World’s richest people smashed wealth records this week


(FMT) – It’s been one of the most lucrative weeks in history for some of the world’s wealthiest people.

The net worth of Amazon.com Inc founder Jeff Bezos topped the once-unfathomable amount of US$200 billion.

Entrepreneur, inventor, provocateur Elon Musk added the title of centibillionaire when his fortune soared past US$100 billion fueled by Tesla Inc’s ceaseless rally. And by Friday, the world’s 500 wealthiest people were US$209 billion richer than a week ago.

Musk’s surging wealth expanded the rarefied club of centibillionaires to four members. Facebook Inc co-founder Mark Zuckerberg, the world’s third-richest person, joined Bezos and Bill Gates among the ranks of those possessing 12-figure fortunes earlier this month.

Together, their wealth totals US$540 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

This week marked just the latest boon for the personal fortunes of the richest of the rich, whose red-hot growth has been largely driven by surging markets, particularly for tech shares.

US stocks reached fresh highs on Friday as investors took confidence in the Federal Reserve’s new inflation approach.

Pay Package

Musk’s net worth has grown by US$76.1 billion this year, propelled by Tesla’s stock price and a boosted valuation of Space Exploration Technologies Corp, or SpaceX.

Also helpful: an audacious pay package – the largest corporate pay deal ever struck between a CEO and a board of directors – that could yield him more than US$50 billion if all goals are met.

Still, Musk’s gain is second to that of Bezos, whose fortune has grown by US$84.9 billion in 2020 as pandemic-induced lockdowns spur demand for Amazon deliveries.

Bezos’s fortune has doubled since he crested the US$100 billion mark in late 2017, even after ceding a quarter of his Amazon stake to ex-wife MacKenzie Scott in a divorce last year.

Scott is now US$700 million shy of surpassing L’Oreal SA heiress Francoise Bettencourt Meyers as the world’s richest woman.

The heady pace of wealth accumulation is in stark contrast to the state of the global economy. Growth has slumped sharply since the pandemic began with companies laying off millions of workers and consumer demand cratering.

Income Inequality

The brunt of economic pain has been borne by young and lower-wage workers, whose jobs are typically more vulnerable to Covid-related layoffs.

“There is little doubt that the pandemic will exacerbate inequality in incomes and wealth, both in the short term and in the longer term,” said Miles Corak, an economics professor who studies income inequality at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.

The world’s 500 richest people have collectively grown their fortunes by US$871 billion this year, a 15% increase, according to the billionaires’ index.

 



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