Bill
Gates is the richest American for the 20th year in a row and has reclaimed the
title of world’s richest person from Mexico’s Carlos Slim with a net worth of
$72 billion. Warren Buffett, again number two, was the year’s biggest dollar
gainer, having added $12.5 billion to his fortune. Facebook’s hot stock pumped
up Mark Zuckerberg’s fortune by $9.6 billion and put him back into the top 20
after missing the top cut last year; Carl Icahn lost his battle to stop Dell
from going private but he had a great year and moves back in the top 20 for the
first time since 2008. The biggest percentage gainer was Workday’s David
Duffield, whose fortune more than tripled to $6.4 billion, and just behind him
in terms of percentage jumps was the entrepreneur Elon Musk, now worth $6.7
billion and ranked 61st.
The
400 wealthiest Americans are worth a record $2.02 trillion, roughly equivalent
to the GDP of Russia. That is a gain of $300 billion from a year ago, and more
than double a decade ago. The average net worth of list members is a staggering
$5 billion, $800 million more than a year ago. The minimum net worth needed to
make the 400 list was $1.3 billion. The last time it was that high was in 2007
and 2008, just before the financial crisis. Because the bar is so high, 61
American billionaires didn’t make the cut.
There
are 20 newcomers to the list. Among the notables are Michael Rubin, whose
online sports merchandise retailer Fanatics, recently attracted venture capital
investors at a sky-high valuation; Jeff Sutton, who owns a number of the
priciest store fronts on Fifth Avenue and Times Square, and 35-year-old Robert
Pera, one of just nine under 40, whose wireless networking gear maker Ubiquiti
Networks surged after a strong earnings announcement in August. At the time he
tweeted this lyric from a Jay-Z song: “And as for the critics, tell me I don’t
get it. Everybody can tell you how to do it, they never did it.”
Only
30 people from last year’s list are poorer than a year ago. Twenty-nine people
dropped out of the ranks and four people died. Of those 29, only 15 saw their
fortunes drop, including T. Boone Pickens, whose costly bets on wind energy
lost him his billionaire status, and Manoj Bhargava, whose 5-Hour Energy drink
firm has been hit by lawsuits and falling revenues. The rest simply couldn’t
keep up with the rising tide. Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder is one of
the billionaires who didn’t qualify and, in his case, even with a rise in his
fortune, just didn’t have enough to stay in the club.
The
ranks are a snapshot of wealth taken on August 23, the day we locked in stock
prices.
Gates
$72 billion Up
Source: Microsoft, investments
Age: 57
Residence: Medina, Wash.
Self-made
$72 billion Up
Source: Microsoft, investments
Age: 57
Residence: Medina, Wash.
Self-made
Gates remains atop The Forbes 400, a perch he’s held since 1994,
despite giving
away $28 billion, most of it to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. He’s also again the world’s richest person, having reclaimed that title from Mexico’s Carlos Slim earlier this year. He bolstered his foundation’s efforts to eradicate polio in April, securing $335 million in pledges from six billionaire comrades, including $100 million each from Slim and Mike Bloomberg. Shares of Microsoft jumped in late August on news that Steve Ballmer will step down as CEO, but Gates will remain chairman of the software company he cofounded in 1975 with Paul Allen. Microsoft represents less than a fifth of his fortune. Gates’ investment firm, Cascade, owns chunks of tractormaker Deere & Co., Canadian National Railway and Mexican Coke bottler Femsa.
away $28 billion, most of it to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. He’s also again the world’s richest person, having reclaimed that title from Mexico’s Carlos Slim earlier this year. He bolstered his foundation’s efforts to eradicate polio in April, securing $335 million in pledges from six billionaire comrades, including $100 million each from Slim and Mike Bloomberg. Shares of Microsoft jumped in late August on news that Steve Ballmer will step down as CEO, but Gates will remain chairman of the software company he cofounded in 1975 with Paul Allen. Microsoft represents less than a fifth of his fortune. Gates’ investment firm, Cascade, owns chunks of tractormaker Deere & Co., Canadian National Railway and Mexican Coke bottler Femsa.
