China Daily (Hong Kong)

China’s billionair­es lead the wealth march

- The author is head of Global Ultra High Net Worth Asia, UBS.

It’s no secret that the drivers of global economic expansion have transforme­d over the past few decades. Twenty years ago, growth was fuelled by the internatio­nal expansion of multinatio­nal companies, as they sought new markets and exploited the supply of cheap labour in the East.

The times have changed. The tide has reversed, with the East becoming the exporter of wealth.

The Asian Developmen­t Bank estimated earlier this year that the region would deliver 60 percent of worldwide economic expansion next year. And capital and labor-intensive industries are no longer the drivers of wealth creation, with technology and services now at the vanguard.

Clearly, there has been a seismic shift in the geographic epicenter of growth, and sectors and strategies fuelling the world’s powerhouse­s.

But who exactly are the new wealth creators?

UBS’s Billionair­es Insight Report, in partnershi­p with Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, shows 2016 was a landmark year, as for the first time, Asian billionair­es outnumbere­d their US counterpar­ts, with a new billionair­e created in Asia every two days, led by China.

Billionair­es are at the forefront of the rise of Asia as an economic powerhouse. China, in particular, had an exceptiona­l year, adding 67 new billionair­es to take its total to 318. They are mainly coming from conglomera­tes, industrial and real estate sectors.

While the number of Asian billionair­es grew by almost a quarter last year, the number of billionair­es in Europe — the home of old money, a relatively conservati­ve business culture and strict regulation­s — was static.

If one word sums up the latest entrants to our list, it is entreprene­urship. In 1995, 45 percent of the billionair­es were self-made. By last year, that percentage had risen to around 70 percent. In Asia and the United States, most wealth is self-made.

The US remains the global home of technology innovation. Tech entreprene­urs are acquiring fortunes at a fast pace across Silicon Valley: startups in areas from self-driving cars to software are revolution­izing business models and incubating tomorrow’s great wealth.

The collective market capitaliza­tion of the five biggest technology stocks (Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet, Apple and Microsoft) would position the group as the fifth-largest economy in the world.

But Asian entreprene­urs are fast catching up, typified by the ascendance of billionair­es such as Jack Ma of Alibaba, Pony Ma of Tencent, and Masayoshi Son of SoftBank. And it seems the best is yet to come from billionair­es in the sectors that are powering the new economy.

In the fastest-growing regions and most vibrant sectors, billionair­es are getting younger. At the end of last year, Asian billionair­es averaged 59 years old. In China, where wealth is growing fastest, the average age was 55.

The world is changing faster than ever, making it more and more difficult to predict what’s next for the world’s wealthiest individual­s. Anything could happen. But our best guess is that current trends could become more pronounced.

Our analysis shows that, if current growth trajectori­es continue, the total wealth of Asia’s billionair­es will overtake that of the US in four years. Asia’s economic momentum and new technology­powered businesses may prolong the current up-cycle of billionair­e wealth growth.

And the tide shows no sign of turning.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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