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Charted: U.S. Home Listings Are Rising Across States

2025-08-01 01:18:39

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

A line chart showing the number of US housing listings

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U.S. Home Listings Are Rising Across States

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Active listing counts in the U.S. have steadily risen since their recent low of 346K in 2022, now reaching almost 1.1 million as of June 2025.
  • Listings in the states of Florida and Texas have reached nine-year highs, with California’s listings also trending upwards.

After hitting a low in 2022, the number of homes listed for sale across the U.S. has been climbing over the past three years, with states like Florida and Texas leading the rise.

The infographic breaks down the active home listings of the U.S. housing market since July 2016 to the latest data as of June 2025, highlighting key regional dynamics in the housing market.

The data for this visualization comes from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, which tracks monthly housing inventory levels nationally along with counts for the states of Florida, Texas, California, and New York.

America’s Housing Market Supply is Growing

Active listings, which measure the number of homes currently for sale, have climbed up from post-pandemic lows to above one million nationally.

A mix of easing mortgage lock-in, growing new construction, and investor offloading has helped rebuild supply, but the rebound is uneven and is threatening the growth of home prices in certain states.

Date U.S. Florida Texas California New York
July 2016 1,463,025 136,780 95,456 83,653 74,565
January 2017 1,154,139 141,533 82,622 58,469 55,071
July 2017 1,322,676 133,862 103,727 71,686 66,901
January 2018 1,043,968 133,041 82,060 52,155 50,144
July 2018 1,261,936 134,093 103,071 78,816 65,518
January 2019 1,110,654 150,118 90,985 69,935 52,436
July 2019 1,239,557 134,961 106,695 82,924 65,235
January 2020 951,699 129,170 86,006 51,831 49,511
July 2020 822,849 106,592 74,650 50,226 52,671
January 2021 531,780 77,534 47,616 30,995 39,831
July 2021 546,697 51,689 45,796 39,163 42,544
January 2022 376,973 39,961 36,614 22,698 28,495
July 2022 691,663 73,645 68,582 59,196 39,156
January 2023 616,869 87,717 72,413 40,126 30,837
July 2023 647,145 83,090 81,594 39,845 33,717
January 2024 665,603 118,163 83,701 36,174 28,234
July 2024 883,905 141,334 113,622 57,148 35,155
January 2025 829,376 157,221 102,552 47,924 28,510
June 2025 1,082,520 178,636 138,255 76,737 37,875

Florida’s surge reflects climate risks, insurance spikes, and heavy homebuilding, particularly in metro areas like Tampa and Jacksonville. The state’s recent 4% drop in home prices was the biggest decline in single-family home prices since October 2011.

Texas, long known for permissive building policies, has a similar trend: resilient construction pipelines now outpacing demand, especially as higher mortgage and tax burdens push owners to list.

The housing market of the state’s capital city, Austin, saw a 5.8% YoY drop in the number of homes sold in May 2025 along with a 2% median price drop.

California, while showing a rise in inventory, remains well below pre-pandemic levels. High land and construction costs, combined with entrenched zoning restrictions, keep supply tight.

New York is even more restrained. Co-op rules, limited resale inventory, and homeowners locked into low mortgage rates have kept listings near record lows, especially in downstate markets.

With inventory coming back mostly in the Sun Belt, buyers there are gaining leverage with more choices at lower prices.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about the U.S. housing market, check out this graphic that compares income, house prices, and mortgage rates in 2025 to those in 1985.

Ranked: Which Areas Receive the Most Pharma R&D?

2025-07-31 23:22:00

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Ranked: Which Areas Receive the Most Pharma R&D?

The pharmaceutical industry has made enormous strides in treating—and even curing—a wide range of diseases and conditions. A key driver behind this progress? Billions in funding fueling research and development (R&D) at the cutting edge.

This visualization, created in partnership with Inigo Insurance, highlights which therapeutic areas currently have the largest number of drugs in development, using data from Citeline.

The Rapid Expansion of Drug Development

The global R&D pipeline has surged over the past two decades. In 2001, just 5,995 drugs were in the pipeline. Today, that number has soared to 23,875.

Leading the pack is Pfizer, with 271 drugs in development, followed by Roche (261), Novartis (254), AstraZeneca (241), and Sanofi (233). Pharma giant Eli Lilly ranks seventh with 224 drugs.

Of the nearly 24,000 drugs in the pipeline, about half (12,704) remain in the preclinical stage, while 1,568 are projected to launch in 2025.

Where Is the Most R&D Happening?

