NCPI Workmark
Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

Search Results


35 results for "Business enterprises--Rankings"
Currently viewing results 1 - 15
PAGE OF 3
Next
Record #:
10260
Abstract:
The state's top seventy-five public companies are ranked by their June, 2005, market value. Bank of America and Wachovia topped the list, as they did the previous year. Eight companies from 2004 did not make the list in 2005. The biggest newcomer was FairPoint Communications which made its debut at No. 38.
Full Text:
Record #:
21139
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top 75 public companies are ranked by their June, 2013, market value. Bank of America retained its 2012 position, but Lowe's and Duke Energy swapped second and third places respectively from 2012. Ten companies dropped off the new rankings--an action which brought ten newcomers aboard.
Full Text:
Record #:
10259
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top seventy-five public companies are ranked by their June 2008, market value. Ten companies from the 2007 ranking did not return in 2008. Bank of America, Wachovia, and Lowe's retained their first, second, and third place rankings from 2007.
Full Text:
Record #:
3818
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top seventy-five public companies are ranked by their May, 1998, market value. Twenty percent of this list are health-care or high-tech companies. NationsBank ranks No. 1. The market value of 1997's No. 75 company was $76.3 million; that of 1998's No. 75, $113.7 million.
Source:
Record #:
5939
Author(s):
Abstract:
North Carolina's top seventy-five public companies are ranked by their May 2003 market value. Bank of America (Charlotte) retained its number one spot from 2002.
Record #:
22295
Abstract:
The state's top 75 public companies are ranked by their June, 2014, market value. Bank of America retained its 2013 position, followed by Duke Energy and Lowe's in second and third places respectively. Ten companies dropped off the new rankings--an action which brought ten newcomers aboard.
Full Text:
Record #:
4714
Author(s):
Abstract:
North Carolina's top seventy-five public companies are ranked by their May 2000 market value. Fifty-two of the seventy-five had their stock value go down. Fourteen newcomers made the list, the most since the ranking began in 1991. Bank of America ranked first, followed by First Union and Duke Energy.
Record #:
6850
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top seventy-five public companies are ranked by their June, 2004, market value. Bank of America ranks No. 1, followed by Wachovia and Lowe's. Charlotte-based MedCath, which operates heart hospitals, made the biggest advance, jumping twenty-one place to No. 44. Five companies dropped off the list. Five companies made the Top 75 for the first time or returned after missing the cut last year.
Record #:
8012
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top seventy-five public companies are ranked by their June 2005 market value. Three companies that moved to North Carolina in the past year and six companies that offered stock publicly for the first time are on the list. The top three companies from 2004 repeated their standings in 2005, with Bank of America ranking No. 1, followed by Wachovia and Lowe's.
Record #:
15579
Abstract:
BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA magazine and Arthur Andersen & Company present their annual ranking of the state's top one hundred privately-held companies. McDevitt and Street Co., a Charlotte general contractor specializing in commercial, industrial, and institutional construction, ranked first, followed by Cone Mills Corp., a Greensboro manufacturer of textile fabrics for jeans and casual sportswear, in second place.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 7 Issue 6, June 1987, p26-27, 30, 33-37, il Periodical Website
Record #:
3457
Author(s):
Abstract:
The pay among the chief executive officers of the state's top seventy-five public companies varies, ranging from $14 million to just over $100,000.
Source:
Record #:
13682
Author(s):
Abstract:
Business North Carolina magazine presents its annual listing of the state's top fifty public companies. The magazine began its rankings in 1982. Companies are ranked by their fiscal-year sales. Food Lion (Salisbury), Lowe's (North Wilkesboro), and Rose's Stores (Henderson) retained their first, second and third rankings from the previous year.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 10 Issue 5, May 1990, p16-18, 20-22, 24-29, il Periodical Website
Record #:
14278
Abstract:
BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA magazine's third annual ranking of public companies reveals that the top eight companies held the same rankings for 1983 as they did in 1982. RJ Reynolds with $13.5 billion in total sales headed the list.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 4 Issue 5, May 1984, p15-18, 20, 23, il Periodical Website
Record #:
14748
Abstract:
BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA magazine's fourth annual ranking of public companies reveals that the top two companies held the same rankings for 1984 as in 1983 - RJ Reynolds Industries, Inc. and Burlington Industries, Inc. respectively. Lowe's Companies, Inc., located in North Wilkesboro, moved from fifth to third.
Source:
Record #:
14750
Abstract:
BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA magazine and Arthur Andersen & Company second annual ranking of the state's top one hundred privately-held companies reveals a change at the top. McDevitt and Street, a Charlotte general contractor, dropped from first to third. Blue Bell, Inc., a Greensboro manufacturer of jeans and other casual and work apparel, took over the top spot.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 5 Issue 6, June 1985, p13-14, 16-18, 20, 22, il Periodical Website