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Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates may have shed billion, but he remains the world's richest person |
Even the world's richest
people feel the sting of a depressed economy and shrinking stock
portfolios.
The world's distinct club of billionaires dropped 83 members this year
to 497 as recession and fallout from the terrorist attacks reduced their
wealth. The group's combined worth fell to .54 trillion from .73
trillion last year, according to Forbes magazine's 16th annual ranking
of billionaires released on February 28.
Among the missing: AOL Time Warner Chairman Steve Case, whose company
stock has declined by about half since last year, and Gary Winnick,
chairman of Global Crossing, which filed for bankruptcy protection in
January.
They led a second year of decline in the number of billionaires since
the tech downturn began pressuring the world economy in 2000.
Gates, Billion Poorer, Is Still No. 1
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates lost billion last year, but that
didn't stop him from being the richest man in the world for the 8th year
in a row. With a net worth of .8 billion, Gates remained comfortably
ahead of Warren Buffet, who held the No. 2 spot with billion.
German retailers Theo and Karl Albrecht climbed two notches to No. 3,
with a net value of .8 billion. They pushed Microsoft co-founder Paul
Allen, ranked third last year with a value of .4 billion, to No. 4 after
he lost .2 billion, partly in the stock market bust.
Oracle Corp. founder Larry Ellison had the fifth spot, while five
heirs of the Wal-Mart fortune created by founder Sam Walton rounded out
the top 10.
Only 25 on the list are under 40, led by 37-year-old computer founder
Michael Dell at No. 18. The highest-ranking rich woman was No. 8, Alice
Walton, with assets of .5 billion.
Among Biggest Losers: Ted Turner
Among the countries, the United States led the list with 243
billionaires, down from 272 last year, with a combined net worth of 1
billion. One of the bigger losers was CNN founder Ted Turner, now a vice
chairman at AOL Time Warner, who lost 50 percent of his net worth to .8
billion. He dropped 62 places on the list to No. 97.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, founder of the financial
information company Bloomberg, spent million of his own money to win his
first political campaign last fall. Still, he saw his ranking move up 10
places to No. 72, despite losing a total of 0 million to have assets of
.4 billion.
Europe had 121 billionaires, headed by the Albrechts and Germany's
Johanna Quandt and family, whose 46 percent ownership of automaker BMW
helped put them at No. 12.
Asia, led by Saudi Arabia's Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud at No.
11, notched 70 billionaires. A loser was Japan's Yasuo Takei and family,
whose .1 billion in losses dropped him 14 places to No. 51 as the
country battles deflation and a decade-long economic slowdown.
Japan accounted for five of Asia's 15 former billionaires who dropped
from the list this year.
Of the 497 total billionaires from 43 countries, 260 inherited some
or all of their wealth, and the rest made their money themselves.
Twenty-seven are college dropouts.