Current Affairs For August 2011

Current Affairs For August 2011

National

    Anna Hazare Arrested Congress messed it up

  • The storm about the arrest of Anna Hazare and his team (virtually the whole nation) has just put Congress in a bit of mess then even they would have imagined at first. Anna and his followers not just maintained that their outlooks be taken on in the panel when drafting the Lokpal Bill, but exacted that only and only their version of the Bill be agreed too and, as a matter of fact, discussed in Parliament by the government. Interestingly, government cannot agree to these kinds of dictates from anybody in a parliamentary democratic system. Rather than letting off such a great deal of steam on their appeals that the government forwards their edition of the Bill in Parliament, Team Anna can simply have got any one of the 545 members of the Lok Sabha to bring in the asked for Jan Lokpal Bill. Definitely, the extremely disconcerted Opposition political parties can leap forward even at this time and forward the Team Anna edition of the Bill in the house.

  • Anna leaves hospital and heads to village

  • Social activist Anna Hazare head to his village Ralegan Siddhi in Maharashtra subsequent to his release from Medanta Medicity Hospital in Gurgaon after development in his state, a supporter alleged. Hazare was taken to the Hospital in uptown Gurgaon Sunday after he finished his 288-hour fast embarked upon since August 16. “He will go to Pune and will consequently head to his village”, revealed a member of the TEAM ANNA. Hazare was released Wednesday once his fundamental factors were seen to be steady. As per Yatin Mehta, a part of the doctor’s team observing Anna at the hospital, the revolutionary was in ‘excellent state’ and ‘healthy’. Previously in the day, Anna had consumed soft solid foodstuffs such as rice, dal and idli. ‘Following the success of his 12-day fast, Hazare’s physical condition exhibited lot of development. His blood pressure is 141/90, which is standard,’ Mehta understood.
  • Sheila Dikshit defers CAG report discussion
  • Sheila Dikshit, Delhi Chief Minister on Tuesday alleged that the government cannot remark on the CAG details pending parliament’s Public Accounts Committee (PAC) presents its proposals. On the succeeding day of the assembly’s yearly monsoon session, which observed tumult by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MPs over the CAG and V.K. Shunglu Committee details on the CWG, the CM stated: ‘I have told about it on numerous occasions that we cannot talk about the CAG report as it is in possession of the PAC, which is a legitimate fraction of parliament. We are subjected to get going against anybody when the PAC directs so.’ Initiating a mocking assault on the BJP, Dikshit further said that the chief opposition party in the parliament has been fooling people by initiating a scuttlebutt as it is in front of a lot of annoyance because of repeated routs in the last three assembly and two Lok Sabha elections in the capital
  • Rajya Sabha suspended over Gujarat Lokayukta row

  • The Rajya Sabha was suspended for a short time Tuesday subsequent to raucous scenes over Leader of Opposition Arun Jaitley posing the subject of selection of Lokayukta in Gujarat by the governor ‘with no meeting with the state government’. Quickly subsequent to Jaitley lifted the subject; Chairman Hamid Ansari took attention to meetings and regulations of the house on discussing subjects about people running in high offices. Jaitley said that there were examples when even reminder to Governor had been conferred in Parliament. BJP members stood up from their chairs to back Jaitley, which translated to raucous scenes during the sessions due to which the house was suspended for ten minutes.
  • Cities to continue living with menacing security arrangements

  • Security in Indian cities is miserable. And the expectations are worse than thought as the condition will simply get worse in time coming up. This threatening note of concern was clouted here today by Mr. G. K. Pillai, ex-Union Home Secretary, at the FICCI convention on S&T for Homeland Security-2011: ‘Safe and Secure City’. Mr. Pillai alleged that with the nation going through a high growth rate of 8 per cent, hopes of the citizens are increasing and loads of them are swarming into cities, raising the already augmenting crime rate due to the lack of work prospects. In the capital, for example, 82 per cent of crime is committed by first timers, that also by adolescents between the age of 16 and 26 years old. Novel kinds of criminal actions are growing for example cyber crimes, hacking, burglaries, snatchings, while rape, murder and car thefts are the ones most in trend. Mr. Pillai warned against radicalization of adolescence as this would develop them into anti-social activists and destroy their lives. He cautioned against ghettoisation of cities as well that originates of the practice of not giving homes on lease to someone of a certain community/religion/caste by some other community/religion/caste community.

