Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Billionaires get richer, while many millionaires lose ground



September 17, 2012
Research company Wealth-X said on Monday in a report that many millionaires got poorer in the last year, but billionaires did just fine, using their heavyweight money management teams to ride out market and economic turmoil. – Reuters pic
SINGAPORE, Sept 17 – Many millionaires got poorer in the last year, but billionaires did just fine, using their heavyweight money management teams to ride out market and economic turmoil that hit the lesser rich, research company Wealth-X said today.
The ranks of people with at least US$30 million edged up to 187,380 but their total wealth fell 1.8 per cent to US$25.8 trillion – still a sum bigger than the combined size of the US and Chinese economies, Wealth-X said in a report.
Hardest hit globally were those in the US$200 million to US$499 million range, whose numbers dropped 9.9 per cent and whose fortunes shrank 11.4 per cent, the World Ultra Wealth Report said, using data for the year through July 31.
But the really, really rich got even richer as the number of billionaires rose 9.4 per cent to 2,160 people and their wealth grew 14 per cent to US$6.2 trillion.
“Even at a billion or two billion, they have a much larger entourage, they have much more in the way of investment advice. They certainly get the attention of every major bank,” Mykolas Rambus, Wealth-X’s chief executive officer, said.
As Europe struggles and the US economy recovers fitfully, the affluent are shifting away from speculative investments into private companies, commodities and property, said Wealth-X, a Singapore-based firm that provides intelligence on the ultra-rich to banks, fundraisers and luxury retailers.
Asia suffered the worst regional loss of wealth, with a fall of 6.8 per cent to US$6.25 trillion due to weaker equity markets and lower export demand from the West, it said.
While wealth also shrank in Europe, Latin America and the Middle East, the rich saw their fortunes grow in North America (up 2.8 per cent to US$8.88 trillion) and Oceania (up 4.4 per cent to US$475 billion) – much of that in Australia.
But Asia’s rich cannot be discounted, Wealth-X said, as the fall in wealth in Japan, China and India – home to 75 per cent of ultra high net worth (UHNW) Asians – will reverse, based on the strength of the region’s financial systems and economies.
“Total Asian UHNW wealth is forecast to surpass the US combined wealth by 2020,” it said. – Reuters

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