Global rich list. (1 Viewer)

Chxta

Onye kwe, Chi ya ekwe
Nov 1, 2004
12,088
#1
FOR the 11th year in a row, computer magnate and philanthropist Bill Gates was yesterday named the world's richest man. Gates, Microsoft Corp. founder, sits comfortably on top in Forbes Magazine's 2005 rankings of world's billionaires, with a net worth of $46.5 billion. The figure is slightly less than his $46.6 billion last year..

Thanks to a surge in demand for steel, the Internet and Scandinavian sofas, there are some new names among the very richest list.. Indian steel mogul Lakshmi Mittal, Mexican telecom magnate Carlos Slim Helu and Ikea founder Ingvar Kamprad of Sweden knocked several Wal-Mart heirs down a few notches.

The billionaires are richer and more numerous for the second straight year, but the top spot is unchanged for Gates. Warren Buffet held a close second with $44 billion, up from $42.9 billion in 2004.

Mittal, the biggest dollar gainer after quadrupling his net worth by $18.8 billion to $25 billion, climbed 59 rungs from last year to No. 3 in 2005.

Helu came in fourth, up from No. 17 in 2004; Saudi Arabian investor Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud ranked No. 5 and Ikea's Kamprad rose to No. 6 from No. 13 last year.

Rounding out the top 10 were Microsoft's Paul Allen, German supermarket company owner Karl Albrecht, Oracle Corp.'s Lawrence Ellison - returning to the top 10 after slipping to No. 12 last year - and Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s S. Robson Walton.

Four other Waltons took spots 11 through 13, with Alice and Helen Walton once again sharing the title of richest woman in the world with $18 billion each. The five family members of the late Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton are together worth over $90 billion.

The number of billionaires grew to a record 691 from 587 last year, and their total net worth rose by $300 billion to $2.2 trillion.

A confluence of factors contributed to the increase, said Forbes associate editor Luisa Kroll, including positive performance by many stock markets around the world - for example, in Ukraine and Iceland, countries that debuted on the list along with Kazakhstan and Poland - and the falling dollar.

Between February 2004 and February 2005, the 12-nation euro rose about 4 percent against the dollar, while the British pound rose about 3 percent versus the U.S. currency.

"If you were a euro-based billionaire, you could've done nothing and seen a 20 percent increase" over the past two years, Kroll said.

Soaring commodities like oil and steel also helped make the rich richer, as did the overall recovery of the global economy over the past few years. "2003 was really the valley for the billionaires," Kroll said.

One of this year's 131 new billionaires - and one of the list's 68 women, up from 53 last year - was Martha Stewart, whose wealth swelled to $1 billion despite her conviction for lying about a stock sale and ensuing five-month prison stint.

Jail time was harder on the fortune of Russia's embattled Yukos oil company chief Mikhail Khodorkovsky, this year's biggest dollar loser after seeing an 85 percent tumble from $15 billion to $2.2 billion.

Not counting the 14 billionaires who died since last February, only 30 people dropped off the list from 2004, including five of Khodorkovsky's colleagues and hotel heir Robert Pritzker.

Among the big winners were Google Inc.'s Sergey Brin and Larry Page, who made their first list appearance last year with $1 billion each. The tech moguls jumped nearly 500 spots this year to No. 55, their net worth multiplying to $7.2 billion after the company's initial public offering in August.

At 31 and 32 years of age, Brin and Page are two of only 29 billionaires under 40 - the average age of billionaires this year was 64 - but youngest billionaire crown went to Germany's 21-year-old Albert von Thurn und Taxis, with $2 billion.

Forbes senior editor Pete Newcomb said the rankings were compiled using the February 11 closing price of publicly traded stock owned by the billionaires. In the case of private companies, Forbes looked at comparable companies in the same industries in order to determine a value of a billionaire's holdings.

For real estate holdings, the magazine valued properties according to square footage, and subtracted any debt from a property's estimated worth.
 

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baggio

Senior Member
Jun 3, 2003
19,250
#2
From 63 to 3 in one year is bloody impressive by Lakshmi Mittal. But it doesnt come as a shock, that guy is in the league of the world's richest. He hired India's biggest bollywood actors to dance at his daughter's wedding!!!
Anyway and i believe there are quite a few Indians in the rich list (GO INDIA) :D
 

Zlatan

Senior Member
Jun 9, 2003
23,049
#5
Mittal made a hugew investement in Bosnia's steel industry a while ago. His jump is probably due to the world increase in price of steel due mainly to the grrowing Chinese economic developement.
 

JCK

Biased
JCK
May 11, 2004
124,046
#9
++ [ originally posted by sehnsucht79 ] ++
what business does that 21 yr old billionaire does ?
Albert von Thurn und Taxis

Our youngest billionaire is also a prince. On his 18th birthday inherited the fortune left to him by his father, which included extensive real estate holdings, valuable art and a tech company. His 30,000 hectares of wood land in Germany is considered one of the largest forestry holdings in Europe. Now lives in one of the family castles at Schloss Emmeram with mother Gloria and older sisters Maria Theresia and Elisabeth.
 

baggio

Senior Member
Jun 3, 2003
19,250
#10
++ [ originally posted by Zlatan ] ++
Mittal made a hugew investement in Bosnia's steel industry a while ago. His jump is probably due to the world increase in price of steel due mainly to the grrowing Chinese economic developement.
Thats when everybody had written these markets off. He stepped in, when everybody was diversifying in search of more stable markets. And this is exactly what happened. China has a major role to play as well, their economic development has been as rapid, and together with India they are definitely the economies of the future.
 

Elnur_E65

Senior Member
Feb 21, 2004
10,848
#11
++ [ originally posted by Jeeks ] ++
Abramovic is 38 years old and he's worth 13.3 Billion
He is actually worth a lot more.

Most of his assets (such as a network of alluminum production factories) do not formally belong to him on paper.
 
OP
Chxta

Chxta

Onye kwe, Chi ya ekwe
Nov 1, 2004
12,088
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #13
    The list doesn't include those with ill gotten wealth. Or I'd bet that some African leaders past and present would have featured. :yuck:
     

    Erkka

    Senior Member
    Mar 31, 2004
    3,863
    #20
    ++ [ originally posted by Jeeks ] ++
    Abramovic is 38 years old and he's worth 13.3 Billion
    ++ [ originally posted by Elnur_E65 ] ++

    He is actually worth a lot more.

    Most of his assets (such as a network of alluminum production factories) do not formally belong to him on paper.
    ++ [ originally posted by Kaiser Franco ] ++
    Meanwhile half of Russia's population lives under the poverty line.
    Speaking of Abramovic (and Chelsky):

     

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