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воскресенье, 25 апреля 2021 г.

Mapped: The Top 10 Billionaire Cities

 


воскресенье, 21 апреля 2019 г.

All the World’s Billionaires


Hi All,
in this instructive map each bubble represents a billionaire and the size of the country represents the total wealth of the billionaires in that country.
Several striking observations:
  • Looks like USA followed by China is dominating, the third one is already way behind
  • The APAC region is top, more wealthy than N- and S-America together
  • China is second wealthy country with 373 billionaires, I think they made their homework in capitalism
  • India is way more wealthy than expected with rank 4 after Germany (and total wealth higher than Russia), seems the wealth is extremely disbalanced in this country
  • Japans economy is about a third the size of China’s, but Japan has only about 10% as many billionaires
  • Saudi Arabia is less wealthy than expected, partly due to the fact that lots of wealth there is hidden in state-owned companies
Compared to these numbers, the current market cap of all cryptos (137B$) is pathetic. If each billionaire would invest lets say only 2% in cryptos, the crypto market cap would explode by 1000%.

понедельник, 9 июля 2018 г.

Trillion Dollar Inheritance: The World’s Biggest Family Fortunes


Walmart, Samsung, Koch Industries and Hermes have built some of the biggest fortunes to ever be handed down between generations.

The saying, or at least the sentiment, sounds familiar in any language: “Shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations.”
The adage is often attributed to Andrew Carnegie, but the notion that family wealth ends up squandered travels far. “Stable to stars to stable,” an Italian version goes. “From paddy to paddy in three generations,” runs the Chinese saying.
But in an era of mind-boggling wealth and gaping inequality there seems little danger of that happening any time soon to the world’s 25 richest clans, who control $1.1 trillion of wealth (see below graphic), according to data compiled by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
From Mars bars to Hermes scarves, supermarkets to hotels and data firms to drug makers, the source of this wealth is varied and its scale is startling: more than the market cap of Apple Inc., all the deposits held by Citigroup Inc. or the entire GDP of Indonesia.
And any calculation is likely to be a lowball figure. The wealth of families like the Rothschilds or Rockefellers is too diffuse to value. The nature of many dynastic fortunes — backed by decades and sometimes centuries of assets and dividends — can obfuscate the true extent of their holdings. Clans whose source of wealth is currently unverifiable or derives primarily from the state, such as the sprawling House of Saud, are also absent.
Bloomberg’s categorization of family wealth also excludes first-generation fortunes and those in the hands of a single heir. That means just three Asian families make the list and none from China, reflecting the relatively recent wealth boom experienced by the region. That should soon change. Family offices are proliferating in the region and tycoons like Li Ka-shing are starting to hand over their empires to their sons and daughters.
The dwindling of once-storied fortunes like the Pulitzers, Vanderbilts and Woolworths illustrate how common it is for even the biggest family fortunes to be squandered. “There are a host of hurdles families must tackle to ensure that their wealth is safeguarded through the generations,” said Rebecca Gooch of Campden Wealth. “Strategic planning, education and communication is key.”
Some billionaires are taking a different tack. Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg are among the entrepreneurs who have signed up for Warren Buffett’s Giving Pledge and committed to dedicating the majority of their wealth to philanthropy.
This approach embodies another Carnegie dictum: “To spend the first third of one’s life getting all the education one can. To spend the next third making all the money one can. To spend the last third giving it all away to worthwhile causes.”

Rank

1
Name Walton



Company Walmart


Wealth $ 151.5 bn


Industry Consumer retail


Base Bentonville, Arkansas

Walmart is the world's largest retailer by revenue with sales of $500 billion from almost 12,000 stores worldwide. Holding companies Walton Enterprises and the Walton Family Holdings Trust own half the retailer, a stake that’s the foundation of the world's biggest family fortune.
GENERATIONS
1 1945: Sam Walton buys his first store
2 1992: Sam Walton dies. Eldest son Rob becomes chairman.
3 2016: Steuart Walton replaces his father Jim on the board of Walmart