2. Warren Buffett
$58.5 billion Up
Source: Berkshire Hathaway
Age: 83
Residence: Omaha
Self-made
$58.5 billion Up
Source: Berkshire Hathaway
Age: 83
Residence: Omaha
Self-made
Neither age nor prostate cancer slows Buffett down: a year after
completing radiation treatment, he is still doing huge deals. His Berkshire
Hathaway picked up iconic ketchupmaker H.J. Heinz for $23.2 billion in June in
a deal with Brazilian billionaire Jorge Paulo Lemann. A Berkshire subsidiary is
buying Nevada’s NV Energy for $5.6 billion in cash. He gave away another $2
billion of Berkshire stock to the Gates Foundation in July, bringing his
lifetime giving to nearly $20 billion. Despite the gift, he saw his fortune
rise $12.5 billion, more than any other member of The Forbes 400, thanks to a
34% increase in Berkshire shares.
3. Larry Ellison
$41 billion Even
Source: Oracle
Age: 69
Residence: Woodside, Calif.
Self-made
$41 billion Even
Source: Oracle
Age: 69
Residence: Woodside, Calif.
Self-made
Little gets in the way of Larry Ellison’s ambition—or mouth. In
a TV interview in August the Oracle founder said that Apple’s best days are
behind it after the passing of Steve Jobs, a close friend, and that Google’s
alleged infringement on Oracle’s patents in its Android software was
“absolutely evil.” His dream of a winning second America’s Cup sailing trophy
was dealt a serious blow in September when a jury found the Oracle team guilty
of cheating and docked it two points. He collects houses on Malibu’s Carbon
Beach and also owns of 98% of Hawaii’s Lanai island. In his quest for youth he
has donated $445 million to his medical foundation to support research on aging
and age-related diseases.
4. Charles Koch
$36 billion Up
Source: Diversified
Age: 77
Residence: Wichita, Kans.
Inherited & Growing
$36 billion Up
Source: Diversified
Age: 77
Residence: Wichita, Kans.
Inherited & Growing
Charles is chairman and CEO of Koch Industries, the country’s
second largest private company with sales of $115 billion, a post he’s held
since 1967. He and his brother David, with whom he shares the fortune, failed
to unseat Barack Obama as President in 2012 but keep finding ways to drive
liberals crazy. The latest frenzy was over Charles and younger brother David’s
widely reported (but never confirmed) interest in buying Los Angeles Times and
Chicago Tribune as platforms for their libertarian views. His net worth is up
$5 billion this year as Koch Industries steadily expands. The company agreed to
buy electronics-components maker Molex for $7.2 billion and cellulose fibers
producer Buckeye Technologies for $1.5 billion. They invested $1.5 billion in
glassmaker Guardian Industries. The thrifty brothers reinvest 90% of earnings
in the business. He studied nuclear and chemical engineering at MIT.
4. David Koch
$36 billion Up
Source: Diversified
Age: 73
Residence: New York City
Inherited & growing
$36 billion Up
Source: Diversified
Age: 73
Residence: New York City
Inherited & growing
David is New York City’s richest resident. He and his brother
Charles, with whom he shares the fortune, failed to unseat Barack Obama as
President in 2012 but keep finding ways to drive liberals crazy. The latest
frenzy was over Charles and younger brother David’s widely reported (but never
confirmed) interest in buying Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune as
platforms for their libertarian views. His net worth is up $5 billion this year
as Koch Industries steadily expands. The company agreed to buy
electronics-components maker Molex for $7.2 billion and cellulose fibers
producer Buckeye Technologies for $1.5 billion. They invested $1.5 billion in
glassmaker Guardian Industries. The thrifty brothers reinvest 90% of earnings
in the business. David is a prostate cancer survivor, and he’s contributed more
than $200 million to finding a cure. Like his brother, he studied chemical
engineering while at MIT.
