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World’s Billionaires 2011: more of them and they own yet more of the world (Forbes) [View All]

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Bucky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-10-11 08:54 PM
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World’s Billionaires 2011: more of them and they own yet more of the world (Forbes)
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I've giving up pornography for Forbes Magazine. It leaves me feeling so much filthier than mere boobs can.

The World’s Billionaires 2011: Inside The List
Mar 9, 2011 | by Luisa Kroll, Bounty Hunter


This 25th year of tracking global wealth was one to remember. The 2011 Billionaires List breaks two records: total number of listees (1,210) and combined wealth ($4.5 trillion). This horde surpasses the gross domestic product of Germany, one of only six nations to have fewer billionaires this year. BRICs led the way: Brazil, Russia, India and China produced 108 of the 214 new names. These four nations are home to one in four members, up from one in ten five years ago. Before this year only the U.S. had ever produced more than 100 billionaires. China now has 115 and Russia 101.

Atop the heap is Mexico’s Carlos Slim Helu, who added $20.5 billion to his fortune, more than any other billionaire. The telecom mogul, who gets 62% of his fortune from America Movil, is now worth $74 billion and has pulled far ahead of his two closest rivals. Bill Gates, No. 2, and Warren Buffett, No. 3, both added a more modest $3 billion to their piles and are now worth $56 billion and $50 billion, respectively. Gates, who now gets 70% of his fortune from investments outside of Microsoft, has actually been investing in the Mexican stock market and has holdings in Mexican Coke bottler Femsa and Grupo Televisa.

While nearly all emerging markets showed solid gains, wealth creation is moving at an especially breakneck speed in Asia-Pacific. The region now has a record 332 billionaires, up from 234 a year ago and 130 at the depth of the financial crisis in 2009. Sizzling stock markets are behind the surge. Three-fourths of Asia’s 105 newcomers get the bulk of their fortunes from stakes in publicly traded companies, 25 of which have been public only since the start of 2010.


Those of yall investing for your retirement, take this caveat: Asia's bustling stock markets are growing impressively, but do your homework. I smell a speculative bubble there. All that growth is great, but it looks more like capitalization than productivity, and in the case of China, more like potential than actual consumer power.
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