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Ranked: The World’s Most Profitable Companies in 2025

2025-12-03 02:25:10

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Graphic showing the world’s most profitable companies in 2025

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Ranked: The World’s Most Profitable Companies in 2025

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Alphabet, Apple, and Microsoft lead global profitability, each earning over $100B in net income.
  • U.S. companies dominate the list, but major Asian and European giants also rank among the top earners.

The ranking of the world’s most profitable companies in 2025 highlights a powerful concentration of earnings across technology, finance, and energy.

The data for this visualization comes from FinanceCharts.com. It ranks companies by trailing 12-month net income as of November 2025 and shows the profit margins behind those earnings.

Tech Giants Lead by a Wide Margin

As in previous years, technology firms dominate the top of the ranking, with Alphabet earning $124.3 billion and Apple and Microsoft close behind. These companies benefit from high-margin digital services, advertising platforms, and enterprise software, all of which scale efficiently.

Rank Name TTM Net Income TTM Net Profit Margin
1 Alphabet $124.3B 30.1%
2 Apple $112.0B 24.8%
3 Microsoft $104.9B 35.7%
4 NVIDIA $99.2B 53.7%
5 Saudi Aramco $95.6B 21.7%
6 Amazon.com $76.5B 9.8%
7 Berkshire Hathaway $67.5B 22.0%
8 Meta Platforms $58.5B 36.7%
9 JPMorgan Chase & Co $56.7B 20.1%
10 Taiwan Semiconductor $50.5B 41.6%
11 Industrial and Commerci.. $49.9B 21.7%
12 China Construction Bank $46.4B 23.4%
13 Agricultural Bank of Ch.. $38.5B 18.8%
14 Bank of China $31.4B 16.3%
15 Exxon Mobil $30.0B 9.7%
16 HSBC Holdings $29.6B 14.7%
17 Toyota Motor $29.5B 9.6%
18 Tencent Holdings $29.3B 27.8%
19 Bank of America $28.3B 13.5%
20 Johnson & Johnson $25.1B 21.9%
21 China Life Insurance $24.0B 35.6%
22 Walmart $22.9B 3.0%
23 Comcast $22.6B 14.9%
24 PetroChina $22.3B 5.6%
25 AT&T $22.2B 10.7%
26 UniCredit SpA $21.3B 23.8%
27 Alibaba Group Holding $20.9B 11.3%
28 Samsung Electronics $20.6B 10.6%
29 China Merchants Bank $20.2B 28.3%
30 Allianz $20.1B 13.2%
31 Wells Fargo & Co $20.0B 15.2%
32 Visa $19.9B 52.2%
33 Verizon Communications $19.8B 12.2%
34 Ping An Insurance (Grou.. $19.7B 14.6%
35 Holcim $19.1B 31.4%
36 BNP Paribas $19.1B 8.5%
37 Merck & Co $19.0B 25.7%
38 Broadcom $18.9B 19.0%
39 Eli Lilly and Co $18.4B 24.7%
40 UnitedHealth Group $17.6B 4.3%
41 Uber Technologies $16.6B 24.0%
42 Procter & Gamble $16.5B 18.2%
43 Novo Nordisk $16.0B 34.6%
44 Sanofi $15.9B 16.2%
45 Goldman Sachs Group $15.8B 11.1%
46 Banco Santander $15.7B 9.8%
47 Morgan Stanley $15.6B 12.1%
48 Shell $14.6B 5.2%
49 Home Depot $14.6B 9.0%
50 Deutsche Telekom $14.5B 8.1%

NVIDIA stands out with a remarkable 53.7% profit margin, underscoring how demand for AI chips continues to reshape the semiconductor industry. Together, the top U.S. tech firms account for several hundred billion dollars in annual profit, more than entire sectors in some countries.

Financial Institutions Are Global Profit Engines

JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo all appear in the top 50, contributing tens of billions in profit.

China’s “Big Four” banks—ICBC, China Construction Bank, Agricultural Bank of China, and Bank of China—also rank highly thanks to scale and extensive domestic networks.

European firms such as HSBC, BNP Paribas, and Santander add further evidence that financial services remain one of the world’s most profitable industries.