Rank

2
Name Koch


Company Koch Industries

Wealth $ 98.7 bn

Industry Industrial

Base Wichita, Kansas

Brothers Frederick, Charles, David and William inherited father Fred’s oil refinery firm. A fraternal feud over control of the company in the early 1980s led Frederick and William to leave the family business while Charles and David stayed and have since grown it into Koch Industries, a conglomerate with annual revenue of about $100 billion. David and Charles manage a portion of their wealth through a family office, 1888 Management.
GENERATIONS
1 1940: Fred Koch co-founds the Wood River Oil and Refining Company
2 June 2018: Deteriorating health forces David Koch to step down from leadership positions in his family's business
Rank

3
Name Mars


Company Mars

Wealth $ 89.7 bn

Industry Confectionery, pet care

Base McLean, Virginia

Frank Mars learned to hand-dip chocolates as a schoolboy. The business he went on to found is best known for M&Ms, Milky Way and Mars Bars though petcare products make up almost half of the company's more than $35 billion in revenue. The closely held business is entirely owned by members of the Mars family.
GENERATIONS
1 1883: Frank Mars is born. He contracts polio as a young boy and is unable to walk to school
2 1932: Forrest E. Mars Sr. moves to the U.K.
3 1999: Forrest Mars Jr. retires from active management
4 2017: Mars completes acquisition of pet health care services provider VCA

Rank

4
Name Van Damme, De Spoelberch, De Mevius


Company Anheuser-Busch InBev

Wealth $ 54.1 bn

Industry Beverages

Base Belgium

The collective enterprise of these three Belgian beermaking families has roots in the 14th century. The Van Damme family joined the others when the 1987 merger between Piedboeuf and Artois led to the creation of Interbrew, which merged with Brazil’s AmBev in 2004. Verlinvest, an investment vehicle for some of the families, manages more than $2 billion of assets.
GENERATIONS
1 1895: Edmond Willems, the owner of the Artois brewery, dies
2 1926: Brewery releases Stella Artois as a Christmas beer
3 1968: Artois takes over the Dommelsch Brewery
4 1987: Merger of Artois and Piedboeuf breweries
5 2008: Anheuser-Busch and InBev combine

Rank

5
Name Dumas


Company Hermes

Wealth $ 49.2 bn

Industry Luxury goods

Base Paris, France

Jean-Louis Dumas, who died in 2010, is credited with turning Hermes into a global giant in luxury fashion. Among the family members who maintain senior positions at the company are Pierre-Alexis Dumas, the artistic director, and Axel Dumas, the company chairman.
GENERATIONS
1 1837: Thierry Hermes starts to make riding gear for noblemen
2 1880: Business moves to 24 Faubourg Saint-Honore, Paris
3 1902: Grandsons Emile Maurice Hermes and Adolphe Hermes become joint presidents of the company
4 1950s: Emile's sons-in-law, Robert Dumas and Jean-Rene Guerrand, diversify operations
5 1978: Jean-Louis Dumas establishes global network of stores
6 2013: Axel Dumas becomes co-CEO

Rank

6
Name Wertheimer


Company Chanel

Wealth $ 45.6 bn

Industry Luxury goods

Base Paris, France

Brothers Alain and Gerard Wertheimer are reaping the benefits of their grandfather's funding of designer Coco Chanel in 1920s Paris. The siblings own the closely held fashion house, which introduced the "little black dress" to the world, and had revenue of $9.6 billion in 2017. The Wertheimers also own racehorses and vineyards.
GENERATIONS
1 1924: Pierre Wertheimer negotiates a perfume contract with fashionista Coco Chanel
2 1963: Jacques Wertheimer, known as "the kid" to Coco Chanel, takes over after his father's death
3 2018: Chanel releases its financial results for the first time

Rank

7
Name Ambani


Company Reliance Industries

Wealth $ 43.4 bn

Industry Industrial

Base Mumbai, India

Dhirubhai Ambani, the father of Mukesh and Anil, started building the precursor to Reliance Industries in 1957. When Dhirubhai died in 2002 without leaving a will, his widow brokered a settlement between her sons over control of the family fortune. Mukesh is now at the helm of the Mumbai-based conglomerate, which owns the world's largest oil refining complex. He lives in a 27-story mansion that’s been called the world’s most expensive private residence.
GENERATIONS
1 1957: Dhirubhai Ambani returns to India from Yemen
2 2002: Elder son Mukesh takes over chairmanship