The biggest focus area is oncology, which accounts for 9,476 drugs—roughly 40% of the total pipeline. Neurological drugs follow at 3,868, while metabolic drugs, boosted by the weight-loss drug boom, total 3,314.

Therapeutic Area Number of drugs
Oncology 9476
Neurology 3868
Metabolic 3314
Infectious Disease 2879
Musculoskeletal 2157
Immunology 1469
Dermatology 1327
Sensory 1312
Cardiology 1207
Respiratory 1172
Genitourinary 885
Hematology 811
Hormonal 273
Parasitology 109
Rare diseases 7721

Surprisingly, despite being the leading cause of death in the U.S., cardiovascular drugs rank ninth, with just 1,207 drugs in development.

Meanwhile, rare diseases represent another major focus, with 7,721 drugs in progress. Companies like Novartis and Bristol Myers Squibb are leading this charge, dedicating more than half of their pipelines to rare disease treatments—132 drugs (52%) and 115 drugs (50.2%), respectively.

The Future of Pharma Breakthroughs

Pharma R&D doesn’t always align with the biggest health burdens. Instead, it follows the intersection of scientific breakthroughs, patient demand, and market opportunity—a dynamic that will continue to shape the next wave of innovation.

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The World’s 50 Most Valuable Private Companies in 2025

2025-07-31 22:12:21

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Data visualization ranking the 50 most valuable private companies of 2025

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The World’s 50 Most Valuable Private Companies in 2025

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • 31 of the 50 most valuable private companies are based in the United States.
  • AI-focused companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, and Safe Superintelligence are among the most highly valued.
  • China has 8 entries, including ByteDance, Xiaohongshu, DJI, and Yuanfudao, showing strong representation in consumer tech and hardware.

The race to build the next generation of global giants is on.

While public markets get most of the spotlight, private companies are quietly building massive valuations and shaping the future of industries.

This visualization ranks the world’s 50 most valuable private companies in 2025, highlighting emerging powerhouses from different countries and sectors.

Data & Discussion

The data for this visualization comes from CB Insights. It ranks private companies globally by their most recent reported valuations.

Rank Company Country Valuation ($B)
1 🚀 SpaceX United States $350
2 📱 ByteDance China $300
3 🧠 OpenAI United States $300
4 💳 Stripe United States $70
5 👗 SHEIN Singapore $66
6 📊 Databricks United States $62
7 🤖 Anthropic United States $62
8 🌌 xAI United States $50
9 💱 Revolut United Kingdom $45
10 🎨 Canva Australia $32
11 🏈 Fanatics United States $31
12 🛡 Safe Superintelligence United States $30
13 🏦 Chime United States $25
14 🎮 Epic Games United States $23
15 🧭 Miro United States $18
16 📸 Xiaohongshu China $17
17 🧾 Rippling United States $17
18 📚 Yuanfudao China $16
19 📷 DJI Innovations China $15
20 💬 Discord United States $15
21 🛍 Gopuff United States $15
22 🥤 Yuanqi Senlin China $15
23 💸 Ripple United States $15
24 🛒 Klarna Sweden $15
25 🛰 Anduril United States $14
26 🧪 Scale United States $14
27 🌊 OpenSea United States $13
28 ⚙ Celonis Germany $13
29 💼 Ramp United States $13
30 ✍ Grammarly United States $13
31 ❤ Devoted Health United States $13
32 🌍 Deel United States $13
33 🛒 Faire United States $13
34 🏢 Brex United States $12
35 🚬 JUUL Labs United States $12
36 🪙 Bitmain Technologies China $12
37 🌱 GoodLeap United States $12
38 🧺 Xingsheng Selected China $12
39 📋 Airtable United States $12
40 🚗 ZongMu Technology China $11
41 🌐 Global Switch United Kingdom $11
42 💳 Checkout.com United Kingdom $11
43 ⚡ Bolt United States $11
44 🔮 Alchemy United States $10
45 🧬 Colossal United States $10
46 🚛 Huolala China $10
47 🧠 Thinking Machines Lab United States $10
48 👥 Gusto United States $10
49 🚘 Chehaoduo China $10
50 📞 Talkdesk United States $10

Note: Scale AI’s recent deal with Meta was not captured in the source dataset. Scale is now valued at roughly $29 billion, which would place it 14th in this ranking.

Artificial Intelligence is Taking Over

AI startups are increasingly populating the top 10, with OpenAI in third ($300 billion), Anthropic in seventh ($62 billion), and xAI in eighth ($50 billion). All three of these companies have produced some of the world’s smartest AI models in recent years.

