Fortune (June 21)
“Nvidia became the world’s most valuable company” earlier this week. Moreover, Nvidia’s market cap of $3.35 trillion “single-handedly eclipses all of Europe’s stock markets in market capitalization.” According to Deutsche Bank, “the chipmaker’s valuation outstrips that of all listed stocks in Europe’s major business hubs—Germany, France, and the U.K.” Currently the “only markets whose listed shares are collectively larger than Nvidia’s are those of the U.S., India, China, and Japan”
Tags: $3.35 trillion, China, Chipmaker, Company, Deutsche Bank, Europe, France, Germany, India, Listed stocks, Market-cap, Nvidia, Outstrips, Stock markets, U.K., U.S., Valuable, Valuation
Institutional Investor (February 2)
“What happens when a company gets an A from one ESG rater and an F from another? With the explosion of ESG data and ratings, there’s little agreement on what makes a company good or bad.”
Inc. (May Issue)
“Building a company to last and building a company to sell are the same thing.” Young entrepreneurs shouldn’t “be seduced by shortcuts” and they should “implement best practices.” In short, “you should build it as if you were going to have it forever and yet, at the same time, build it so that you could sell it tomorrow for as much money as possible, even if you don’t intend to.”
Tags: Best practices, Company, Entrepreneurs, Forever, Money, Sell, Shortcuts