Rank

8
Name Quandt


Company BMW

Wealth $ 42.7 bn

Industry Automotive

Base Munich, Germany

Herbert Quandt helped turn BMW from a struggling carmaker into one of the world's largest makers of luxury vehicles. Family matriarch, Johanna Quandt, died in 2015 and her children Stefan Quandt and Susanne Klatten, retain control of the company. Their other investments include stakes in German logistics company Logwin and Dutch security software company Gemalto.
GENERATIONS
1 1883: Emil Quandt acquires a textile company owned by his late father-in-law
2 1933: Guenther Quandt joins the Nazi Party
3 1954: Herbert Quandt inherits the business and later increases its holding in BMW to 50%
4 2015: Johanna Quandt, Herbert's widow, dies

Rank

9
Name Cargill, MacMillan


Company Cargill

Wealth $ 42.3 bn

Industry Industrial

Base Minneapolis, Minnesota

This family are majority owners of Cargill Inc., the largest closely held company in the U.S. It was founded by William W. Cargill who started the commodities business with one grain storage warehouse in Conover, Iowa, in 1865. His descendants maintain control of the food, agriculture and industrial giant.
GENERATIONS
1 1865: William W. Cargill becomes the owner of a grain flat house
2 1884: John H. MacMillan starts working in his father's bank in Wisconsin
3 1936: John MacMillan Jr. takes over as president after his father steps down
4 1960: Erwin Kelm becomes first Cargill president who is not a family member
5 1980: Cargill enters the coffee-trading business
6 2011: Mosaic Company and Cargill agree to split-off

Rank

10
Name Boehringer, Von Baumbach


Company Boehringer Ingelheim

Wealth $ 42.2 bn

Industry Pharmaceuticals

Base Ingelheim, Germany

The German drugmaker Boehringer Ingelheim was founded in 1885 by Albert Boehringer and more than 130 years later the Boehringer family, encompassing the von Baumbachs, are still in charge. Chairman Hubertus von Baumbach and his extended family are owners of the closely held company.
GENERATIONS
1 1885: Albert Boehringer buys a small tartar factory in Germany
2 1939: Albert Boehringer dies
3 1992: Erich von Baumbach, son-in-law of Albert Boehringer Jr., appointed chair of shareholders' committee
4 2010: Company celebrates its 125th anniversary

Rank

11
Name Albrecht


Company Aldi

Wealth $ 38.8 bn

Industry Consumer retail

Base Essen and Muelheim, Germany

Brothers Theo and Karl Albrecht took over their parents’ grocery store after returning home from World War II and turned it into Aldi, a national chain of discount supermarkets. The brothers split the business in the 1960s after a dispute over the direction of the business. The two branches – Aldi Nord and Aldi Sud – now have more than 10,000 stores combined. Theo’s side of the family also owns Trader Joe’s, which they bought in 1979.
GENERATIONS
1 1913: Albrecht grocery store is opened in Essen, Germany
2 1971: Theo Albrecht kidnapped for 17 days and $2 million was paid for his release.
3 2014: Karl Albrecht dies

Rank

12
Name Mulliez


Company Auchan

Wealth $ 37.5 bn

Industry Consumer retail

Base Lille, France

The Mulliez family had already built a retail empire by the time Gerard Mulliez, started Auchan, known as France’s Walmart, in 1961. Auchan has grown into one of Europe’s biggest supermarket chains. The family holding company, Association Familiale Mulliez, controls a diverse group of retail businesses including home improvement chain Leroy Merlin and sports and leisure group Decathlon.
GENERATIONS
1 1931: Gerard Mulliez born into a family that runs a clothing firm
2 1961: Mulliez opens the first Auchan store in France
3 1998: Auchan expands into Hungary
4 2016: 100th hypermarket opens in Russia

Rank

13
Name Kwok


Company Sun Hung Kai Properties

Wealth $ 34.0 bn

Industry Real Estate

Base Hong Kong

Kwok Tak-seng listed Sun Hung Kai Properties in 1972. The company has since become one of Hong Kong’s largest property developers and the basis of the Kwok family fortune. His sons, Walter, Thomas and Raymond, assumed control when he died in 1990.
GENERATIONS
1 1972: Kwok Tak-Seng, a grocery wholesaler, incorporates Sun Hung Kai Properties
2 2008: Walter Kwok is ousted as chairman after a feud with his brothers

