Donald J. Trump,whose personal brand has always been intertwined with his wealth,is no longer considered one of America’s richest people. At least not according to Forbes.
It’s rare when a billionaire is willing to trade blows in a public courtroom and expose their personal finances. Scott Hassan,known by some as the third Google founder,and his wife are doing just that.
Move over Jeff Bezos. Luxury goods owner Bernard Arnault is now the richest person in the world,based on the current stock price of Louis Vuitton.
The Kennedys,who are as close as the US gets to aristocracy,can be said to define generational wealth.
The number of people joining the millionaires club in Australia is so high it has almost taken the cachet out of what was once a financial status symbol.
Joseph Safra became the world's richest banker by transforming a Brazilian lender into a global multibillion-dollar empire. Now,after his death at 82,it falls to the next Safra generation.
James Packer with a fortune estimated by Forbes to be $US3.4 billion is the wealthier sibling. But his sister is catching up.
The challenges of biblical bush fires,a pandemic and a growing trade battle with China didn't hurt the fortunes of our richest 200 Australians,who grew their wealth by $72 billion to $424 billion in 2020.
Before the pandemic,getting a manicure or hitting the gym were affordable pastimes. But the virus has increasingly made these pursuits even more exclusive.
A 2015 letter is at the centre of a dispute between four brothers from one of the world's wealthiest families.
2020 is a good year for glove companies and their founders. And nowhere has that been more apparent than in Malaysia,which produces close to two thirds of the world's supply of rubber gloves.