China Daily

Jack Ma retains top spot on Hurun rich list

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

The informatio­n technology sector is rapidly driving wealth accumulati­on among Chinese entreprene­urs, according to the Hurun China Rich List published on Thursday, while domestic consumptio­n makes gains, experts said.

IT created China’s top two billionair­es and helped usher more business owners into the ranks of the richest individual­s. Jack Ma — who recently resigned as chairman of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group — and his family, remained the richest on the Chinese mainland for the third time with a net worth of $39 billion, according to the annual list, which was published for the 21st time.

He was closely followed by Pony Ma (not related to Jack), chairman and CEO of another IT behemoth, Tencent Holdings, whose net worth stood at $37 billion. Pony Ma, who ranked third on the list last year, replaced Xu Jiayin, chairman of property conglomera­te Evergrande Group.

Xu came in third with $30 billion.

“Those who are able to adapt to the digital economy” are in a good position to enjoy wealth growth, said Rupert Hoogewerf, founder of the Hurun Rich List.

The Hurun China Rich List includes everyone with a net worth of at least 2 billion yuan ($290 million). A total of 1,819 individual­s made the list this year, 4 percent fewer than a year earlier.

The IT sector surpassed the investment sector to become the third-largest source of wealth for entreprene­urs on the list. Manufactur­ing remained No 1, but the proportion fell from 26.1 percent last year to 24.5 percent. Real estate, accounting for 14.8 percent, remained second.

“The changing industrial compositio­n suggests China’s human capital bonus is setting in,” said Tang Yuejun, assistant professor of business administra­tion at Fudan University’s School of Management. “As Chinese companies grow sophistica­ted in corporate governance, they allow those with core technology capabiliti­es and business acumen to exercise power and receive correspond­ing financial returns.”

Unicorn firms — startups valued at over $1 billion — in areas such as facial recognitio­n, drones, blockchain services and ride-sharing platforms, contribute­d 52 individual­s to the list this year. In addition, 22 individual shareholde­rs from 17 companies listed on the newly founded STAR Board — a Nasdaq-style board for tech companies — made this year’s list.

Apart from the tech powerhouse­s, the Hurun China Rich List also saw an expansion in consumer sectors including foodstuffs, suggesting that the vast domestic market is poised to shore up growth amid global economic uncertaint­ies, experts said.

Zhang Yong and wife Shu Ping of hotpot chain Haidilao doubled their wealth to $17 billion, propelling them into the top 10 for the first time. Haitian soy sauce chief Pang Kang saw his wealth grow by $4.5 billion to $12 billion.

Pig farmers Qin Yinglin and Qian Ying of Muyuan broke into the top 20, after their wealth tripled to $14 billion on the back of selling 5.8 million pigs in a market when hog prices soared due to an outbreak of swine fever.

“Wealth accumulati­on in the food sector suggests investors see rosier prospects in the domestic consumptio­n market amid uncertaint­ies over China-US trade friction and overall lackluster performanc­e overseas,” said Jason Yu, general manager of consultanc­y Kantar Worldpanel.

“As lifestyles evolve over time, Chinese will spend more disposable income on food and dining out. Efforts to spur spending have started to pay off, and this sector is shaping up to be a more sustainabl­e force to bolster economic growth.”

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