
India Falls Out of Global Top 100 Company Rankings Amid Equity Market Decline
Indian Companies Slip Out of Global Top 100 List
India has crossed an unwelcome milestone, marking the first time in years where not a single Indian company figures among the world's top 100 listed firms by market capitalization. This measure reflects the devastating impact of the selloff in domestic equities.
As recently as the start of 2025, three Indian companies - Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, and TCS - held a place in that global list. Today, none do. The slide in rankings tells the full story.
Decline in Rankings
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- Reliance Industries, the country's most valued firm, has slipped to around 106th globally from 57th at the start of 2025 and 73rd at the start of 2026.
- HDFC Bank, India's most valued lender, now ranks 190th, down from 97th at the start of 2025.
- Bharti Airtel stands at 202nd, falling from 164th at the start of 2026.
- ICICI Bank and State Bank of India have dropped to 274th and 276th respectively, from 215th and 231st at the start of 2026.
- TCS, the country's largest software exporter, has seen the steepest fall, with its global rank dropping to 314th from 84th at the start of 2025 and 171st at the start of 2026.
Technology Stocks Take a Hit
The decline has been sharpest among India's top technology stocks. Infosys, India's second largest IT firm, now ranks 590th, down from 198th at the start of 2025 and 330th at the start of 2026. ITC has slipped to 702nd from 296th and 466th at the start of 2025 and 2026 respectively.
Broader Picture
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In the global top 500 by market cap, India's count has fallen to nine companies from 13 at the beginning of 2026 and 15 at the start of 2025. Closer home, India's club of listed companies with a market cap above $100 billion has shrunk to just three firms from around six at the start of the year. ICICI Bank, the country's second most valued lender, State Bank of India, India's largest public sector bank, and TCS have all lost that status amid sustained market weakness.
Remaining Above the Threshold
Only Reliance Industries, with a market cap of around $198 billion, HDFC Bank at $124 billion, and Bharti Airtel, India's largest telecom operator, at $113 billion now remain above the threshold.
Roots of the Erosion
The roots of the erosion stretch back to mid-2024, when Indian equities began a prolonged period of underperformance driven by sustained foreign investor selling amid stretched valuations, subdued earnings, currency depreciation, and trade war concerns. The selloff intensified after the US-Iran-Israel conflict pushed crude oil prices above $100 per barrel, worsening the macroeconomic outlook through rising inflation and fiscal imbalance.
Global Market Trends
A wave of downgrades from global brokerages has added to the pressure. UBS, Morgan Stanley, and Nomura cut their outlook on Indian markets in March, followed by JPMorgan, HSBC, and Goldman Sachs in April. Citi joined in the first week of May. The concerns across these reports are consistent — high valuation premiums, oil-led earnings risks, a weakening rupee, and India's limited exposure to high-growth technology and artificial intelligence sectors.
Global Market Leaders
While India retreats, global markets continue to be dominated by the world's largest technology giants. Nvidia leads as the world's most valued company with a market cap of $5.33 trillion, followed by Alphabet at $4.7 trillion and Apple at $4.3 trillion. Microsoft and Amazon round out the top five.
| Company | Market Cap (2025) | Market Cap (2026) | Global Rank (2025) | Global Rank (2026) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reliance Industries | 57th | 106th | ||
| HDFC Bank | 97th | 190th | ||
| TCS | 84th | 314th | ||
| Infosys | 198th | 590th | ||
| ITC | 296th | 702nd |
Investor Takeaway
Investors should be cautious of the decline in Indian equities and its impact on the country's top companies.
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