I myself am not very fun of rankings. But when the Library of my University
decided to cut down some of the journal subscriptions
(due to the budget crisis in the Eurozone), I gave my personal viewpoint
by means of creating a unbiased ranking of Mathematical Journals.

Mainly what I wanted to measure was the impact of the Maths published
by each Journal throughout its life  on today's Math. I took the raw data from MathSciNet.
The result can be consulted in the web page of the society journal of
the Spanish Math Society (the "Gaceta de la Real Sociedad Matematica Española"):

http://gaceta.rsme.es/adicional.php?id=1215

and also in my personal web page:

http://personal.us.es/arias/V17N3_439.pdf

The paper, where I explain the procedure devised for creating the ranking my procedure, is in Spanish,
but at the end you can find the ranking, which is easily understood.

My ranking treats on the same footing all journals in applied, pure and statistical math.