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15 Biggest Companies That Aren’t Profitable

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In this article we are going to list the 15 biggest companies that aren't profitable. Click to skip ahead and jump to the 5 biggest companies that aren't profitable. People start businesses because they don't want to carry on with the 9-5 slog at best, though in today's world in most developing countries, 8 hours a day doesn't even come close to cutting it. And all this effort and bearing rush hour traffic throughout your life only to have to live pay check to pay check and the moment, say a pandemic hits, and businesses are closed and the next day you're out of a job and don't know where your next meal will come from. This what allures many people to start businesses, where the work is much harder but then you are earning money for yourself and not for anyone else.

This brings us to the main point of starting a business; making profits at a far larger scale than a simple standard working class pay check and working for yourself instead of anyone. This is why it seems counterintuitive that companies, especially major companies, could go on for decades while often making losses. Look, everyone knows that when you start a business, the first few years are not going to be profitable at all. This is why you need investment from people who will buy into your vision, and you slowly work on converting those losses to profits as times goes by and provide a decent return on the investment that other people have made in your business.

The best example of this, and perhaps the most extreme as well, would be Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN). From its inception in 1994, up till just a few years ago, Amazon remained unprofitable. This seems an insane thing to say about perhaps one of the most popular companies in the world and certainly one of the most influential but it is definitely true. The reason behind this is that Amazon, over the years, kept making sales at extremely low and competitive prices to entice customers to switch over to the company rather than whatever retailer they were initially going with. This has led to Amazon gaining a significant market share in e-commerce especially over the past decade, which in turn has led to economies of scale allowing Amazon to further provide subsidized prices to customers and gain even more share. This has allowed Amazon to also invest in other businesses such as its cloud service platform, which is one of the biggest in the world, and has allowed it to finally become profitable. Another advantage of the losses I mentioned earlier? Amazon now earns profits of billions of dollars and still doesn't have to pay income tax on it, due to the losses of previous years being carried forward and being set off against the profits of the current year, making it the biggest company in the world to not pay taxes.