Asia’s mega rich lose $137 bn to trade tensions
NEW YORK: The world’s fastest growing source of mega-wealth hit a speed bump this year.
The 128 people in Asia with enough money to crack the 500member Bloomberg Billionaires Index lost a combined $137 billion in 2018, the first time wealth in the region has dropped since the ranking started in 2012.
Global trade tensions and concerns that stock valuations are too frothy hammered some of the area’s biggest fortunes.
China’s tech sector was hit particularly hard, while India and South Korea weren’t spared. The declines occurred even as banks and money managers aggressively stepped up efforts to cater to Asia’s richest. Asian equities retreated again on Friday, with benchmarks slipping in Japan, China and Australia.
“Difficult stock market conditions this year and the uncertainty of the trade tensions likely have been a challenge to many businesses,” said Philip Wyatt, a Hong Kong-based economist for UBS Group AG, who doesn’t see the downdraft continuing through 2019 or significantly reducing the ranks of billionaires. Conditions are actually ripe for the region to create more of the mega rich as new technologies attract private capital and government support, he said.
For now, though, fear in the market is trampling fortunes. More than two-thirds of the 40 Chinese on Bloomberg ranking saw their wealth dwindle. Wanda Group’s Wang Jianlin lost $10.8 billion, the most of anyone in Asia.