The National - News

WACKY WAYS THE RICH MADE $1.2tn IN 2019

▶ A ‘Baby Shark’ song, cosmetics line and junkyard sale were among the unusual ways to make a fortune this year

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Taking advantage of a giant social-media presence, a catchy tune about a family of sharks and a burgeoning collection of junkyards are only a few of the curious ways that helped make 2019 a fertile year for fortunes to blossom around the world.

Kylie Jenner became the youngest self-made billionair­e this year at the age of 21 after her company, Kylie Cosmetics, signed an exclusive partnershi­p with Ulta Beauty. She then sold a 51 per cent stake for $600 million (Dh2.2 billion) to French cosmetics giant Coty.

It has been almost two months since the Washington Nationals captured their first World Series championsh­ip, but people around the world are still singing along to the baseball team’s adopted rallying cry: “Baby Shark, doo-doo doo-doo doo-doo.” The Korean family that helped popularise the viral earworm are now worth about $125m.

Even car wrecks proved to be a treasure trove. Willis Johnson, the gold-chain-wearing Oklahoma native who founded Copart, has amassed a $1.9bn fortune by building a network of junkyards to sell damaged autos.

The emergence of atypical fortunes underscore­s just how much money the uber-rich accumulate­d this year.

And the richer they were at the start of the year, the richer they got. The world’s 500 wealthiest people tracked by the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index added $1.2 trillion, boosting their collective net worth 25 per cent to $5.9tn.

Such gains are sure to add fuel to the already heated debate about widening wealth and income inequality. In the US, the richest 0.1 per cent control a bigger share of the pie than at any time since 1929, prompting some politician­s to call for a radical restructur­e of the economy.

“The hoarding of wealth by the few is coming at the cost of peoples’ lives,” representa­tive Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a self-described democratic socialist, wrote in a December 12 tweet as the UK began to vote in the recent general election.

Still, the defeat of Britain’s socialist opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn, whose campaign included attacks on billionair­es and calls to “rewrite the rules of our economy”, gave an added boost to mega-fortunes.

Leading the 2019 gains was France’s Bernard Arnault, who added $36.5bn as he rose on the Bloomberg index to become the world’s third-richest person and one of three centibilli­onaires – those with a net worth of at least $100bn. In all, only 52 people on the ranking saw their fortunes decline on the year.

Amazon.com’s Jeff Bezos was down almost $9bn, but that drop is because of his divorce settlement with MacKenzie Bezos. The e-commerce titan is still ending the year as the world’s richest person after Amazon shares jumped on Thursday. The company reported a “record breaking” holiday season with billions of items shipped and “tens of millions” of Amazon devices like the Echo Dot sold.

So how did the year fare for the 0.01 per cent?

2019 winners

The 172 American billionair­es on the Bloomberg ranking added $500bn, with Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg up $27.3bn and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates rising $22.7bn.

Representa­tion from China continued to grow, with the nation’s contingent rising to 54, second only to the US. He Xiangjian, founder of China’s biggest air-conditione­r exporter, was the standout performer as his wealth surged 79 per cent to $23.3bn.

Russia’s richest added $51bn, a collective increase of 21 per cent, as emerging-market assets from currencies to stocks and bonds rebounded in 2019 after posting big losses a year earlier.

2019 Declines

Rupert Murdoch’s personal fortune dropped by about $10bn after proceeds from Walt Disney’s purchase of Fox assets were distribute­d to his six children, making them billionair­es in their own right.

Interactiv­e Brokers’s Thomas Peterffy saw his wealth slump by $2.1bn as investors weighed a reshaped competitiv­e landscape for brokerage businesses after rival Charles Schwab eliminated commission­s and agreed to buy TD Ameritrade.

WeWork’s Adam Neumann saw his fortune implode – at least on paper – as the struggling office-sharing company’s valuation dropped to $8bn in October from an estimated $47bn at the start of the year. Still, SoftBank’s rescue package left Mr Neumann’s status as a billionair­e intact.

New billionair­es

The beverage White Claw, the “hard seltzer” that was the hit of the summer among millennial­s, helped boost Anthony von Mandl’s net worth to $3.6bn.

Mastering the art of fastfood deliveries proved rewarding for Jitse Groen, whose soaring Takeaway.com lifted his wealth to $1.5bn.

The popularity of soy milk gave eight members of Hong Kong’s Lo family a combined $1.5bn.

Despite the widespread gains, plenty of the world’s richest people may be happy to wave farewell to 2019. The year included messy details of the Bezos divorce and the Jeffrey Epstein saga, which enveloped a who’s who of financiers and entreprene­urs, after the convicted paedophile was arrested in July by federal agents after stepping off his private jet at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey.

Through it all, their bank balances remained robust, as a record bull market got a December kick with trade tensions between the US and China easing, a resolution to Britain’s political stalemate and a blowout US jobs report.

 ?? AP; Getty ?? ‘Baby Shark’ is Washington Nationals baseball team’s rallying song. Below, Kylie Jenner’s cosmetics made her a billionair­e
AP; Getty ‘Baby Shark’ is Washington Nationals baseball team’s rallying song. Below, Kylie Jenner’s cosmetics made her a billionair­e
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