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In 2022, Fortune's Global 500 list of the world's largest corporations included 145 Chinese companies in total. [1] Over the same year, Forbes reported that three of the world's ten largest public companies were Chinese, including the world's largest bank by total assets, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. [2]
Jingjia Microelectronics (Jingjia; Chinese: 景嘉微; pinyin: Jǐngjiāwēi) is a publicly listed Chinese electronics company. It is China's largest graphics processing unit (GPU) producer and the only one with independently developed technology and commercial production on a large scale.
Sunvalley Group (Chinese: 泽宝集团 [7]), previously known as Sunvalleytek International Inc., [8] [9] [10] is a Chinese consumer electronics company founded in 2007 and headquartered in Shenzhen. [11] [12] [13] In addition to its headquarters in Shenzhen, the company has offices in San Francisco, Tokyo, Singapore, and Hamburg. It owns six ...
Electronics: 481.28 Taiwan: 3 Samsung Electronics: Electronics: 386.91 South Korea 4 Tencent: Technology: 355.05 China 5 Kweichow Moutai: Beverages: 297.91 China 6 Toyota: Automotive: 251.20 Japan 7 ICBC: Banking: 223.89 China 8 Reliance Industries: Conglomerate: 211.76 India: 9 PDD Holdings: E-commerce: 201.21 China 10 Alibaba Group ...
Pages in category "Electronics companies of China" The following 63 pages are in this category, out of 63 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Aigo;
In 2005, total sales in the electronic information industry increased by 28.4% from 2004 to CN¥3.8 trillion (approximately US$475 billion). [7] The added-value base of the Chinese electronic information industry is about 900 billion yuan (approximately US$112 billion).
All data in the table is taken from the Fortune Global 500 list of technology sector companies for 2023 [2] unless otherwise specified. As of 2023, Fortune lists Amazon (revenue of $513.98 billion), Jingdong ($155.53 billion), and Alibaba ($126.81 billion) in the retailing sector rather than the technology sector.
China Hualu Group (Chinese: 中国华录集团) is a Chinese state-owned electronics manufacturer headquartered in Dalian, Liaoning. It was established in Dalian on June 17, 1992, by the joint capital of nine designated video recorder enterprises across the country. It was born for the purpose of building China's video recorder industry. [2]