Energy, Pharmaceuticals, and Retail Show Mixed Results

Saudi Aramco remains the world’s most profitable non-tech operator, generating $95.6 billion from energy production despite market volatility. Pharma companies like Merck, Eli Lilly, and Novo Nordisk show strong margins driven by high-value therapeutics and blockbuster drug pipelines.

In contrast, retail giants such as Walmart and Home Depot post lower margins due to their cost-intensive structures, though their absolute profits still place them among the world’s leaders.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out When Will the Next $5 Trillion Dollar Company Emerge? on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Ranked: The Top Factors That Build AI Trust

2025-12-03 00:37:00

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The following content is sponsored by Terzo

Ranked: The Top Factors That Build AI Trust

Key Takeaways

  • Capability is the biggest driving factor of AI trust across over 500 studies.
  • Human-like traits (anthropomorphism) are the second-biggest precursor to people trusting AI.

AI is evolving faster than most teams can keep up. It’s often inaccurate, occasionally unpredictable, and forces businesses to rethink workflows they’ve trusted for years. In this environment, AI trust isn’t automatic. It has to be earned.

This graphic pulls back the curtain on what really makes people believe in AI—and why performance matters more than polish. It’s a preview of the brand-new executive guide from Terzo and Visual Capitalist, AI’s Illusion of Truth: The Data Behind AI Errors.

The Most Common Drivers of AI Trust

Researchers reviewed over 500 studies to find the most commonly cited drivers of people’s trust in AI. At the top of the list is capability, an AI system’s ability to perform tasks accurately and effectively. 

This makes intuitive sense. When an AI model repeatedly hallucinates or gives unreliable output, teams quickly lose trust. In a world where overconfidence and illusions of accuracy are common, competent AI matters most.

Factor Number of Times Reported
as Precursor to Human Trust in AI
Capability 92
Anthropomorphism* 67
Individual Factors 47
Explainability 41
Privacy Risk 37

*Anthropomorphism is attributing human characteristics to AI. Source: AI & Society, based on a systematic review of 562 studies of human trust in AI.

The second most common factor is giving AI human-like traits (anthropomorphism). For example, this can include things like the AI model referring to itself as “I,” using a conversational tone, or appearing friendly.

Beyond this, individual factors like age, gender, and education level play a large role. 

People are also more likely to have confidence in AI if they understand the logic behind AI decisions (explainability) and if they feel there is a low privacy risk. 

How Business Leaders Can Build Trust

To move past illusions of confidence and toward dependable results, teams need to invest in AI that is competent and clear. While human-like traits can help ease adoption, they shouldn’t be a substitute for strong performance.

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Dig deeper into the data behind AI errors and how to get 99% accuracy in the free executive guide, AI’s Illusion of Truth.

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What the Top 1% Richest Americans Pay in Taxes Across the U.S.

2025-12-02 23:36:05

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This graphic shows each state’s share of income taxes paid by the top 1% of earners.

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What the Top 1% Richest Americans Pay in Taxes Across the U.S.

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • The top 1% richest Americans earn 19.5% of U.S. income yet pay 37% of total income taxes.
  • State-by-state tax burdens vary widely, with Wyoming, Florida, and Nevada seeing the highest share of taxes paid by the top 1%.

This graphic uses IRS data from 2022 analyzed by SmartAsset to show how much the richest people contribute to income tax revenue.

The table below includes each state’s share of income taxes paid by the top 1% and the total amount of income tax they paid.

Where the Top 1% Pay the Largest Share of Taxes

Wyoming leads the nation, with the top 1% paying 54.67% of all state income taxes.

Florida and Nevada follow closely, both surpassing the 50% threshold. These states attract high-income individuals in part due to tax-friendly policies and large concentrations of wealthy households.

