The Hurun Research Institute has released its US dollar billionaires list for 2023, and five South African men are among 3 112 global moguls.
The Chinese-based research company reports the world lost 269 tycoons in 2022 – five for every week last year.
The richest man in South Africa is well-known luxury goods group Richemont founder Johann Rupert, who ranked 187th with a fortune of $11 billion (R199.4 billion).
Heir to the DeBeers diamond fortune, Nicky Oppenheimer came in at 287th place with an amassed fortune of $8.3 billion (R150.4 billion).
Naspers chair Koos Bekker ranked 1 408th on the list with a cool $2.6 billion (R47 billion)
Coming in at 1 682nd is African Minerals Chairperson Patrice Motsepe, whose fortune totals some $2.3 billion (R41.6 billion).
The 2 451st is Capitec Bank CEO Michiel le Roux with $1.6 billion. (R28.9 billion)
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The world’s total wealth dropped by 10% to $13.7 trillion.
China leads the world’s wealthiest with 969 billionaires, followed by the USA at 691, which lost 25 people. Together, billionaires in both countries hold 53% of the world’s money.
At least, 59% of the new faces come from the Asian continent, which holds 57% of the global population and 39% of the world’s wealth.
India came in third place with 187 US-dollar billionaires, while Germany overtook the UK for fourth place with 144 money magnets.
While North America and Europe are home to 15% of the planet’s population, the report found that both continents are home to 46% of billionaires and hold the lion’s share of the world’s wealth with 57%.
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Hurun reports consumer goods and financial services are the top two sources of wealth, with healthcare coming in at third place, overtaking demand for retail services.
It’s also been a good year for fertiliser and commodity traders, the iron, steel, oil and gas industries, soft drinks and confectionaries, casinos, hotels, sports goods and luxury purchases.
The technology industry took a knock with decreased demand for semiconductors, cloud solutions, cyber security, payments, e-commerce, batteries, new energy and biotech.
At least 111 billionaires come from ‘old-money’ families maintaining their wealth across four generations or more.
Two-thirds, or 63%, made their money from selling physical products, while 37% sold services.
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See the full report here.
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