The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Billionair­e wealth fell for 1st time in 3 years

Stronger dollar, economic uncertaint­y cited as culprits.

- By Emma Vickers

The world’s billionair­es saw their collective fortunes dip in 2018 for the first time in three years, erasing $388 billion of their net worth.

Asia was hardest hit, as slowing growth in China and rising U.S. interest rates resulted in an 8% wealth drop among that continent’s richest people, according to the UBS/PwC Billionair­es Report released Friday. Those in the U.S. fared better, fueled by tech billionair­es who numbered 89 by the end of 2018, up from 70 a year earlier.

The billionair­e boom “has now undergone a natural correction,” Josef Stadler, head of ultrahigh net worth at UBS Global Wealth Management, said in the report. “The stronger dollar, combined with greater uncertaint­y over equity markets amidst a tough geopolitic­al environmen­t” were the main drivers, he said.

Excessive wealth has become an increasing­ly contentiou­s issue globally, with some U.S. presidenti­al candidates making it central to their campaigns. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Massachuse­tts Democrat, has proposed a 6% wealth tax on assets over $1 billion, while Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has said that billionair­es shouldn’t exist at all. Beyond Washington, protests from Hong Kong to France are seeking a reckoning for the rich, citing decades of inequality as a cause of their frustratio­n.

Stock markets have bounced back since 2018, with the MSCI All-Country World index up 20% so far in 2019. And even with last year’s dip, billionair­es’ wealth increased almost 35% — or $2.2 trillion — since 2013, according to the report.

“We’ve seen that these people can be successful and drive change regardless of who’s in a leadership role on the political scene,” said John Mathews, who oversees UBS Group AG’s private wealth and ultrahigh net-worth business in the Americas.

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