Sports News

    Speed lovers soon to see Greater Noida as their pit-stop

  • The highly anticipated homologation of the Budh International Circuit (BIC), setting for the first ever Indian Grand Prix, is all but done. Plus, the FIA team, headed by technical director Charlie Whiting, has also given his nod to all aspects of the 5.14m long track. As per a report declared by the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India (FMSCI) President, Vicky Chandhok on behalf of the supporters JPSI, Whiting, through the first of the two days of inspection, was mighty delighted in the fashion in which the circuit’s making has been developing. "Mr. Charlie Whiting, the Formula One Race Director came to see the Budh International Race circuit some time back for a premeditated custom check," Chandhok stated in the statement. "He told us that the development was more than all right and was beyond of what he expected from us from the last visit he paid. He further put across assurance that the introductory Indian Grand Prix will be a titanic triumph," he added. On the other hand the statement read that as a general exercise for all fresh circuits, the physical issuance of Grade-I recognition to the circuit, will be sanctioned seven days ahead of the chief event to be held on October 30.
  • New Sports bill turned down by the Government

  • A contentious offer that required controlling India’s and World’s most powerful cricket board BCCI and added national sports organizations was rejected by the government in late August, reports from the local media emerged. The proposal that is designed to regulate these sports bodies under federal intelligibility and responsibility laws were put forward by Ajay Maken, Sports Minister. However, the much needed bill was rejected by the cabinet and it asked Ajay Maken to return with a new and improvised version, one of the news networks of the county reported. The bill aimed to keep back no less than 25 percent of federation positions for previous players and puts a ceiling on the age of all administrators i.e.70. A further significant prerequisite of the bill was to get the associations under the purview of the Right to Information Act (RTI), a milestone regulation that lets members of the public to ask for information of the functioning of public bodies. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has usually been out of the government’s purview and, unlike added national sports federations, does not rely on the finances given by the state. Sports bodies in India have been the focal point of numerous controversies in recent years. The popular Indian Premier League, after previous year’s controversial exit of its Founding Chairman Lalit Modi, has been the center of numerous probing over charges of pecuniary indiscretions.

International News

Zardari nods to cooperate with China

  • Pakistan will cooperate with China to overcome terrorism and secessionism, cited Asif Ali Zardari, the Pakistani President. Zardari repeated Pakistan’s pledge to get rid of extremism and he promised China of his nation’s full cooperation in overcoming terrorism and secessionism, reported Associated Press of Pakistan. The Pakistani president landed in China in late August to be present at the first China-Eurasia Expo to be hosted by Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, in the first week of September. He alleged Pakistan denounces terrorism in all its types and appearances and will not relax on any attempt to get rid of it. Zardari also talked about his daughters were on board with him on the trip, which is a testimony of the relationships between the two nations existing since generations. He further talked about the upcoming trip of Pakistan Peoples Party chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari to China later on this week to be present at the International Political Conference and assumed it demonstrates Pakistan and China were making efforts to fortify relations and ultimately deep-rooting their international polity.
  • United States downgraded to AA+

  • The United States parted company with its respected AAA credit rating for the first time in seven decades after being downgraded by Standard & Poor's. The country's credit rating was cut to AA+ following S&P alleged the conciliation made by Congress and President Obama in early August to slash expenditure and enhance the liability upper limit "doesn’t meet the level, in our view, would be essential to even out the government's standard-term debt dynamics." The agency was frank in its evaluation. Its statement read: "We downgraded the 70-year long AAA rating of the United States since we think that the protracted storm over increasing the constitutional liability upper limit and the associated monetary policy debate point out that additional upcoming development surrounding the increase in public expenditure, particularly on privileges, or coming to an agreement on generating income is less probable than we formerly understood and will stay put to a arguable and intermittent procedure," the ratings firm believed.