Further down the ranking, we can identify Safe Superintelligence ($30 billion), which was created by former employees of OpenAI and Anthropic, and Scale AI, in which Meta recently acquired a 49% stake.

This deal wasn’t captured in the source dataset, but it means that Scale is now valued at $29 billion, which would bump it up to 14th place.

Finally, there are many companies that have AI applications, but not necessarily as their core product. This includes names like Databricks (a data analytics platform), Grammarly (uses generative AI to power its writing assistant), and Colossal (a de-extinction biotech company).

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out History’s Most Valuable Companies vs the Magnificent 7 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

The $5.6T Pharmaceutical Industry in One Chart

2025-07-31 21:11:00

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The $5.6T Pharmaceutical Industry in One Giant Chart

Pharma giants don’t just make medicine—they shape the future of healthcare. From determining which treatments reach patients to setting costs and driving innovation, their influence extends across both health outcomes and financial markets.

This visualization, created in partnership with Inigo Insurance, ranks the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world by market capitalization, using data from companiesmarketcap.com.

The Top Dog: Eli Lilly

Eli Lilly dominates the industry with a staggering market cap of $686 billion, nearly double that of Johnson & Johnson, the second largest company, at $359 billion. Eli Lilly’s value has skyrocketed since 2020, climbing from roughly $130 billion, largely fueled by the runaway success of its weight-loss drugs, Mounjaro and Zepbound.

Rank Company Name Market Cap ($ billions)
1 Eli Lilly 686
2 Johnson & Johnson 359
3 Novo Nordisk 334
4 AbbVie 327
5 Roche 255
6 Novartis 229
7 AstraZeneca 217
8 Merck 200
9 Amgen 156
10 Pfizer 136
11 Gilead Sciences 135
12 Sanofi 116
13 Vertex Pharmaceuticals 113
14 Bristol-Myers Squibb 96
15 CVS Health 85
16 Chugai Pharmaceutical 81
17 GlaxoSmithKline 78
18 CSL 75
19 Zoetis 70
20 Merck KGaA 55

Indeed, in the first quarter of 2025, worldwide revenue increased 45% to $12.73 billion, driven by volume growth from Mounjaro and Zepbound.  

Other Pharma Heavy Hitters

There are three other companies with market caps above $300 billion: Johnson & Johnson with $359 billion, Novo Nordisk with $334 billion, and AbbVie with $327 billion

Novo Nordisk also benefited from the weight-loss drug boom, with products like Ozempic and Wegovy driving growth. However, after peaking near $640 billion in mid-2024, its valuation has since cooled.

Roche, valued at $255 billion, joins other major players alongside Novartis at $229 billion, AstraZeneca at $217 billion—one of the first companies to release a COVID-19 vaccine—and Merck at $200 billion.

Pfizer ranks 10th with a market cap of $136 billion and is best known for blockbuster drugs like Viagra. Merck KGaA holds the 20th spot with a valuation of $55 billion, carrying the distinction of being the world’s oldest pharmaceutical company, founded in Germany in 1668.

The Future of Pharma

Doctors prescribe and patients decide, but pharma giants ultimately control which drugs they develop, who gets access, and what price they charge. Understanding who dominates this $5.6 trillion industry provides critical insight into the future of healthcare.

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History’s Biggest Companies vs. The Magnificent Seven

2025-07-31 20:08:03

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Data visualization comparing history's biggest companies to the magnificent seven stocks

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History’s Biggest Companies vs. The Magnificent Seven

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Historic companies from the 17th and 18th century were once worth trillions of dollars by today’s standards, thanks to monopolies on trade and speculation.
  • This graphic compares the valuation of these companies to today’s Mag-7 heavyweights

The rise of today’s tech giants has redefined market dominance. Companies like Nvidia, Microsoft, and Apple, which form the Magnificent Seven, boast multi-trillion-dollar valuations, but how do they compare to the titans of history?

In this visualization, we compare the market capitalization of Magnificent Seven stocks to three of history’s biggest companies.

Data & Discussion

The data for this visualization originates from a 2012 post by The Motley Fool, which compared peak inflation-adjusted valuations of historical monopolies.

We adjusted these values to current dollars, then compared them to the Magnificent Seven as of July 18, 2025.

