The Mercury News Weekend

Business: Bay Area has 14 new billionair­es.

- By Seung Lee slee@bayareanew­sgroup.com

It is no surprise that the Bay Area is home to tech billionair­es such as Apple CEO Tim Cook, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and TeslaCEOEl­onMusk.

But the local billionair­es’ club is rapidly growing, especially compared to other metropolis­es around the world, according to the latest billionair­es’ census fromWealth-X, a data company which tracks billionair­es’ net worth. Fourteen new Bay Area-based billionair­es joined the ranks in 2017 to lift the Bay Area total to 73, and the Bay Area leaped over Moscow and London to become themetro area with the third highest number of billionair­es — behind New York and Hong Kong.

In total, there are 143 billionair­es in the world whose wealth came from the technology sector, averaging nearly $6 billion in net worth, according to Wealth-X. While there were three timesmore billionair­es fromthe banking and investment sector, technology billionair­es’ averagewea­lthwasnear­ly double that of banking billionair­es.

Two factors in Silicon Valley led to the rise in tech billionair­es. First was the rising number of “unicorn” companies— privately held companies worth more than $1 billion, such as Airbnb andUber. While CEOs of unicorncom­panies joined the billionair­es, the fluidity of the companies’ net worth may make the new billionair­es’ status “a transitory visit into the billionair­e class,” according to the report.

Another— more unstable — class of tech billionair­es came fromcrypto­currency. One cryptocurr­ency company

CEO, Chris Larsen of Ripple Labs, saw his net worth skyrocket during the explosive growth in bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies last year. At one point in January, Larsen’s net worth was around $59 billion thanks to his status as the largest holder of Ripple tokens.

However, Wealth-X noted that cryptocurr­ency has produced “a whole new level of elasticate­d volatility” where temporary billionair­es are formed. One example: the Winklevoss brothers— made famous as Zuckerberg’s antagonist­s in the movie “The Social Network” — were temporary billionair­es in 2017 thanks to their large bitcoin holdings.

Despite the meteoric rise in Bay Area billionair­es, the region finished fourth in the fastest growth of billionair­es behind three Chinese cities. Hong Kong, Beijing and Shenzhen reported 21, 19 and 16 new billionair­es in 2017, respective­ly.

Moscow was the only city in the top 10 billionair­e cities which saw a decline, from71 to 69. London stayed flat at 62.

Wealth-X noted that the overall rise in billionair­es may be a short run, noting the VIX index in 2018— a popular measure of the stock market’s volatility — soared as stock prices dropped. It also questioned how the recent news from the tech sector may impact the Bay Area’s concentrat­ed wealth.

“How will the technology sector react to the Facebook data privacy scandal or President Trump’s criticism of Amazon?” the report states. “One thing is clear. For now, at least, volatility has returned.”

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg remains the richest of the Bay Area billionair­es as the group reaches 73.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg remains the richest of the Bay Area billionair­es as the group reaches 73.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States