GATE: Previous papers Downloads

Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering (GATE) is an all India examination administered and conducted jointly by the Indian Institute of Science and seven Indian Institutes of Technology on behalf of the National Coordination Board - GATE, Department of Higher Education, Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD), Government of India.The GATE committee, which comprises of representatives from the administering institutes, is the sole authority for regulating the examination and declaring the results.GATE is conducted through the constitution of eight zones for entrance to various post graduate programmes in the prestigious institutes of INDIA. From 2012 gate is also considered by the various Govt. sector companies like BHEL, NTPC, Power Grid for their recruitment process. DOWNLOAD ALL THE PREVIOUS YEARS GATE PAPERS FROM THE LINK BELOW: Download all previous years GATE Papers of all Branches

The College Student's Guide to a Winning Resume :Published by: Deborah Federico

Gone in sixty seconds. Recruiters spend less than a minute reviewing your resume. With a stack of resumes to review, recruiters naturally want to make their workload easier, tossing bad resumes right off the bat.  Reasons for your resume to be quickly tossed into the “No” pile: Typos, misspellings, mismatched fonts, a sloppy appearance.  Even a resume that’s too text heavy or runs onto two pages will get thrown into the discard pile.
Every time I teach my class on resume writing, I always start the lecture with the question, What is the goal of a resume?  Is it “to get a job?” as most students will answer? To them, I say, “No, that’s not it. Eventually, someone guesses the real goal of a resume: to get an interview.  I make the marketing analogy that the resume is an advertisement about you, and you need to make the most of that 8.5-by-11-inch sheet of paper. Sell yourself to the employer by convincing them that you’re the best candidate to bring in for the interview.
So, what can you do to increase the chances that your resume will be read by the recruiter?  Follow my “lucky 13” tips outlined below, and you will produce a winning resume that not only gains the attention of the recruiter, but also garners his or her admiration.  Pretty soon your phone will be ringing with calls from recruiters inviting you in for an interview.
Length:  Keep your resume to one page. No exceptions.
Formatting:  Your resume should look clean and readable with plenty of white space to make it inviting.  Keep the font size consistent and use bolding or italicization for effect.  Stay away from cutesy fonts or graphics.  Some students will tell me that they want to get attention that way.  I tell them that the only attention they get will be the negative kind.  Put your energies into the content.
Contact information:   Make sure your email address is professional.  Sticking with your name is the best bet.  Again, this is not the place to be creative by using addresses like “surferdude87” or “hotchick143.”
Put both your permanent address and school address on your resume.  If you have room for only one, put the address on that’s closest to the job location. I worked with a student once who wasn’t getting any interviews despite having a terrific resume.  The problem?  She had put her home address in New Jersey down while applying for full-time positions in Boston.
Use bullet points:  I highly recommend using bullet points on your resume.  Stick with the standard kind of bullets.  If you decide to use paragraphs, make sure you write concise readable prose.
(Okay, by now you’re probably thinking, “How will I get my resume to stand out if it’s just like everyone else’s?”  Just keep reading…)
Use action statements:  That means starting each bullet point with an active verb (avoid words like “assisted,” “helped,” “worked” or “aided”).  Use verbs that are relevant to your industry, e.g. “design” or “create” for the fashion industry or “calculate” or “audit” for the accounting field.
Avoid laundry lists:  Don’t use phrases like “responsibilities or duties included,” then proceed to list everything you did at a particular job in one long bullet point.  First of all, this is boring to read and, secondly, you’re shortchanging yourself.  When I work with students on dissecting these long statements, we very often break them into two or three active statements , highlighting accomplishments, results and purpose.
Quantify when possible.  Numbers always make a point stronger.  For example, instead of saying something like, “service customers by answering questions, selecting appropriate merchandise and processing sales on register in order to meet sales goals,” try, “service 50 customers per shift by answering questions, selecting appropriate merchandise and processing sales on register in order to consistently meet and surpass daily sales goal of $500.
Highlight accomplishments and results:  In the example above, the accomplishment is that this student consistently met the sales goal of $500.  When writing your bullet points, think about what you accomplished or achieved.  If you were a tutor, did you help students improve their test scores?  If you were a server in a restaurant, did your persuasive upselling techniques result in increased profits for the restaurant?  To make your statements even more powerful, start with the accomplishment, e.g., “Achieved highest monthly sales out of 10 salespeople by….”
State the purpose of what you did:  Whenever I show students how to do this, their statements always end up being so much stronger.  Think about what the purpose was of what you did, and put that at the end of your point.  Sometimes students think that what they did was insignificant, but by adding the purpose to the statement, it makes them realize that it wasn’t.  Which is better: “Researched demographic variables and environment factors in the children’s toy market”? Or “Researched demographic variables and environment factors in the children’s toy market for client’s use in new product development.”?
Prioritize your bullets:  When ordering your bullet points, always think, “If the recruiter only had time to read my first or perhaps second bullet, what would I want him or her to read?” Most students think that they have to list their bullet points based on what they did the most.  If 75% of their job involved cold-calling prospective clients, they will want to list that first.  However, if they worked on a project that was presented to the CEO of the company, then by all means, that should come first!
Categorize your Experience section:  Because work experience needs to be presented in reverse chronological order, many students are faced with the problem of having to put their current job first, which is often a part-time job unrelated to what they want to do, while they did a terrific  internship last summer and want to showcase that.  What to do?  Simply break your experience section in two:  Relevant Experience and Other Experience.
Target your resume:  Many students will have a master resume from which they create more specific, targeted resumes for the different industries they want to work in.  If a student is simultaneously pursuing internships in marketing and finance, he will have a marketing resume that has his marketing-related team projects, which uses lost of marketing keywords, while his finance resume will do just the opposite. Tip:  Look at the job description for key words to incorporate into your resume.
What to include on your resume:  In addition to your education, include work experience, both relevant and not, volunteer experience, college activities/clubs/organizations, leadership roles, team projects, skills and interests.  Interests are great conversation starters in an interview.  So often students will tell me they made a connection with their interviewer by talking about a mutual interest.  In short, your resume should provide a picture of a student who is well rounded.   A word about GPA:  the standard rule of thumb is to put it on your resume if it is greater than 3.0.

