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Record #:
433
Author(s):
Abstract:
Business North Carolina's annual list of North Carolina's top 100 companies also profiles three companies: Mebane Packaging Corporation, Spectrum Dyed Yarns and Charles Craft.
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Record #:
1610
Author(s):
Abstract:
For the 10th year in a row, BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA lists the top 100 private companies in the state. Only 23 companies have remained on the list for the past 10 years.
Record #:
1611
Author(s):
Abstract:
BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA and Arthur Andersen & Co. have been researching and publishing the top 100 private companies in the state each year since 1984. This list is recognized as the definitive source of annual information about NC's private companies.
Record #:
1612
Author(s):
Abstract:
Since BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA began compiling the North Carolina 100, an annual list of the top 100 private companies in the state, 234 companies have been listed. Several factors account for the disappearance of some companies from the list.
Record #:
2156
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's one-hundred largest employers, which range in size from 25,000 to 2,200 workers, are publicly, privately, and foreign owned. They offer such products and services as pizza, pulp, and poultry processing.
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Record #:
2343
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's seventy-five largest public companies range from banks to transport companies to makers of collecting cards. However, most of the market value is concentrated in the state's financial institutions - banks, thrifts, and brokerages.
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Record #:
3061
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top seventy-five public companies are ranked according to their May, 1996, market value. NationsBank heads a list that includes a number of high-tech and health-care-related companies.
Record #:
3063
Author(s):
Abstract:
The accounting firm of Arthur Anderson yearly ranks the state's 100 largest companies. To be listed, companies must be based in the state, have fewer than 500 stockholders, and not be engaged in financial services, real estate, or retail business.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 16 Issue 7, July 1996, p55,57-59,61,63,65, il Periodical Website
Record #:
3456
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top seventy-five public companies are ranked according to their May, 1997, market value. The top three, NationsBank, First Union, and Wachovia, total a market value of $81 billion, or fifty-four percent of the top 75's total.
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.
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Record #:
3486
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top 100 private companies are ranked, using 1996 revenues. General Parts, Inc., a Raleigh-based auto-parts distributor, replaced Klaussner Furniture Industries, Inc. as the top company. Klaussner had been No. 1 since 1993.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 17 Issue 10, Oct 1997, p47,49-51,53,55-57, il Periodical Website
Record #:
3618
Abstract:
The state's fifty best places for business are ranked using the criteria of workforce, infrastructure, business climate, and quality of life. Charlotte and Wilmington ranked first and second. Greenville ranked twenty-fourth.
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Record #:
3619
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's one-hundred largest employers are ranked. Food Lion headed the list with 31,270 employees. Hechts and Apple Gold tied at 100, with 2,100 employees.
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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.
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Record #:
3867
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's top one hundred private companies are ranked. The list does not include companies dealing primarily in real estate, retail, and finance. Raleigh-based General Parts, Inc., the country's second -largest distributor of wholesale automobile parts, ranks first for the second straight year.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 18 Issue 10, Oct 1998, p49, 51-53, 55, 57-59, il Periodical Website