Australian and New Zealand companies that rule the world
Leading the charge from Down Under

From toasters to planes with some top surf gear thrown in, there are plenty of global success stories to come out of Australia and New Zealand. We take a look at the most impressive brands to have taken their wares to the world.
Breville

Back in 1932, Breville started life as a radio and then mine detector manufacturer. After World War II, the company became renowned for its small kitchen appliances. It all went gangbusters in 1974 when the company introduced the first-ever sandwich toaster, selling 400,000 units in Australia alone in its first year.
Breville

Unsurprisingly, it didn’t take long for Breville to break into sandwich-loving Britain, soon becoming a household name that is still a go-to brand today. In fact, Breville products are sold in more than 30 countries worldwide, with its coffee machines hailed for their top-notch quality. Today the company is valued at $2.26 billion.
Fisher & Paykel

Fisher & Paykel

Lorna Jane

Lorna Jane

These days, Lorna Jane turns out a staggering 70-100 new designs each month. When its “Flashdance” pants were released in 2014, a pair was bought every 27 seconds by customers all over the world. The word of mouth promotion seems to have paid off, as the company makes annual revenues of $200 million, according to industry experts quoted in Financial Review.
Smiggle

Smiggle

In 2007, Just Group bought the company for $29 million and in 2008 Smiggle started a global takeover. The stationery store now sells its jazzy wares in hundreds of stores across Australia, New Zealand, the UK, Ireland and southeast Asia. Its global sales hit $293 million in 2018 – a record according to Premier Investments, the parent company of Just Group.
Amcor

Amcor

Today Amcor is continuing to expand by acquiring other multimillion-dollar companies and it's ranked as one of the world's top five packaging companies. The business has more than 50,000 employees across more than 40 countries and it's currently valued at US $16.4 billion (AU$24bn). At the moment the company is working towards reducing its environmental impact with a pledge to make all of its packaging recyclable or reusable by 2025.
Bundaberg Brewed Drinks

Founded in the small city in Queensland from which it took its name, Bundaberg is a drink that used what was locally in abundance: sugar cane. Neville and Gladys Fleming decided to take advantage of the sweet stuff and started brewing ginger beer at a small factory they'd purchased near their home. Growth was slow but steady, initially only catering to locals, then to the rest of Queensland and finally, in the late 1980s, to the whole of Australia.
Bundaberg Brewed Drinks

Kathmandu

Kathmandu

These days the company is worth a healthy $AU490 million, with 167 stores in New Zealand, Australia and the UK, and it ships globally online. But it’s no longer owned by the original duo, who sold the company in 2006 to an Australasian private equity company for $AU260 million.
Billabong

Founded by married couple Gordon and Rena Merchant in the surf epicentre of the Gold Coast in 1973, Billabong is a brand synonymous with Aussie beach life. At first, the Merchants designed and created board shorts from their home for local surf shops. But the clothes’ unique triple-stitching technique meant they were more durable than any other shorts on the market and the company expanded.
Billabong

Quiksilver

Quiksilver

Flight Centre

Founded in 1982 by travel businessmen Graham Turner, Bill James and Geoff Harris, Flight Centre was an instant hit with Australians from its base in Brisbane. It’s still the country's largest retail travel outlet and the trio were worth a combined $19 billion, according to Financial Review's 2018 Rich List.
Flight Centre

Cloudy Bay

Cloudy Bay

In 2003, Cloudy Bay was bought by luxury conglomerate Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy Group, which is valued at $AU208.7 billion and also owns the likes of Veuve Clicquot champagne. But the deal has always remained very hush-hush and even to this day financial figures surrounding Cloudy Bay wines aren’t known.
Sistema

This business started in Brendan Lindsay’s garage in Cambridge, New Zealand in the 1980s. He was making plastic coat hangers when he decided to create a plastic storage system. The result was Sistema, a tupperware-style food storage that exploded in popularity.
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Sistema

In late 2016, Lindsay sold the company for an impressive $AU624.6 million to New Jersey-based Newell which, despite experiencing a dramatic decline over the past 16 months, is still valued at $AU13.2 billion.
Xero

Xero

The service is now used in over 180 countries, with offices in New Zealand, Australia, the UK, the US, Canada, Asia and South Africa. And in early 2019, the company was valued at an impressive $AU6 billion.
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QBE Insurance

QBE Insurance is one of the oldest companies in our line-up, founded all the way back in 1886 in Townsville by two young Scotsmen, James Burns and Robert Philp. In just 14 years the insurance company had gone global, providing cover for people in London, Hong Kong, Singapore, New Zealand and the Pacific Islands.
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QBE Insurance

Today QBE Insurance ranks in the top 20 best insurance companies in the world and has over 12,000 employees in more than 30 countries. The company is currently valued at a cool $16.7 billion and it has hit the news most recently for its generous contributions to bushfire relief and recovery efforts across Australia.
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Qantas

Having served in World War I, Hudson Fysh and Paul McGinness wanted to connect Australia to the rest of the world, and so they created Qantas. The first flights provided connections for people living in western Queensland and by 1935 the airline had services between Brisbane and Singapore, taking a now not-so-speedy three and a half days. Fast forward 45 years and Qantas was flying from Perth to London, as well as having established the world's first business class cabin.
Qantas

Qantas achieved another world first this year to kick off its centenary celebrations, which was the first direct flight from London to Sydney. The flight took 19 hours and 19 minutes and was the first of several celebrations in the run-up to the company's 100th birthday. Qantas is currently valued at $10.6 billion and is regularly named as the best airline in the Pacific region.
BHP

BHP

The now Anglo-Australian BHP Group, which is listed on the London Stock Exchange, is currently valued at £94.3 billion ($178.7bn), but its success isn't without controversy. The fossil fuel giant has been named in a list of 20 companies that between them have contributed to more than one third of all greenhouse gas emissions since 1965 by the Climate Accountability Institute.
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