Deborah Federico is an Assistant Director of Undergraduate Career Services in the School of Management at Boston University. Prior to her career in higher education, Deborah worked in the corporate world, primarily doing marketing and market research. She blogs about career advice here and her LinkedIn profile is here.

The Worlds Biggest Public Companies by Forbes

Rank Company Country Sales Profits Assets Market Value
1 JPMorgan Chase

JPMorgan Chase

United States $115.5 B $17.4 B $2,117.6 B $182.2 B
2 HSBC Holdings

HSBC Holdings

United Kingdom $103.3 B $13.3 B $2,467.9 B $186.5 B
3 General Electric

General Electric

United States $150.2 B $11.6 B $751.2 B $216.2 B
4 ExxonMobil

ExxonMobil

United States $341.6 B $30.5 B $302.5 B $407.2 B
5 Royal Dutch Shell

Royal Dutch Shell

Netherlands $369.1 B $20.1 B $317.2 B $212.9 B
6 PetroChina

PetroChina

China $222.3 B $21.2 B $251.3 B $320.8 B
7 ICBC

ICBC

China $69.2 B $18.8 B $1,723.5 B $239.5 B
8 Berkshire Hathaway

Berkshire Hathaway

United States $136.2 B $13 B $372.2 B $211 B
8 Petrobras-Petróleo Brasil

Petrobras-Petróleo Brasil

Brazil $121.3 B $21.2 B $313.2 B $238.8 B
10 Citigroup

Citigroup

United States $111.5 B $10.6 B $1,913.9 B $132.8 B
11 BNP Paribas

BNP Paribas

France $130.4 B $10.5 B $2,680.7 B $88 B
11 Wells Fargo

Wells Fargo

United States $93.2 B $12.4 B $1,258.1 B $170.6 B
13 Banco Santander

Banco Santander

Spain $109.7 B $12.8 B $1,570.6 B $94.7 B
14 AT&T

AT&T

United States $124.3 B $19.9 B $268.5 B $168.2 B
15 Gazprom

Gazprom

Russia $98.7 B $25.7 B $275.9 B $172.9 B
16 Chevron

Chevron

United States $189.6 B $19 B $184.8 B $200.6 B
17 China Construction Bank

China Construction Bank

China $58.2 B $15.6 B $1,408 B $224.8 B
18 Wal-Mart Stores

Wal-Mart Stores

United States $421.8 B $16.4 B $180.7 B $187.3 B
19 Total

Total

France $188.1 B $14.2 B $192.8 B $138 B
20 Allianz

Allianz

Germany $142.9 B $6.7 B $838.4 B $62.7 B
21 Bank of China

Bank of China

China $49.4 B $11.9 B $1,277.8 B $143 B
22 ConocoPhillips

ConocoPhillips

United States $175.8 B $11.4 B $156.3 B $109.1 B
22 Sinopec-China Petroleum

Sinopec-China Petroleum

China $284.8 B $10.9 B $148.7 B $107.7 B
24 Volkswagen Group

Volkswagen Group

Germany $168.3 B $9.1 B $267.5 B $70.3 B
25 Agricultural Bank of China

Agricultural Bank of China

China $49.4 B $9.5 B $1,298.2 B $134 B
26 Nestlé

Nestlé

Switzerland $112 B $36.7 B $117.7 B $181.1 B
27 Vodafone

Vodafone

United Kingdom $67.5 B $13.1 B $236.6 B $148.2 B
28 ENI

ENI

Italy $130.5 B $8.4 B $176.1 B $96.8 B
29 GDF Suez

GDF Suez

France $113.1 B $6.2 B $245.5 B $85.2 B
29 American Intl Group

American Intl Group

