World’s richest 500 have grown richer by $1 trillion this year

28 Dec 2017

The world's 500 richest people have increased their wealth by $1 trillion this year due to a huge increase in the value of global stock markets, which are likely to finish 2017 at record highs.

This is more than four times last year's gain, as stock markets shrugged off economic, social and political divisions.

The 23 per cent increase on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, a daily ranking of the world's 500 richest people, compares with an almost 20 per cent increase for both the MSCI World Index and Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

Meanwhile The UK's FTSE 100 is up more than 6 per cent – and hit a new closing high of 7,620.7 points on Wednesday.

The big increase in the fortunes of the ultra-wealthy comes as billions of poorer people across the world have seen their wealth stand still or decline. The gap between the very rich and everyone else has widened to the biggest it has been in a century and advisers to the super-rich are warning them of a ''strike back'' from the squeezed majority, says The Guardian.

The globe's 500 richest people, as measured by the Bloomberg index, have seen the value of the wealth increase by 23 per cent so far this year, taking their combined fortunes to $5.3 trillion as of close of trading on Tuesday.

''It's part of the second-most robust and second-longest bull market in history,'' said Mike Ryan, chief investment officer for the Americas at UBS Wealth Management, on 18 December. ''Of all the guidance we gave people over the course of this year, the most important advice was staying invested.''

The number of Asian billionaires surpassed the US for the first time, according to a UBS Group AG and PricewaterhouseCoopers report.

Bezos richest
Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, is the world's richest man. His fortune has increased by $34.2 billion so far this year to take his net worth to $99.6 billion. On just one day in October Bezos's fortune increased by $10.3 billion, when Amazon posted profits much higher than analysts had expected and the company's shares spiked.

Bezos, 53, who founded Amazon in his Seattle garage in 1994, owns 16 per cent of the online retailer. He also owns all of space exploration company Blue Origin and the Washington Post newspaper, which he bought for $250 million in 2013.

His fortune is $8.3 billion larger than that of Microsoft founder Bill Gates, the world's second richest man. In August Gates donated $4.6 billion worth of Microsoft shares to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the charity he set up with his wife to improve global healthcare and reduce extreme poverty.

Bill and Melinda Gates have donated $35 billion since 1994. They donated $16 billion worth of Microsoft shares in 1999 and followed it up with another $ 5.1 billion a year later. The Gates Foundation has grown to become the world's largest private charity.

George Soros also gave away a substantial part of his fortune, revealing in October that his family office had given $18 billion to his Open Society Foundations over the past several years, dropping the billionaire investor to No 195 on the Bloomberg ranking, with a net worth of $8 billion.

In 2010 the Gates and Warren Buffett (the world's third richest person with a $85 billion fortune) created the Giving Pledge, a promise to give at least half of their wealth to charity, and called on other billionaires to join them. More than 170 of the world's richest people, including Mark Zuckerberg, Michael Bloomberg and Lord Ashcroft, have so far signed up. Bezos is not a signatory.

In June Bezos tweeted a request for ideas for a ''philanthropy strategy'', asking for suggestions on how he should approach philanthropy. He later tweeted to thank his 400,000 followers for their input and said there would be ''more to come''.

Collectively, the world's five richest people – Bezos, Gates, Buffett, Amancio Ortega, the owner of Zara, and Facebook's Zuckerberg – hold $425 billion of assets. That is equivalent to one-sixth of the UK's GDP.

The world's super-rich hold the greatest concentration of wealth since the US Gilded Age at the turn of the 20th century, when families like the Carnegies, Rockefellers and Vanderbilts controlled vast fortunes. There are now 1,542 dollar billionaires across the world, after 145 multimillionaires saw their wealth tick over into nine-zero fortunes last year, according to the UBS / PwC Billionaires report.

Josef Stadler, the lead author of the report and UBS's head of global ultra-high net worth, said his billionaire clients were concerned that growing inequality between rich and poor could lead to a ''strike back''.

A report by Credit Suisse found that the world's richest 1 per cent people have seen their share of the globe's total wealth increase from 42.5 per cent at the height of the 2008 financial crisis to 50.1 per cent in 2017, or $140 trillion.

''The share of the top 1 per cent has been on an upward path ever since [the financial crisis], passing the 2000 level in 2013 and achieving new peaks every year thereafter,'' the Credit Suisse global wealth report said. The bank said ''global wealth inequality has certainly been high and rising in the post-crisis period''.

The increase in wealth among the already very rich led to the creation of 2.3 million new dollar millionaires over the past year, taking the total to 36 million. ''The number of millionaires, which fell in 2008, recovered fast after the financial crisis, and is now nearly three times the 2000 figure,'' Credit Suisse said.

These millionaires – who account for 0.7 per cent of the world's adult population – control 46 per cent of total global wealth that now stands at $280 trillion. At the other end of the spectrum, the world's 3.5 billion poorest adults each have assets of less than $10,000. Collectively these people, who account for 70 per cent of the world's working age population, account for just 2.7 per cent of global wealth.