Wednesday, December 2, 2015

50 Most Innovative Companies

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December 2, 2015

The Boston Consulting Group is out this morning with its 50 Most Innovative Companies list. It is based on a survey of 1,500 C-suite executives, who are asked to rank companies across industries and within their own industry. The list also gives weight to total returns to shareholders.

Top three on the list - Apple, Google, Tesla - will come as no surprise. But it gets interesting after that. Samsung clocked in at a very respectable number 5. Automakers, including Tesla, earned four spots in the top ten, including Toyota (6), BMW (7) and Daimler (10.) Study co-author Andrew Taylor says the strong showing reflects how much autos have changed in the last decade, both in their power trains and as "delivery systems for other innovative technologies."

Another surprise is how few inroads Chinese companies have made. There's not one in the top ten. Tencent is first at 12, and then there's a big jump to Huawei (45) and Lenovo (50). Taylor says that's an increase from a decade ago, when there were no Chinese companies on the list, and he thinks their presence will grow. "The rate of innovation of Chinese companies is increasing, and the perception of their innovation is increasing," he said, "but with a lag."

The U.S. is still home to a majority of the companies - 29 of 50 - although that includes Pfizer (44), which is soon off to Ireland. (Have I mentioned that before?)

The BCG survey found the importance of speed is on the rise, with executives citing overly long development times as their biggest obstacle to innovating. It also noted the changing role of technology. "Technology used to live in its own silo - the IT department. Today, digital, mobile, big data and other technologies are used to support and enable innovation across the organization, from new product development to manufacturing to go-to-market strategies, in multiple industries."

You can see the full list here. And you can read the full report here.

Separately, we are releasing this morning Roger Lowenstein's provocative essay from Fortune's upcoming annual Investor's Guide, which looks at the mediocre performance of private equity firms since 2006. "As an industry, mutual funds long ago dropped any pretense of beating the market," Lowenstein writes. "Can private equity be far behind?"

More below.

Alan Murray
@alansmurray
alan.murray@fortune.com

Top News

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Puerto Rico avoids default

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Shutterfly CEO to step down

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VW argued for easing E.U. tests

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Around the Water Cooler

Zuckerberg to donate his wealth

Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan announced that they are the parents of a baby girl named Maxima - while simultaneously saying they plan to donate 99% of their ownership in the social network to the Chan Zuckerberg Foundation. That pledge, worth $45 billion today, is a promise to invest in areas such as health, education, and scientific research. The couple promised to share more details on the donations in the coming months. Fortune

Gun sales were huge on Black Friday

Fortune reports that there were 185,345 background checks on November 27, the date of Black Friday this year and easily exceeding the previous all time high of 177,170 on December 21, 2010, which was shortly after the Sandy Hook massacre in Connecticut. The FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) data are widely considered to be the best proxy for gun sales. Big gun retailers including Cabela's and Sportsman Warehouse were promoting deals for guns heading into the Black Friday shopping season. Fortune

Starbucks hit by E. coli scare

Coffee giant Starbucks became the latest major U.S. food and beverage purveyor to be hit by an E. coli scare, last week moving to remove its holiday turkey paninis from some 1,347 coffee shops. The paninis were recalled in parts of three states - California, Oregon and Nevada - as they had celery sourced from the same supplier connected to a recall that hit Costco Wholesale. Costco's outbreak sickened 19 people, while Starbucks says it has not received any reports of illness. Those cases comes just weeks after an E. coli outbreak has been linked to Chipotle, where 45 diners in six states have reportedly been ill since October. Fortune

What the Morgan Stanley layoffs mean

Reports that Morgan Stanley is planning to cut 25% of its fixed income operations is problematic because while other Wall Street banks have also moved to resize their bond trading operations in the past year, the cuts at Morgan Stanley are larger than its rivals. As Fortune reports, Morgan Stanley has been trying to sell itself as the safest bank on Wall Street - but that sell hasn't always worked out. With fixed income trading not where it once was for any Wall Street firm since the financial crisis, the cuts imply Morgan Stanley is convinced the business isn't going to rebound any time soon. Fortune

Today's Fortune CEO Daily was produced by:
John Kell
@johnnerkell 
john.kell@fortune.com
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