United States $77.3 B $7.8 B $683.4 B $67.1 B
31 IBM

IBM

United States $99.9 B $14.8 B $113.4 B $198.1 B
31 Telefónica

Telefónica

Spain $81.3 B $13.6 B $166.5 B $113.3 B
33 Samsung Electronics

Samsung Electronics

South Korea $133.8 B $13.7 B $119.3 B $112.9 B
34 China Mobile

China Mobile

Hong Kong-China $71.8 B $17.7 B $129.3 B $192.1 B
35 Procter & Gamble

Procter & Gamble

United States $79.6 B $11.2 B $134.3 B $172.2 B
36 Pfizer

Pfizer

United States $67.8 B $8.3 B $195 B $155.7 B
37 Goldman Sachs Group

Goldman Sachs Group

United States $46 B $8.4 B $911.3 B $90 B
38 E.ON

E.ON

Germany $124.6 B $7.9 B $205.1 B $64 B
39 ING Group

ING Group

Netherlands $149.2 B $4.3 B $1,665.3 B $46.8 B
40 UBS

UBS

Switzerland $49.8 B $7.7 B $1,403 B $70.8 B
41 Barclays

Barclays

United Kingdom $63.9 B $5.6 B $2,328.3 B $58.3 B
42 Hewlett-Packard

Hewlett-Packard

United States $127.2 B $9.1 B $119.9 B $90.3 B
43 Daimler

Daimler

Germany $130.9 B $6 B $178.7 B $70.5 B
44 Société Générale

Société Générale

France $85.4 B $5.3 B $1,518.7 B $46.9 B
45 Siemens

Siemens

Germany $103.5 B $5.3 B $135 B $110.2 B
46 Banco Bradesco

Banco Bradesco

Brazil $70.1 B $6 B $373.5 B $63.3 B
47 Apple

Apple

United States $76.3 B $16.6 B $86.7 B $324.3 B
48 AXA Group

AXA Group

France $162.4 B $3.7 B $981.8 B $46.4 B
48 Nippon Telegraph & Tel

Nippon Telegraph & Tel

Japan $108.9 B $5.3 B $193.8 B $70.3 B
50 Microsoft

Microsoft

United States $66.7 B $20.6 B $92.3 B $215.8 B
51 Banco do Brasil

Banco do Brasil

Brazil $68.9 B $7.1 B $488.7 B $48.5 B
52 Mitsubishi UFJ Financial

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial

Japan $51 B $4.2 B $2,177.4 B $74.5 B
53 Vale

Vale

Brazil $50.1 B $18.1 B $127.8 B $162.5 B
54 Ford Motor

Ford Motor

United States $129 B $6.6 B $164.7 B $54.3 B
55 ENEL

ENEL

Italy $96.5 B $5.9 B $217.4 B $54 B
55 Toyota Motor

Toyota Motor

Japan $202.8 B $2.2 B $323.5 B $137.8 B
57 Johnson & Johnson

Johnson & Johnson

United States $61.6 B $13.3 B $102.9 B $163.3 B
58 Rio Tinto

Rio Tinto

United Kingdom $56.6 B $14.3 B $112.4 B $131.6 B
59 Credit Suisse Group

Credit Suisse Group

Switzerland $53.9 B $5.2 B $1,097.1 B $50.7 B
60 Statoil

Statoil

Norway $90.4 B $6.5 B $110.3 B $83.8 B
61 General Motors

General Motors

United States $135.6 B $6.2 B $138.9 B $49.8 B
62 Deutsche Bank

Deutsche Bank

Germany $61.2 B $3.1 B $2,556.5 B $59.6 B
62 Novartis

Novartis

Switzerland $50.6 B $9.8 B $123.3 B $125.2 B
64 Verizon Communications

Verizon Communications

United States $106.6 B $2.5 B $220 B $101.3 B
65 Westpac Banking Group

Westpac Banking Group

Australia $37.8 B $6.1 B $596.4 B $69.3 B