6. Christy Walton & family
Forbes $35.4 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 58
Residence: Jackson, Wyo.
Inherited
Forbes $35.4 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 58
Residence: Jackson, Wyo.
Inherited
Christy is once again the richest woman in the world. She
inherited her wealth when husband, John Walton, a Green Beret and medic in
Vietnam War, died in an airplane crash in 2005. She got a huge chunk of
Wal-Mart shares. But it is his side investment in First Solar that boosts her
fortune ahead of all the other Waltons. That lead, which had narrowed when the
stock tanked a couple of years ago, has once again widened, as First Solar
shares rose 57% in past year.
7. Jim Walton
$33.8 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 65
Residence: Bentonville, Ark.
Inherited
$33.8 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 65
Residence: Bentonville, Ark.
Inherited
The combined fortune of Sam Walton’s heirs is up 27%, or $28.9
billion, from a year ago due to a change in control of the shares held by their
late mother’s (d. 2007) trust. Shares of Wal-Mart are up only 2%. Their father
Sam and uncle James started the giant retailer in 1962, which now employs 2.2
million people in 11,000 stores worldwide. The siblings have split more than
$1.4 billion in dividends after taxes so far in 2013. Jim, Sam’s youngest son,
is the CEO of the family’s Arvest Bank, which is worth $1.8 billion and has
branches in Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri.
8. Alice Walton
$33.5 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 63
Residence: Fort Worth, Tex.
Inherited
$33.5 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 63
Residence: Fort Worth, Tex.
Inherited
Alice’s Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art — which she
founded in 2011 — has eclipsed 1 million visitors in under two years of
operation. The Bentonville, Ark., museum includes works spanning five centuries
from icons like Andy Warhol, Norman Rockwell and Georgia O’Keeffe. The combined
fortune of Sam Walton’s heirs is up 27%, or $28.9 billion, from a year ago due
to a change in control of the shares held by their late mother’s (d. 2007)
trust. Shares of Wal-Mart are up only 2%. Their father Sam and uncle James
started the giant retailer in 1962, which now employs 2.2 million people in 11,000
stores worldwide. The siblings have split more than $1.4 billion in dividends
after taxes so far in 2013.
9. S. Robson Walton
$33.3 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 69
Residence: Bentonville, Ark.
Inherited
$33.3 billion Up
Source: Wal-Mart Age: 69
Residence: Bentonville, Ark.
Inherited
While the Waltons and Wal-mart continue to get richer, it hasn’t
been all smiles this past year for S. Robson, the eldest sibling, who has been
chairman of the $469 billion (sales) retailer since 1962. Employees organized
protests against low wages in 15 cities across the U.S. Wal-Mart also endured criticism
for its connection to a bribery scandal in Mexico. The combined fortune of Sam
Walton’s heirs is up 27%, or $28.9 billion, from a year ago due to a change in
control of the shares held by their late mother’s (d. 2007) trust. Shares of
Wal-Mart are up only 2%. Their father Sam and uncle James started the giant
retailer in 1962, which now employs 2.2 million people in 11,000 stores
worldwide. The siblings have split more than $1.4 billion in dividends after
taxes so far in 2013.
10. Michael Bloomberg
$31 billion Up
Source: Bloomberg LP
Age: 71
Residence: New York City
Self-made
$31 billion Up
Source: Bloomberg LP
Age: 71
Residence: New York City
Self-made
The world’s richest mayor ends a 12-year run atop the Big Apple
in December. His next act is anyone’s guess, but he will likely continue to
exert his political influence on the national debate over gun control. His
fortune is up $6 billion since last year, thanks to the performance of
Bloomberg LP, the financial data firm he founded in 1982 after being fired from
Salomon Brothers. He owns 88% of the company, which generated $7.9 billion in
2012 revenue. He also owns at least 10 homes in Manhattan, Westchester County,
Bermuda, Vail and the Hamptons. His lifetime philanthropic giving is at $2.8
billion, including a recent $100 million pledge to the Gates Foundation to help
Bill Gates eradicate polio.
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