Rank

14
Name Cox


Company Cox Enterprises

Wealth $ 33.6 bn

Industry Communications, automotive

Base Atlanta, Georgia

The Cox family controls Cox Enterprises, a conglomerate with about $20 billion in revenue. Its Cox Communications division is the third-largest cable company in the U.S. James M. Cox founded the firm in 1898. His descendants, including James C. Kennedy and Blair Parry-Okeden, remain shareholders in the group.
GENERATIONS
1 1898: James M. Cox buys a newspaper
2 1957: Jim Cox Jr. takes over the company after his father's death
3 1988: Jim Kennedy, grandson of founder James Cox, is promoted to CEO and chairman
4 2018: Alex Taylor takes charge of Cox Enterprises

Rank

15
Name Pritzker


Company Hyatt Hotels

Wealth $ 33.5 bn

Industry Hotels

Base Chicago, Illinois

The son of a Ukrainian immigrant, A.N. Pritzker began investing in real estate and troubled companies while working for his father’s law firm. The investments seeded the fortune of one of America’s oldest dynasties, whose shared assets include Hyatt Hotels. Prominent supporters of the Democratic Party, Penny Pritzker served as U.S. Commerce secretary under Barack Obama and her younger brother J.B. is running for Illinois governor.
GENERATIONS
1 1881: Nicholas Pritzker arrives in Chicago
2 1936: Abram and Jack Pritzker branch out from law and start investing in real estate
3 1957: Grandsons Jay and Donald Pritzker create the Hyatt Hotel chain
4 1999: Jay Pritzker dies

Rank

16
Name Lee


Company Samsung

Wealth $ 30.9 bn

Industry Consumer electronics

Base Seoul, South Korea

Lee Kun-hee’s father, Lee Byung-chull, started Samsung as a trading company in 1938. The firm is now known as the world's largest producer of smartphones. Lee Kun-hee is chairman. His son Jay Y. Lee was released from jail in February 2018 following a reduction in a prison sentence related to bribery charges.
GENERATIONS
1 1938: Lee Byung-chull starts a business exporting fruit, vegetables and fish
2 1987: Lee Kun-hee becomes chairman of Samsung Group
3 2014: Lee Kun-hee has a heart attack and is hospitalized

Rank

17
Name Rausing


Company Tetra Pak

Wealth $ 30.9 bn

Industry Packaging

Base London, U.K.

The family’s wealth originated with Tetra Pak, the long-life drinks carton pioneered by Ruben Rausing in Sweden in the 1950s. Descendants of Ruben’s son, Gad, now control all of closely held Tetra Laval, one of the world’s biggest packaging companies. Another son of Ruben, Hans, sold his stake in the business to Gad in 1995 and has since invested in eco-friendly packaging and equities through London-based Alta Advisers.
GENERATIONS
1 1929: Ruben Rausing becomes a partner in a packaging company
2 1995: Hans Rausing sells his shares to brother Gad
3 2012: Hans' son, Hans Kristian Rausing, pleads guilty to preventing the burial of his wife after she dies from a drug overdose

Rank

18
Name Thomson


Company Thomson Reuters

Wealth $ 30.9 bn

Industry Media

Base Ontario, Canada

The wealth of Canada’s richest family originated in the early 1930s when Roy Thomson opened an Ontario radio station. Within five years, he’d become the country’s leading newspaper-owner. The family now shares a 64 percent stake in financial data and services provider, Thomson Reuters, which they hold through investment firm, Woodbridge.
GENERATIONS
1 1934: Roy Thomson buys his first newspaper, the Timmins Press
2 2006: Ken Thomson dies
3 2018: Thomson Reuters sells a majority stake in its financial and risk unit to Blackstone

Rank

19
Name Johnson (SC)


Company SC Johnson

Wealth $ 28.2 bn

Industry Household goods

Base Racine, Wisconsin

Five generations of the Johnson family have built SC Johnson into a household-goods maker. Samuel C. Johnson began selling parquet flooring in 1882, the business that became the foundation for SC Johnson. H. Fisk Johnson is the company’s chairman and chief executive. Its brands include Mr Muscle, Raid and Windex.
GENERATIONS
1 1886: Samuel C. Johnson starts touring the countryside selling flooring
2 1906: Herbert F. Johnson Sr. becomes a partner
3 1928: Herbert F. Johnson Jr. inherits the company at age 28, after his father's death
4 1955: Samuel C. Johnson, the great-grandson of the founder, starts as product director
5 1992: SC Johnson buys the Drackett Company

