Business Standard

JEFF BEZOS BECOMES FIRST PERSON WORTH $200 BN

Musk extends an extraordin­ary stretch of wealth gains to become a centibilli­onaire

- DEVON PENDLETON AND JACK PITCHER

Three of the world’s richest people have achieved staggering new levels of personal wealth.

The net worth of Amazon.com Inc founder Jeff Bezos eclipsed $200 billion on Wednesday as shares of the e-commerce giant climbed to a record. The move simultaneo­usly pushed his ex-wife Mackenzie Scott, 50, to the brink of becoming the world’s richest woman, just behind L’oreal SA heiress Francoise Bettencour­t Meyers.

Elon Musk, meanwhile, extended an extraordin­ary stretch of wealth gains to become a centibilli­onaire. Tesla Inc. shares rallied Wednesday, pushing his net worth to $101 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, a listing of the world’s 500 richest people.

Tech companies boosted the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite indexes to new highs for a fourth straight day, buoyed by news that the Federal Reserve is likely to keep short-term interest rates near zero for at least five years.

The gains by Bezos, 56, and Musk represent just the latest high water mark for wealth accumulati­on in a topsy-turvy year defined by both surging markets and catastroph­ic human and economic loss. The world’s 500 richest people have gained $809 billion so far this year, a 14% increase since January, even as a global pandemic caused a record drop in gross domestic product and millions of lost jobs.

Income Inequality

The rising income inequality has provoked sharp responses from many progressiv­e politician­s and critics on the left. US Senator Bernie Sanders earlier this month introduced legislatio­n to tax ‘extreme’ wealth gains during the coronaviru­s crisis.

“We cannot continue to allow billionair­es like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk to become obscenely rich while millions of Americans face eviction, hunger and economic desperatio­n,” Sanders said Wednesday in a statement. “It’s time to fundamenta­lly change our national priorities.”

Others view their massive wealth as justified, saying they’ve earned it through the creation of singular businesses. “When you look at

Musk and Bezos, it’s understate­d to say that in their own ways, they’ve changed the world,” said Thomas Hayes, chairman of Great Hill Capital.

The surge in wealth is especially concentrat­ed in the upper ranks of the billionair­es index and has been fuelled largely by tech stocks, which have been on a tear as the pandemic drives more people online. That also includes a rise in the number of retail investors buying stocks. Musk, 49, now one of four centibilli­onaires in the world, has seen his fortune grow by $73.6 billion this year, a jump still smaller than Bezos’s, who is up by $87.1 billion. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg’s net worth topped $100 billion earlier this month. On Wednesday alone, it rose by $8.5 billion.

US tech tycoons haven’t been the only beneficiar­ies. India’s Mukesh Ambani became the first Asian to rank among the world’s five richest last month. He’s gained $22.5 billion this year on the back of a boost in shares of his conglomera­te Reliance Industries, whose tech division has attracted recent investment­s from the likes of Facebook and Silver Lake.

With Amazon stock edging up 2% as of Wednesday, Bezos’ net worth is up by $4.9 bn, making him the world’s first-ever person to amass a $200-bn fortune. The move simultaneo­usly pushed his ex-wife Mackenzie Scott to the brink of becoming the world’s richest woman

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