Data: FactSet; Chart: Naema Ahmed/Axios
Data: FactSet; Chart: Naema Ahmed/Axios

The four Big Tech CEOs who will testify before Congress Wednesday command global empires with power and wealth that make them more like countries than companies.

By the numbers: Here are four very large stats for Facebook, Apple, Google/Alphabet and Amazon that tell the story of their value, scale and influence.

$5 trillion: The four companies' (rough) combined market capitalization.

  • That number changes by the day, of course. Apple, with its premium consumer devices, and Google and Facebook, who depend on ad revenue, could be vulnerable to a long-lasting pandemic-driven downturn.
  • But for the time being, they constitute four of the top five most valuable American companies to trade on public markets. (The other one, which is also often considered a member of the Big Tech club, is Microsoft.)
  • Five years ago, the other six companies in the top 10 were worth about 90% of the combined market cap of the big four. Now, they're worth about 75% as much. Even as the market and its most valuable firms have risen dramatically in value, the big four have risen more.

$773 billion: the four companies' combined annual revenue at last count.

Broken out by company, they made the following in fiscal 2019 (also calendar 2019 for all but Apple, whose fiscal year starts with the fourth calendar quarter):

  • Facebook: $70.7 billion, in the same ballpark as Venezuela's gross domestic product.
  • Alphabet: $161.9 billion, a bit north of Ukraine's GDP.
  • Apple: $260.2 billion, close to Vietnam's GDP.
  • Amazon: $280.5 billion, around Pakistan's GDP.

Together, revenue for all four add up to roughly the GDP of Saudi Arabia.

$420 billion: the combined total cash pile of the four firms (per data from FactSet, when they last reported earnings).

That breaks down to about:

  • $49.6 billion for Amazon
  • $60.3 billion for Facebook
  • $117.2 billion for Alphabet
  • $192.8 billion for Apple

Those fat cash hoards give them flexibility to make ambitious internal investments, freedom to buy up potential competitors, the option to juice shareholder value through stock buybacks, and cushioning to weather crises.

4.6 billion: Human beings on earth who are connected to the internet (according to one recent estimate).

These companies all aim to connect anyone who can get online to goods, services and other people. Their scale is limited only by how many people they can reach.

  • The world isn't all open to them, of course. Facebook and Google aren't in China, home to the largest population of internet users in the world. Amazon only operates its core e-commerce platform in certain countries (and has stumbled in efforts to crack into some key markets, including China). And Apple's high-end devices are out of reach for billions of people.

Despite those limits, these companies are operating at a scale that no previous industry has achieved.

  • Google crossed the 2 billion user mark for its G Suite of products (which includes Gmail along with productivity apps like Google Docs) earlier this year. The company's YouTube notched 2 billion monthly active users last year.
  • Facebook had 2.6 billion monthly active users as of Q1 this year.
  • By the end of last year, Apple had 1.5 billion devices in active use by people around the world.
  • Amazon doesn't publicly state how many people have accounts, but CEO Jeff Bezos did reveal in 2018 that the company had passed 100 million Prime customers in the U.S.

Our thought bubble: The big four companies shape people's lives — what goods they can obtain, what media they're exposed to, how they connect with friends and family, how they understand the world. That's a stunning amount of power to entrust to a handful of companies run by a handful of men.

Go deeper

Google to keep workers at home through July 2021

Google to keep workers at home through July 2021

Google CEO Sundar Pichai. Photo: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

Google will keep its employees out of its offices and working from home through at least next July, the Wall Street Journal first reported and a source familiar with the policy confirmed to Axios.

Why it matters: It's the first major U.S. company to allow remote work for such an extended period in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Axios
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Coronavirus dashboard

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Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios

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  2. U.S.: Total confirmed cases as of 12 p.m. ET: 4,238,500 — Total deaths: 146,968 — Total recoveries: 1,297,863 — Total tested: 51,491,494Map.
  3. Public health: Deaths skew younger in the South — It's not over when the vaccine arrives.
  4. Politics: Senate GOP to propose cutting weekly unemployment checks from $600 to $200 — Trump's national security adviser Robert O'Brien tests positive.
  5. Sports: Miami Marlins outbreak cancels MLB games.

Senate GOP to propose cutting weekly unemployment checks from $600 to $200

Senate GOP to propose cutting weekly unemployment checks from $600 to $200

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) Photo: Ting Shen/Xinhua via Getty) (Xinhua/ via Getty Images

Senate Republicans' coronavirus relief proposal will include a provision to cut federal weekly unemployment benefits from $600 to $200, the Washington Post reports, citing two people familiar with the plan.

How it works: The reduction would be a temporary measure in place until states implement a more targeted system that pays individuals 70% of their lost weekly wages, which they would be given two months to do. The federal benefits are supplemental to existing unemployment insurance, which varies by state.