Rank

20
Name Dassault


Company Dassault Group

Wealth $ 27.8 bn

Industry Diversified

Base Paris, France

The Dassault Group empire includes military aircraft manufacturers, newspapers and real estate and software businesses. Founder Marcel Bloch, a Jewish aviation legend, was captured by Nazis in World War II and later changed his name to Dassault, a homage to his brother's wartime pseudonym, which means "assault tank."
GENERATIONS
1 1944: Marcel Bloch is deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp
2 1986: Aviation tycoon Serge Dassault takes the helm after his father's death
3 2018: Serge Dassault dies

Rank

21
Name Duncan


Company Enterprise Products Partners

Wealth $ 26.0 bn

Industry Natural gas and crude oil

Base Houston, Texas

Pipeline behemoth Enterprise Products Partners was launched by Dan L. Duncan in 1968. Duncan lost his mother to tuberculosis, his brother to blood poisoning and his father to leukemia before the age of 18. He died in 2010. Enterprise Products, a gas and oil company, is still under family control.
GENERATIONS
1 1968: Dan L. Duncan founds Enterprise Products Partners with $10,000
2 2010: Enterprise Products remains under family control after Dan L. Duncan dies suddenly

Rank

22
Name Hoffmann, Oeri


Company Roche

Wealth $ 25.1 bn

Industry Pharmaceuticals

Base Basel, Switzerland

Drug maker, Roche Holding, was founded by entrepreneur Fritz Hoffmann-La Roche in 1896. His descendants now control a 9 percent stake in the company whose blockbuster oncology drugs helped the group generate $54.1 billion in 2017 revenue. Family members have been prominent supporters of nature conservation. Fourth-generation scion Andre Hoffmann founded and chairs multi-family office, Massellaz SA.
GENERATIONS
1 1896: Fritz Hoffmann-La Roche launches a medicine company at 28
2 1932: Fritz Hoffmann's son, Emanuel, dies in a traffic accident
3 1953: Lukas Hoffmann joins the Roche board
4 1996: Andre Hoffmann joins the board of Roche

Rank

23
Name Hearst


Company Hearst Corporation

Wealth $ 24.5 bn

Industry Media, Business Information

Base New York, New York

William Randolph Hearst laid the foundation for his family's fortune when he took control of the San Francisco Examiner from his father in 1887. William's grandson, William Randolph Hearst III, is chairman of the group these days. Its stable of media assets includes stakes in television networks A&E and ESPN. Hearst is perhaps best known as a media company but also owns Fitch Ratings, the credit ratings firm.
GENERATIONS
1 1880: George Hearst buys the San Francisco Examiner
2 1887: After being expelled from Harvard University, William Randolph Hearst is given the San Francisco Examiner by his father in the hope he would settle down
3 1956: His second son, William Randolph Hearst Jr., wins a Pulitzer Prize for international reporting
4 1974: William Randolph Hearst Sr.'s granddaughter, Patty, is kidnapped for 19 months
5 2018: Fitch Group becomes a wholly-owned Hearst business

Rank

24
Name Lauder


Company Estee Lauder

Wealth $ 24.3 bn

Industry Cosmetics

Base New York, New York

Queens-native Estee Lauder founded a business selling skincare products in 1946 with her husband, Joseph. Today her eponymous company sells $12 billion of cosmetics and fragrances. Notable art collector and company chairman emeritus Leonard has donated hundreds of his pieces, from vintage postcards to Picassos, to museums.
GENERATIONS
1 1947: Estee Lauder receives her first major order for $800 of products from Saks Fifth Avenue
2 1995: Estee Lauder retires
3 2009: Grandson William Lauder, who expanded the company's international presence as CEO, becomes chairman

Rank

25
Name Ferrero


Company Ferrero

Wealth $ 22.9 bn

Industry Confectionery

Base Alba, Italy

Michele Ferrero built a global chocolate confectionery company from the small Italian town of Alba. His son Giovanni took sole helm of the family business after another son Pietro died in a cycling accident in 2011. Ferrero acquired Nestle's U.S. candy business for $2.8 billion in 2018.
GENERATIONS
1 1946: Pietro Ferrero creates a sweet paste from hazelnuts, sugar and cocoa in war-ravaged Italy
2 1964: First jar of Nutella is produced
3 2017: Ferrero appoints its first non-family chief executive, Lapo Civiletti