Financial Rankings
Top companies ranked by key financial metrics and overall health score. Based on the latest annual financial statements.
Financial Health Score
Flagship compositeOur 6-dimension composite, sector-adjusted: profitability, growth, leverage, liquidity, cash flow, and returns. One number, sector-aware.
Revenue
Largest companies by annual revenue
EBITDA
Highest EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization)
Net Income
Most profitable companies by net income
Free Cash Flow
Top companies by free cash flow generation
Cash & Equivalents
Companies with the largest cash reserves
Long-term Debt
Companies carrying the most long-term debt
R&D Spending
Biggest investors in research and development
Share Buybacks
Companies spending the most on share repurchases
Capital Expenditures
Largest capital spenders on infrastructure and assets
Gross Margin
Companies with the highest gross profit margins
Operating Margin
Companies with the best operating efficiency
Net Margin (GAAP)
Companies converting the most revenue into profit (includes one-time items)
Return on Equity
Companies generating the highest return per dollar of equity
About Financial Rankings
These rankings draw directly from the annual financial statements that NYSE and NASDAQ companies file with the SEC. Size metrics (revenue, EBITDA, net income) identify the largest players in each category; margin and return metrics highlight the most efficient operators regardless of size. Rankings update as new annual reports come in.
The Financial Health Score rolls six dimensions into a single 0 to 100 rating. Each dimension shows where the company stands compared to its peers in the same sector. A score of 85 means it ranks in the top 15% of that peer group on that dimension. Performance metrics blend the last three years (with the most recent year weighted most heavily) so a single good or bad year doesn't distort the picture. Banks, insurers, REITs, and early-stage companies are scored on metrics tailored to how their businesses actually work, because comparing a bank to a tech company using the same formula wouldn't be fair.
This measures the quality of the business, not whether the stock is a good buy. A strong company can still be overpriced at today's share price. Use the score as one input among many and pair it with valuation analysis and your own judgment. How the score is calculated →