Khaleej Times

World’s richest add $1T to their wealth

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Dubai’s Majid Al Futtaim, whose net worth was estimated at $6.36 billion, came top among the UAE billionair­es, ranking 256th globally. Abdullah Al Ghurair, with $5.22 billion in net worth and ranking 362nd globally, is the second-richest from the UAE in Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. Hussain Sajwani of Damac Property Group was ranked third from the UAE with a net worth of $4.96 billion and ranked 385th globally.

Saudi tycoon Prince Alwaleed bin Talal came top among GCC billionair­es, ranked 58th globally with a net worth of $17.8 billion. The other three GCC super-rich, also from Saudi Arabia, include Mohamed Al Jaber ($8.27 billion, 188th), Mohamed Al Amoudi ($7.77 billion, 205th) and Sultan Al Kabeer ($4.67 billion, 418th).

Globally, Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos added the most in 2017, a $34.2 billion gain that knocked Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates out of his spot as the world’s richest person in October. Gates, 62, had held the spot since May 2013, and has been donating much of his fortune to charity, including a $4.6 billion pledge he made to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in August. Bezos, whose net worth topped $100 billion at the end of November, currently has a net worth of $99.6 billion compared with $91.3 billion for Gates.

George Soros also gave away a substantia­l part of his fortune, revealing in October that his family office had given $18 billion to his Open Society Foundation­s over the past several years, dropping the billionair­e investor to 195th on the Bloomberg ranking, with a net worth of $8 billion.

India’s equity market scaled new peaks in 2017, making it Asia’s second-best performer. That added to the fortunes of nation’s richest.

Mukesh Ambani, India’s richest man with a net worth of nearly $40.3 billion, gained the most during the year. He added $17.6 billion to his net worth, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­e Index data compiled on December 20. The key trigger was his telecom arm Reliance Jio Infocomm.

Gautam Adani, whose infrastruc­ture group is the country’s largest coal trader, gained $5.56 billion this year, riding on stock market gains. He is followed by Lakshmi Mittal, chairman of the world’s largest steelmaker ArcelorMit­tal, billionair­es fell from the bloomberg ranking which gained amid an uptick in global steel demand.

Radhakrish­nan Damani of Avenue Supermarts features next, helped by the blockbuste­r market debut of the parent of DMart supermarke­t chain that turned him into a billionair­e.

Azim Premji, 56 per cent owner of software services provider Wipro, completes the top five gainers.

The 23 per cent increase on the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, a daily ranking of the world’s 500 richest people, compares with an almost 20 per cent increase for both the MSCI World Index and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

The 38 Chinese billionair­es on the index added $177 billion in 2017, a 65 per cent gain that was the biggest of the 49 countries represente­d in the index.

The number of Asian billionair­es surpassed the US for the first time. The US has the largest presence on the index, with 159 billionair­es who added $315 billion, an 18 per cent gain that gives them a collective net worth of $2 trillion.

Russia’s 27 richest people added $29 billion to $275 billion, surpassing the collective net worth they had before western economic sanctions began.

It was also a banner year for tech moguls, with the 57 technology billionair­es on the index adding $262 billion, a 35 per cent increase that was the most of any sector on the ranking.

Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg had the fourth-largest increase on the index, adding $22.6 billion, or 45 per cent to raise net worth to $72.6 billion.

In all, the 440 billionair­es on the index who added to their fortunes in 2017, gained a combined $1.05 trillion.

Prince Alwaleed, the richest person in Saudi Arabia, dropped $1.9 billion to $17.8 billion after he was detained in a crackdown against corruption.

There were 60 billionair­es who fell from the ranking, including South African retailer Christo Wiese, whose fortune dropped to $1.8 billion from a peak of $7.7 billion after news of an accounting scandal.

— issacjohn@khaleejtim­es.com

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