whats tork? cant you write ? or is your isolated and the sanctions wrecked your brain? mate USA killed 290 of your citizens and they shot down like 5 of your ships and you couldnt do JACK S... other than cry , the world didnt do nothing for you , maybe our 2 pilots became sehit but they will be regard at highest and we will get their revenge remember
Revenge is Best Served Cold you should be crying for the professors that got bombed in your own countryy , in your own land , the 290 citizens , the ships , if we should be mourning you should throw yourself out the window.
Wait a minute, you are a Tork, you should now be mourning for the death of 2 of your pilots and not posting on forums on Egypt Iran relations lol
big boys? your economy is smaller than saudi arabia with 482 billion , you couldnt do anything you just threaten , you make helicopters that i can make at home looks like a third world toy , your tanks look like paper and your ranked low in eveything within muslim countries , dont even compare my country to your funny country , and after Turkey dont compare it even with saudi because they are way above you and they are even less dependent on oil , atleast we dont make ninja women , our government is p.... , its not us who is saying lets not bomb syria to iran levels but its him so we cant kill him to do what i want , because we are not like your country.
Look what you have become, getting humiliated by the Syrians in REAL LIFE politics, then getting your ''revenge'' on Iranian members on a Pakistani forum.
Where is Jordan, i cant see it on the map
Turkey dominates Muslim world’s top 100 companies list
With 20 companies, Turkey has the highest number of companies listed in the Top 100 Companies of the Muslim World: 2010 DS100 Ranking.
DinarStandard, a research and advisory company that specializes in emerging Muslim markets, has issued the seventh annual 2010 DS100 ranking, the result of research conducted on companies in the 57 member countries of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).
According to the latest report, Turkey leads the list in terms of having the most companies represented, with 20 companies in the DS100 ranking. The report also states that Turkish companies present the widest and most diverse sector representation of any country in the report. “This should come as no surprise, given the fact that Turkey has the largest OIC economy, as measured by gross domestic production [GDP] output,” the report stated.
With its 2009 end-of-year revenue at $28.9 billion, Koç Holding was the top Turkish company and ranked 10th on the list among 100 companies in the 57 OIC member countries. This was followed by Sabancı Holding, which ranked 16th, with $12.1 billion. Yıldız Holding (ranked 18th with 2009 revenue of $10.9 billion) and İş Bankası (19th with 2009 revenue of $10.8 billion) were other big Turkish companies who made the list.
The remaining Turkish companies in the DS100 were Ziraat Bankası (24th), Akbank (31st), Doğan Holding (35th), Turkcell (40th), Enka Holding (45th), Doğuş Holding (47th), Halkbank (48th), VakıfBank (51st), Turkish Airlines (THY) (56th), Türkiye Elektrik Üretim İletim A.Ş. (Turkey Electric Production and Communication) (64th), BİM (77th), Ereğli Demir-Çelik (Ereğli Iron-Steel) (79th), Selçuk Ecza Deposu (Selçuk Pharmaceuticals) (83rd), Eczacıbaşı Holding (88th), Vestel (90th), Ciner Grubu (98th).
The top of the list was occupied by the world’s top oil producer, Saudi Arabian Oil Co., with 2009 revenues of $182.4 billion. This was followed by other oil companies, including National Iranian Oil Company ($79.28 billion), which ranked second, and Petroliam Nasional Bhd. from Malaysia ($70.87 billion), which ranked third. The report underlined that the energy sector had continued its dominance by listing 19 companies on the list. The combined revenue of these companies in 2009 was $642 billion.
The 2010 DS100 list had 56 publicly traded companies from 11 countries, compared to the 2009 list, where 58 companies from 13 countries were listed. Turkey’s Koç Holding, a diversified electronics, automotive, energy, finance and retail giant, was the largest publicly traded company on the list, followed by Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) and the Saudi Telecom Company, which ranked eighth and 13th, respectively.
DinarStandard™, a specialized market research and business media firm, released its 7th annual ranking of the top 100 businesses by annual revenue, in the 57 member countries of the OIC (Organization of the Islamic Conference.)
The 2010 DS100 ranking, which is based on companies' fiscal year ended on or before June 2010, fully captures the impact of the 2008/2009 global financial crisis. With USD 1.12 trillion in aggregate revenue, the DS100 list of companies recorded a cumulative 26.47% decline in annual revenue over the previous reporting period.
Saudi Aramco, the world's top oil producer, continues to lead the DS100™ as the largest business enterprise of the Muslim world. The 19 Oil & Gas Companies featured on the list continued to exert their fiscal dominance representing 64% of the combined DS100 company revenues. However these same companies tallied a 38% drop in yearly revenue from the previous term, accounting for most of the aggregate revenue decline of this period’s DS100 list.
The silver lining has been that some sectors, such as finance, consumer goods, and utilities, absorbed the shockwaves of the global financial meltdown, and still registered single digit growth.
The fastest growing companies on the 2010 DS100, by annual revenue, were YTL Corp. (+85.48%, Malaysia,) PT Adaro Energy (+48.89%, Indonesia,) Savola Group (+29.64%, Saudi Arabia,) Etihad Airways (+29.15%, UAE,) Proton (+26.20%, Malaysia,) Bank Rakyat Indonesia (+26.02%, Indonesia,) BIM Birlesik (+25.48%, Turkey,) Public Bank (+24.30%, Malaysia,) Selçuk Ecza Deposu (+24.28%, Turkey,) and Pakistan State Oil (+21.48%, Pakistan.)
The purpose of the DS100™ is to present a snapshot of the domestic corporate environment in OIC member countries. It continues to include government and private enterprises, to reflect the overwhelmingly significant role they play in the economies of the Muslim world. The financial data for these enterprises was estimated or verified through public sources. At the same time, more than half of the list is comprised of publicly listed companies (56 of the 100) representing the OIC-wide trend of increasing investor confidence in the maturing public markets of the Muslim world.
"Oil company revenue loss during the term of this ranking revealed the true strength of the emerging real-economy sectors of the OIC. The big growth winners of this ranking, Savola Group, BIM, Etihad Airways, PT Adora and others are the new emerging global players from the OIC." says Rafi-uddin Shikoh, Managing Director of Dinar Standard™. "As we speak, oil prices are again back to their highs, and oil-revenue windfall will continue to inject inertia to speed up the OIC economies."
Turkish companies continue to lead the list with 20 represented enterprises, followed by 16 from Malaysia, 13 from Saudi Arabia, and 11 from Indonesia. Other countries represented include the UAE, Iran, Kuwait, Egypt, Morocco, Oman, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Brunei, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Libya, Nigeria, Pakistan, Qatar, Syria, Pakistan, Nigeria, Morocco, Kazakhstan, Bahrain, and Algeria.
next time talk properly before your junk country is put forward , i dont want to put more stuff but this was a response to the racism and rudeness