The Guardian (USA)

All billionair­es under 30 have inherited their wealth, research finds

- Rupert Neate Wealth correspond­ent

All of the world’s billionair­es younger than 30 inherited their wealth, the first wave of “the great wealth transfer” in which more than 1,000 wealthy people are expected to pass on more than $5.2tn (£4.1tn) to their heirs over the next two decades.

There are already more billionair­es than ever before (2,781), and the number is expected to soar in the coming years as an elderly generation of super-rich people prepare to give their fortunes to their children.

Research by Forbes magazine found there were 15 billionair­es aged 30 or under but that none had created their own wealth, instead benefittin­g from huge inheritanc­es.

Among them are Ireland’s Firoz Mistry, 27, and his brother Zahan, 25, who each have an estimated $4.9bn from their stakes in Tata Sons, the parent company of the Indian conglomera­te Tate Group, which owns car brands including Jaguar Land Rover. They inherited their 4.6% stakes in the company in 2022 after the death of their father, Cyrus Mistry, who died less than three months after their grandfathe­r Pallonji.

Three children of Leonardo Del Vecchio,

the founder of the luxury sunglasses company Luxottica, became billionair­es after his death in 2022. Leonardo Maria, 28, Luca, 22, and Clemente Del Vecchio, 19, each inherited a 12.5% stake in the family’s Luxembourg-based holding company Delfin, which owns nearly a third of EssilorLux­ottica, the company behind RayBan

and Oakley. The siblings has a fortune estimated to be worth $4.7bn each.

The world’s youngest billionair­e is Livia Voigt, 19, who has a $1.1bn fortune thanks to a 3.1% stake in WEG Industries, a Brazilian electrical equipment producer co-founded by her grandfathe­r Werner Ricardo. He died in 2016.

Her older sister Dora Voigt de Assis, 26, is also on the list.

Experts at the Swiss bank UBS said: “During the next 20 to 30 years, over 1,000 of today’s billionair­es are likely to transfer more than $5.2tn to their heirs. How do we calculate this number? Simply by adding up the wealth of the 1,023 billionair­es who are aged 70 or more today.

“Looking to the longer term, the exceptiona­l wealth resulting from the boom in entreprene­urial activity since the 1990s has establishe­d a foundation for future generation­s of billionair­e families.”

The richest person on the planet is the majority owner of the luxury goods conglomera­te LVMH, Bernard Arnault. He is 75 and has recently promoted his children to key roles in the business. Arnault has an estimated fortune of $233bn, a 10% increase on last year.

Charles Koch, the elder of the US billionair­e industrial­ist brothers, is 88. Phil Knight, the billionair­e co-founder of Nike, is 86.

A total of $70tn is expected to be inherited by the next generation over the next 20 years, according to estimates by the consulting firm Cerulli Associates. The transfer is expected to make millennial­s the “richest generation in history”, says research by the real estate agent Knight Frank.

One of the youngest billionair­es to have made – rather than inherited – their fortune is Ben Francis, 31, the British founder of athleisure brand Gymshark. His wealth is estimated at $1.3bn.

• This article was amended on 3 April 2024 to remove a mistaken reference to Charles Koch’s younger brother David, who died in 2019.

 ?? Photograph: Kristy Sparow/Getty Images ?? Leonardo Maria del Vecchio, 28, who became a billionair­e after the death of his father, Leonardo Del Vecchio, in 2022.
Photograph: Kristy Sparow/Getty Images Leonardo Maria del Vecchio, 28, who became a billionair­e after the death of his father, Leonardo Del Vecchio, in 2022.

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