Rank State Income taxes paid by top 1% Total income tax paid by 1% (thousands of dollars)
1 Wyoming 54.67% $2,460,940
2 Florida 53.62% $96,264,565
3 Nevada 51.12% $11,010,104
4 New York 46.26% $79,488,609
5 Texas 44.52% $81,990,700
6 Connecticut 43.85% $16,284,881
7 Montana 42.92% $2,690,156
8 Arkansas 42.22% $4,814,153
9 Utah 41.16% $7,477,634
10 Tennessee 41.04% $14,547,566
11 South Dakota 40.46% $2,020,508
12 Louisiana 38.72% $6,806,423
13 California 38.60% $122,452,981
14 Illinois 38.39% $32,677,874
15 Georgia 38.31% $21,001,340
16 Mississippi 38.29% $3,297,109
17 Idaho 38.20% $3,392,957
18 Massachusetts 38.19% $26,646,912
19 Arizona 38.00% $14,438,918
20 Oklahoma 37.80% $5,622,529
21 Missouri 37.16% $10,481,163
22 South Carolina 37.05% $8,867,845
23 Nebraska 37.03% $3,704,671
24 Alabama 36.15% $6,778,809
25 Kansas 35.79% $5,066,051
26 Wisconsin 35.54% $11,024,109
27 Indiana 35.52% $10,518,818
28 New Hampshire 35.41% $3,946,877
29 North Carolina 35.28% $19,037,365
30 Pennsylvania 35.09% $26,128,752
31 Michigan 35.01% $16,650,121
32 Ohio 34.60% $18,842,538
33 Colorado 34.51% $14,894,687
34 North Dakota 34.41% $1,521,767
35 Kentucky 34.26% $5,451,182
36 New Jersey 33.78% $26,899,308
37 Rhode Island 33.58% $2,150,700
38 Hawaii 33.57% $2,455,554
39 Iowa 33.16% $4,813,252
40 Virginia 32.94% $19,239,261
41 Minnesota 32.64% $11,524,941
42 New Mexico 32.30% $2,380,544
43 Washington 32.06% $20,012,467
44 Vermont 32.04% $1,078,255
45 Maine 30.48% $1,976,671
46 Maryland 30.45% $12,675,749
47 Delaware 30.38% $1,647,326
48 Oregon 30.37% $6,773,041
49 West Virginia 30.28% $1,647,747
50 Alaska 26.37% $1,016,945

High-Population States with High-Dollar Contributions

In states like California, Texas, and New York, the share of taxes paid by the top 1% ranges from 39% to 46%, but the dollar amounts are higher due to population scale.

California’s top earners alone account for more than $122 billion in income taxes, the largest total contribution of any state. High adjusted gross incomes—often above $2 million—mean that even moderate tax-share percentages translate into substantial revenue.

States with More Evenly Distributed Tax Burdens

States further down the ranking, such as Oklahoma, Arizona, and Idaho, still see the top 1% paying about 38% of income taxes. Alaska sits at the bottom, with top earners paying 26%. Across nearly every state, the top 1% shoulder between one-third and one-half of total income taxes.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Mean vs. Median: Visualizing Net Worth in the U.S. by Age Group on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: U.S. Income Inequality by State

2025-12-02 21:09:03

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Map showing income inequality by state in 2024.

Use This Visualization

Mapped: U.S. Income Inequality by State

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Income inequality in America is high, with the top 20% of earners receiving more than half of all income.
  • Washington, D.C. and New York have the most extreme income inequality nationwide, driven by favorable tax policies and the concentration of billionaire wealth.

The wealth of America’s top 1% sits around $52 trillion today, rising by $4 trillion over the year.

Overall, the top 1% of U.S. earners need to make around $800,000 or more in salary per household. Meanwhile, about 30% of American households earned less than $50,000 last year, highlighting clear divides in wage distribution across the country.

This graphic shows income inequality by state, based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

The Spectrum of Income Inequality in America

In 2024, the U.S. Gini coefficient was 0.48, representing a high degree of inequality.

Effectively, a score of one means that a single person would earn all of the income, and 0 would represent perfect equality. Last year, the top 20% of earners pocketed 52.2% of the country’s income according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In contrast, the bottom fifth of earners received just 3.1%.

Yet, income is distributed differently across states. Last year, income inequality was the most severe in Washington, D.C. and New York, each with a 0.52 Gini index score.

