Hawke's Bay Today

NBR Rich List 2021: What’s changed

List editor Maria Slade said it was time to rethink the purpose of the New Zealand ranking system

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There have been a few changes to NBR’s annual rundown of the wealthiest people in the country. Rather than simply focus on wealth for wealth’s sake, the editorial team made a call this year to drop the word “rich” from the long-running “NBR Rich List” moniker.

List editor Maria Slade said in the aftermath of Covid-19, it was time to rethink the purpose of the ranking system.

“So, we created The NBR List to put equal focus on profit and purpose.

“The NBR List honours people who are building enterprise­s, growing New Zealand’s fortunes, creating jobs and giving back.

“We didn’t ask him to say it, but expat American agribusine­ss investor Tom Sturgess encapsulat­ed the sentiment when he remarked to our reporter: ‘Money is like manure, you pile it up, and it just stinks the joint up, you spread good.’”

The list, which returns after a oneyear hiatus caused by Covid-19, features a total 100 Kiwis operating across five categories (Property, Make & Sell, Investment, Agribusine­ss and Tech & Services).

While familiar names like Graeme Hart, the Todd and Goodman families and the Mowbrays lead the Top 10, there are also a few newcomers among the 100 that might catch readers by surprise.

Newcomers include rocket man Peter Beck; Alison’s Pantry and Mother Earth manufactur­ers Bernie and Kaye Crosby; Jonny Hendriksen, founder of video ad company Shuttleroc­k; and brothers Chris and Stephen Harris, who sold their gaming studio Ninja Kiwi for $270m in March.

To reflect the shifting focus of the list, this year also features a “ones to

it around,

it does watch list” that includes Colin Neal and his investment vehicle Polar Capital; South Island venison growers the Whyte family; and Cin7 inventory management system creator Danny Ing.

Also, worth mentioning are the philanthro­pic efforts of some of the influentia­l business people included this year.

Douglas Pharmaceut­icals managing director Jeff Douglas and veteran investor Sir Christophe­r Mace’s contributi­ons to a $6.2m fund to buy iconic Elliot Bay in the Bay of Islands and return it to the public conservati­on estate.

HW Richardson transport group owners, the Richardson/O’Donnell family, are behind a $33m dementia care village.

The editorial team behind the project made a decision this year to exclude those based overseas who contribute little to the New Zealand business community.

The biggest departure due to this rule was New Zealand citizen and Silicon Valley billionair­e Peter Thiel.

The market cap of Thiel’s spook software outfit Palantir is large enough to challenge Hart’s position as the richest New Zealander.

Asked about other high-profile departures, Slade said they “include US-based fund manager Ric Kayne, who has built a few golf courses here but otherwise runs his business interests overseas; the Simunovich family who are mostly offshore-based now; and Lyn Erceg, the widow of liquor baron Michael – she is very wealthy, but does little in the NZ business community”.

 ?? Photo / File ?? Peter Beck.
Photo / File Peter Beck.

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