Company Year Value (USD trillions)
🇳🇱 Dutch East India
Company (VOC)
1637
(peak valuation)
$10.15
🇫🇷 Mississippi Company 1720
(peak valuation)
$8.35
🇬🇧 South Sea Company 1720
(peak valuation)
$5.52
🇺🇸 NVIDIA 2025 $4.20
🇺🇸 Microsoft 2025 $3.79
🇺🇸 Apple 2025 $3.15
🇺🇸 Amazon 2025 $2.40
🇺🇸 Alphabet 2025 $2.25
🇺🇸 Meta 2025 $1.77
🇺🇸 Tesla 2025 $1.06

The VOC: Still the Biggest Ever

Founded in 1602, the Dutch East India Company (VOC) peaked at a valuation of over $10 trillion in today’s dollars.

Backed by government charters and global monopolies, the VOC controlled huge parts of the spice trade, giving it unmatched economic power in its time. VOC could acquire exotic goods, establish colonies, create military forces, and even initiate wars around the world.

Despite its 200-year run as Europe’s foremost trading juggernaut – the speculative peak of the company’s prospects coincided with Tulip Mania in Holland in 1637.

Widely considered the world’s first financial bubble, the history of Tulip Mania is a fantastic story in itself. During this frothy time, the Dutch East India Company was worth 78 million Dutch guilders, which translates to a whopping $10.2 trillion in today’s dollars.

Speculative Bubbles of the 18th Century

The other historical companies in this graphic, Mississippi Company and South Sea Company, both peaked in 1720 amid massive speculative bubbles.

At their heights, their valuations hit $8.35 trillion and $5.52 trillion respectively. However, both collapsed shortly after, serving as early examples of market euphoria and financial instability.

For example, the Mississippi Company was a French trading venture with exclusive rights to develop France’s Mississippi/Louisiana territories. Investors were lured by speculation of the vast wealth from Louisiana’s natural resources (e.g. gold), but no profits ever came.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The Complete History of Microsoft’s Acquisitions on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

What Did Economic Growth Mean for U.S. Households?

2025-07-31 18:40:54

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Composite of 16 line charts from Our World in Data tracking U.S. household adoption of utilities and consumer goods (1860‑2022), plus trends in income and working hours.

What Did Economic Growth Mean for U.S. Households?

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data‑driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

  • Since 1860, average U.S. income has jumped 13‑fold while annual working hours per worker fell 43%, freeing up both cash and time for new conveniences.
  • Tracking who has running water, electricity, or a fridge reveals welfare gains that GDP alone can hide.
  • Adoption curves for household tech still offer a quick read on economic progress in emerging markets today.

From indoor plumbing to pocket‑sized computers, the arc of U.S. prosperity can be traced through the everyday items that migrated from luxury to necessity. Examining when households first gained access to these utilities and gadgets reveals how economic growth translates into tangible improvements in daily life—and offers a roadmap for tracking progress in today’s emerging markets.

The visualization above, created by Our World in Data (Max Roser), pairs 160 years of U.S. GDP‑per‑capita data with the share of households that own—or simply have access to—everyday necessities.

From Railroads to Refrigerators: A Century of Catch‑Up

Economic historian Jeremy Greenwood calls household technologies the “engines of liberation” because they turn income into comfort and time‑saving capacity.

Refrigerators and vacuum cleaners, for example, swept into more than 70% of homes within two decades of commercial viability, mirroring the earlier diffusion of running water and electric light. By 1970, the typical American household owned goods that were science fiction just 50 years earlier. Next, computers and mobile phones leapt from niche to mainstream in a single generation, echoing earlier booms in radio and television.

Together, these trends show how higher output translated into tangible improvements inside the home—arguably the place people feel growth most directly.

Beyond GDP: Why Access Matters

Traditional growth metrics like GDP or real wages conceal what economist Angus Deaton terms the “lived experience” of prosperity.

Tracking adoption rates offers a complementary lens: it tells us not just how big the economy is, but how its gains permeate daily life. A flat income series may hide the fact that color TVs or air‑conditioning are suddenly affordable to all. Work by the National Bureau of Economic Research shows that such quality‑adjusted gains mean living standards rise faster than official estimates suggest.

Lessons for Emerging Economies

The U.S. timeline is now a benchmark for catch‑up development. When researchers compare electrification in India or smartphone uptake in Nigeria, they use similar s‑curves to map progress. Because technology costs fall globally, many emerging economies leapfrog stages—adopting mobile phones, for instance, long before landlines ever became universal. Using access indicators therefore paints a richer picture of growth than per‑capita income alone, and it helps policymakers target bottlenecks in infrastructure and affordability.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

Explore more insights into income inequality and economic growth on the Voronoi app, including how daily incomes have changed across the top 20 economies since 1994.