Houston Chronicle

Billionair­es club spiked 40% over five years

But their fortunes took big hit in 2018 amid trade friction, market volatility

- By Taylor Telford

More billionair­es walk the earth than ever before, their ranks surging 40 percent in five years, new research shows.

The world’s 2,100 billionair­es saw their fortunes swell 34.5 percent from 2013 to 2018, to $8.5 trillion, according to UBS’ 2019 Billionair­e Insights report released Friday. But 2018 was actually a losing year for most of them, thanks to global trade friction and stock market volatility. The lost a combined $388 billion.

Tech billionair­es bucked that trend, growing their wealth by 3.4 percent, or $1.3 trillion, in 2018, according to the report. They’ve nearly doubled their ranks the past five years, from 76 to 148 in 2018,

“If tech billionair­es’ wealth were a country, it would rank second only to the U.S.,” the report said. “Looking back over five years, tech billionair­es have driven almost a third of the growth in billionair­e wealth. U.S. tech billionair­es accounted for more than half of that growth.” UBS is one of the world’s largest wealth managers with close to 1,000 billionair­e clients.

But the burgeoning roster of the super-rich feeds into a wider debate about income inequality, which has become a signature issue for presidenti­al hopefuls Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. Sanders has gone so far as to say billionair­es shouldn’t even exist.

The number of female billionair­es has skyrockete­d the past five years, climbing 46 percent to 233. Their collective wealth grew to $871 billion, led by progress in Asia, according to the report.

“While Asia continues to be seen as having more traditiona­lly male-dominated cultures, it is heartening to see that the number of female billionair­e has grown to more than double over the last five years,” Julia Leong, partner and private banking lead, noted in the report.

Asia has seen some of the greatest advances in wealth and is now home to more than a third of the world’s billionair­es, their fortunes totaling $2.5 trillion. China recently surpassed the United States for the first time in claiming the largest share of the world’s richest people. An October report from Credit Suisse said 100 million Chinese citizens are listed among the top 10 percent of all earners. The United States has 99 million people on that ranking, though it still has more millionair­es, with about 40 percent of the world’s total, according to the report.

But China’s ultra-wealthy have been hammered by the nation’s cooling economic growth, market fluctuatio­ns and weakening yuan; their net worth declined by 12.3 percent in 2018. The decline bumped dozens from the billionair­es list and contribute­d significan­tly to the global drop-off in billionair­e fortunes.

Sanders and Warren have made taxing billionair­es prominent features of their presidenti­al campaigns. Warren this week released a billionair­e calculator to help the ultrawealt­hy see how much they’d have left under her plan, which would impose an annual 2 percent tax on households with more than $50 million in assets and a 6 percent levy on fortunes in excess of $1 billion.

Warren released the calculator after reports of Michael Bloomberg’s possible entry into the 2020 presidenti­al race, a candidacy that was lauded by fellow billionair­es such as hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman. The calculator included personaliz­ed links for Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, Bloomberg and Cooperman, all of whom have publicly worried about how their fortunes would fare under her presidency.

“Good news,” the landing pages on Warren’s website read. “You’ll still be extraordin­arily rich.”

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