The Palm Beach Post

In Bentonvill­e, world’s richest family reigns

- By Tom Metcalf

The largest family fortune on earth is run out of two floors of unmarked suites in Bentonvill­e, Arkansas.

The building is a discreet nerve center for the Walton family’s $152 billion hoard. There are plenty more overt signs of their success in the heart of the city.

The town square features the former five-and-dime store — now a museum — that family patriarch Sam Walton opened in 1950, which was the launchpad for Walmart Inc. Across the square is a branch of Arvest Bank — also owned by the family — while a short walk south brings visitors to the grounds of Crystal Bridges, a $1.2 billion museum of American art built with Walton money on family-owned land in an Ozark forest.

Then there are the stores, warehouses and low-slung headquarte­rs of Walmart that dot the landscape for miles around and underscore the size of the $500 billion sales behemoth that’s the bedrock of the family fortune.

“Outside of monarchies, this is one of the greatest fortunes ever amassed,” said Andy Hart of Delegate Advisors, a multifamil­y office with locations in San Francisco and Chapel Hill, North Carolina. “Monarchies and kingdoms came by birthright. This was earned.”

Investment vehicle Walton Enterprise­s LLC owns 48 percent of Walmart, worth about $120 billion. Walton Family Holdings Trust owns an additional 2.5 percent. The combined stake threw off $3.2 billion of dividends in 2017, the same year the family sold about $4.1 billion of stock to fund philanthro­py and other projects.

Their continued control reflects unusual prescience on the part of Sam Walton, who started preparing for succession in 1953, when he passed 80 percent of the family business to his four children: Alice, Rob, Jim and John. That minimized estate taxes and helped the family retain control even as the company grew into the world’s largest retailer.

Six decades later, there are increasing signs that the third generation is starting to hold greater sway. Steuart Walton, 37, replaced his father Jim on Walmart’s board in 2016. Wyoming court documents show his cousin, Lukas, 31, has the right to vote the estate’s general and limited partner units in Walton Enterprise­s. A spokeswoma­n for the family declined to comment for this story.

The younger generation’s increasing influence is apparent in downtown Bentonvill­e. An office and retail complex features an eatery backed by Steuart’s 34-year-old brother, Tom, and, for a few weeks, hosted a temporary outpost of Rapha, a highend British cycling brand that the pair bought for a reported $225 million in 2017. The siblings are also behind the bicycle trails that crisscross the town’s outskirts and a new outpost of Crystal Bridges, slated to open in 2020.

“Recent growth is due to the Walton grandchild­ren,” said local Realtor Larry Horton, who says real estate prices have tripled in the past few years. “They’ve put a lot of effort into getting younger people here.”

It seems to be working. The population is close to 50,000, up from 35,000 in the 2010 census. On a May weeknight, a steady stream of millennial­s threw back shots in a basement bar that’s also part of Tom Walton’s Ropeswing Hospitalit­y Group.

“A few years ago you could have fired a scattersho­t downtown and not hit anyone,” said Don Overstreet, whose family jewelry store has been on Bentonvill­e’s town square since 1948. “Now look at it.”

Sam Walton would approve. “Operate globally, give back locally,” was his mantra, according to the company museum.

As with other multigener­ational fortunes, the family’s challenge is ensuring its wealth doesn’t dissipate between generation­s. It helps that many family members’ lifestyles aren’t lavish. The Waltons in the area “live modestly,” according to Bentonvill­e Mayor Bob McCaslin, who praised the family’s influence in Northwest Arkansas. They “call no attention to themselves.”

 ?? LUKE SHARRETT / BLOOMBERG ?? Walmart Inc.’s headquarte­rs in Bentonvill­e, Ark., is encircled for miles around by its stores and warehouses.
LUKE SHARRETT / BLOOMBERG Walmart Inc.’s headquarte­rs in Bentonvill­e, Ark., is encircled for miles around by its stores and warehouses.

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