got a problem,' President Trump told CNN's Dana Bash last week. 'The poor guy's got a problem.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store