66 BBVA-Banco Bilbao Vizcaya

BBVA-Banco Bilbao Vizcaya

Spain $43.4 B $6.3 B $734.1 B $52.3 B
67 BHP Billiton

BHP Billiton

Australia $52.8 B $12.7 B $84.8 B $231.5 B
68 China Life Insurance

China Life Insurance

China $48.2 B $4.8 B $179.6 B $96.6 B
68 Royal Bank of Canada

Royal Bank of Canada

Canada $31.8 B $5.6 B $720.9 B $87.2 B
70 Commonwealth Bank

Commonwealth Bank

Australia $34.3 B $4.8 B $544.8 B $79.2 B
71 Lukoil

Lukoil

Russia $86.1 B $9 B $84 B $59.2 B
72 BMW Group

BMW Group

Germany $80.2 B $4.3 B $146.1 B $51 B
73 BASF

BASF

Germany $85.5 B $6.1 B $78.2 B $74.2 B
74 UniCredit Group

UniCredit Group

Italy $68.8 B $2.4 B $1,318 B $47.3 B
74 France Telecom

France Telecom

France $60.9 B $6.5 B $120.5 B $56.7 B
76 Intesa Sanpaolo

Intesa Sanpaolo

Italy $49.9 B $4 B $889 B $41.2 B
77 National Australia Bank

National Australia Bank

Australia $36.9 B $4.1 B $662.2 B $54 B
77 Rosneft

Rosneft

Russia $46.1 B $10.4 B $93.9 B $85 B
79 Zurich Financial Services

Zurich Financial Services

Switzerland $67.8 B $3.4 B $375.7 B $39.9 B
80 Honda Motor

Honda Motor

Japan $91.8 B $2.9 B $122.2 B $73.2 B
81 Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley

United States $38 B $4.7 B $807.7 B $43.8 B
81 Sanofi-aventis

Sanofi-aventis

France $40.7 B $7.3 B $110.3 B $89.2 B
83 MetLife

MetLife

United States $52.7 B $2.8 B $730.9 B $48.4 B
84 TD Bank Financial Group

TD Bank Financial Group

Canada $25.8 B $4.9 B $616.2 B $75.5 B
85 ANZ Banking

ANZ Banking

Australia $32.2 B $4.4 B $514.1 B $60.5 B
86 PepsiCo

PepsiCo

United States $57.8 B $6.3 B $68.2 B $102.6 B
87 Cisco Systems

Cisco Systems

United States $42.4 B $7.6 B $82 B $99.2 B
88 América Móvil

América Móvil

Mexico $49.2 B $7.3 B $69.7 B $110.1 B
89 Roche Holding

Roche Holding

Switzerland $50.8 B $9.3 B $62.9 B $120.9 B
90 ArcelorMittal

ArcelorMittal

Luxembourg $78 B $2.9 B $130.9 B $53.6 B
91 Coca-Cola

Coca-Cola

United States $35.1 B $11.8 B $72.9 B $148.7 B
92 Deutsche Telekom

Deutsche Telekom

Germany $83.6 B $2.3 B $164.6 B $60.7 B
93 Intel

Intel

United States $43.6 B $11.5 B $63.2 B $114.5 B
94 Generali Group

Generali Group

Italy $118 B $2.3 B $564.6 B $33.4 B
95 Saudi Basic Industries

Saudi Basic Industries

Saudi Arabia $40.5 B $5.7 B $84.3 B $81.2 B
96 Anheuser-Busch

Anheuser-Busch

Belgium $36.8 B $4.1 B $113.8 B $90.6 B
96 Sumitomo Mitsui Financial

Sumitomo Mitsui Financial

Japan $33.1 B $2.9 B $1,310.3 B $49 B
98 Bank of Nova Scotia

Bank of Nova Scotia

Canada $24.2 B $4.4 B $541.1 B $63.6 B
99 Crédit Agricole

Crédit Agricole

France $88.9 B $1.7 B $2,130.8 B $38.6 B
100 EDF Group

EDF Group

France $87.2 B $1.4 B $319.9 B $78.2 B