State Gini Coefficient 2024
District of Columbia 0.52
New York 0.52
Connecticut 0.50
Louisiana 0.49
California 0.49
Massachusetts 0.48
Illinois 0.48
Florida 0.48
Texas 0.48
North Carolina 0.48
Mississippi 0.48
Pennsylvania 0.47
Tennessee 0.47
Alabama 0.47
Georgia 0.47
Washington 0.47
New Mexico 0.47
Arkansas 0.47
Rhode Island 0.47
New Jersey 0.47
Kentucky 0.47
Oklahoma 0.47
Virginia 0.47
Michigan 0.47
West Virginia 0.47
South Carolina 0.47
Nevada 0.47
Missouri 0.46
Ohio 0.46
Arizona 0.46
Colorado 0.46
Wyoming 0.46
Montana 0.46
North Dakota 0.46
Maine 0.46
Maryland 0.46
Kansas 0.46
Oregon 0.46
Vermont 0.46
Hawaii 0.45
Indiana 0.45
Minnesota 0.45
Delaware 0.45
New Hampshire 0.45
Nebraska 0.45
South Dakota 0.44
Wisconsin 0.44
Alaska 0.44
Iowa 0.44
Idaho 0.43
Utah 0.42

In Washington, D.C. the top 20% of earners made 27 times more than the bottom 20% in 2023 according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, which is the highest ratio of any state between the top and bottom quintiles.

New York, on the other hand, is home to more billionaires than any other state except for California, creating huge disparities in income. Since 2019, real wage growth among the Big Apple’s top 3% soared 34.5%, more than triple all other income tiers.

Falling near the U.S. average are Florida, Texas, and Massachusetts, providing a more representative picture of income inequality in the country.

In comparison, Utah ranks lowest overall, a position it has regularly held for some time. Utah has the sixth-highest employment share (65.4%) in the country, keeping average family incomes more even.

Along with this, Utah has one of the best social mobility index scores nationwide, likely influenced by narrower wage disparities.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on wealth inequality by country in 2025.

Charted: How Investors Allocate Their Investments, by Country

2025-12-02 02:25:42

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Stacked bar chart showing the investment allocation of different countries.

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How Investors Allocate Their Investments, by Country

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • U.S. investors allocate 78% of their equity portfolio to domestic assets, demonstrating a clear home bias.
  • Investors in Norway and Canada hold a significant share of U.S. equities in their portfolios, at 48% and 45%, respectively.

“Home bias” is a common tendency for investors to invest in domestic assets.

This pattern is especially pronounced among U.S. investors—likely influenced by the country’s outsized role in global financial markets. Similarly, Japanese investors heavily concentrate their investments in local assets.

This graphic shows how different countries invest across equities and bonds, based on data from Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research.

Equity Investment Allocation by Country

Below, we show the equity portfolios of countries across U.S. equities, domestic equities, and global equities:

Country U.S. Equities Domestic Equities Rest of World Equities
(ex U.S.)
🇺🇸 U.S. 78% N/A 22%
🇳🇴 Norway 48% 12% 40%
🇨🇦 Canada 45% 49% 6%
🇩🇰 Denmark 43% 40% 17%
🇦🇺 Australia 37% 33% 30%
🇪🇺 Euro Area 36% 46% 18%
🇬🇧 United Kingdom 34% 19% 47%
🇸🇪 Sweden 31% 50% 19%
🇳🇿 New Zealand 27% 53% 20%
🇨🇭 Switzerland 26% 32% 42%
🇯🇵 Japan 19% 78% 3%

U.S. investors keep 78% of their equity holdings in domestic markets, a share comparable to Japan.

In contrast, many countries allocate a significant portion of their portfolios to U.S. equities, such as Norway (48%) and Canada (45%). Notably, Norwegian investors hold only 12% of their equity allocation in domestic stocks, despite strong average annualized returns of 13.7% since 2020.

UK investors display a similar outward tilt, holding just 19% of their equities at home. This is likely influenced by weak stock market performance and the lingering effects of Brexit. Since 2020, the FTSE 100 has delivered less than 5% in annualized returns.

Bond Investment Allocation by Country

The below table shows how countries illustrate more of a home bias when it comes to bonds:

Country U.S. Bonds Domestic Bonds Rest of World Bonds
(ex U.S.)
🇺🇸 U.S. 77% N/A 23%
🇳🇴 Norway 28% 19% 53%
🇨🇦 Canada 24% 69% 7%
🇩🇰 Denmark 5% 65% 30%
🇦🇺 Australia 5% 62% 33%
🇪🇺 Euro Area 14% 69% 16%
🇬🇧 United Kingdom 25% 63% 13%
🇸🇪 Sweden 10% 66% 24%
🇳🇿 New Zealand 19% 47% 35%
🇨🇭 Switzerland 33% 54% 13%
🇯🇵 Japan 14% 80% 7%

As we can see, Japanese investors illustrate the strongest home bias, with 80% of fixed income investments held domestically.

Meanwhile, European investors also mirror this trend, with 69% allocated into domestic bonds. Factors such as familiarity and potential tax advantages may influence this trend.

For investors diversifying abroad, Switzerland has the highest allocation in U.S. bonds, at 33%. This is likely influenced by the strength of its currency, and comparatively higher U.S. bond yields given Switzerland’s current 0% interest rate.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the $127 trillion dollar global stock market.

Ranked: G20 Greenhouse Gas Emissions per Capita (1990-2024)

2025-12-01 23:28:08

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Graphic showing how G20 per-capita emissions have changed from 1990 to 2024, with big declines in Europe and rising levels in emerging economies.

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Ranked: G20 Greenhouse Gas Emissions per Capita (1990–2024)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • China produces about 30% of global CO₂ emissions, but with its large population, its per-capita output (10.8 tonnes per person) remains below that of the U.S., Australia, and Canada.
  • Countries including the UK, Germany, and France have cut emissions by 30–50% since 1990 thanks to the adoption of renewables.

Greenhouse gas emissions have shifted across the world over the last three decades. The data for this visualization comes from the European Commission’s EDGAR database. It tracks greenhouse gas emissions per capita across the G20 from 1990 through 2024. The dataset accounts for CO₂-equivalent emissions in tonnes per capita. Land use, land-use change, and forestry are not included.

While fossil-fuel-dependent economies continue to rank high, advanced industrial economies in Europe have seen marked declines. Rapidly growing middle-income countries have increased their emissions but remain far below Western levels on a per-capita basis.

Saudi Arabia Tops the Ranking

Saudi Arabia (22.8 tonnes), Australia (22.3 tonnes), Canada (19.8 tonnes), and the United States (17.3 tonnes) remain among the highest per-capita emitters in 2024.

These levels reflect carbon-intensive power systems, large transportation footprints, and high consumption patterns. Russia, a big producer of fossil fuels, completes the top five with 18.02 tonnes per capita.

Rank (2024) Country (t CO2eq/cap) 1990 2024
1 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia 14.49 22.79
2 🇦🇺 Australia 27.03 22.26
3 🇨🇦 Canada 21.32 19.76
4 🇷🇺 Russia 20.71 18.02
5 🇺🇸 United States 24.62 17.34
6 🇰🇷 South Korea 7.25 12.83
7 🇨🇳 China 3.17 10.81
8 🇿🇦 South Africa 10.84 9.31
9 🇯🇵 Japan 10.41 8.52
10 🇩🇪 Germany 15.62 8.17
11 🇦🇷 Argentina 7.73 7.95
12 🇪🇺 EU 11.58 7.14
13 🇹🇷 Türkiye 4.19 6.76
14 🇮🇹 Italy 8.83 6.32
15 🇧🇷 Brazil 4.35 5.93
16 🇫🇷 France 9.32 5.68
17 🇬🇧 United Kingdom 13.61 5.63
18 🇲🇽 Mexico 5.16 4.91
19 🇮🇩 Indonesia 1.86 4.69
20 🇮🇳 India 1.56 3.04

China and Emerging Economies Have Risen, but Still Lag Rich Countries

China’s per-capita emissions increased sharply, rising from 3.17 tonnes in 1990 to 10.81 tonnes in 2024.

Yet even at this level, it remains below the U.S., Canada, Australia, and Saudi Arabia. South Korea and Türkiye also saw significant increases as industrial output expanded. India and Indonesia remain among the lowest emitters on a per-person basis, despite rapid economic growth.

Europe and Japan Show the Steepest Long-Term Declines

Germany cut its per-capita emissions from 15.6 tonnes to 8.2 tonnes, while the UK saw an even larger drop—from 13.6 tonnes to 5.6 tonnes.

France, Italy, and the broader EU also show reductions of roughly 40–50% over the period. These declines reflect shifts toward renewable energy, energy-efficiency mandates, and broader economic transitions away from heavy industry. Japan followed a similar trend, falling from 10.4 tonnes to 8.5 tonnes.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Visualizing Future Solar Power Capacity by Country on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.