When President Donald Trump lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden,some of Wall Street’s biggest names swore they were moving on from him for good. Times have changed.
She is leaving the nonprofit she co-founded with former spouse Bill Gates and will get $18.9 billion for her own work to uplift women and families.
For Russia’s elite,passing on family wealth has become more complex than ever.
The world’s fourth-richest man is offloading his floating palace,but it comes at a rocky time for the yacht industry.
Andreas Bechtolsheim,the first investor in Google,has an estimated $25 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $US415,726.
Linda and Joshua Penn,who organise Sydney’s Gold Dinner fundraiser,are at the coal face of prising donations from Australia’s super rich.
The electric carmaker will ask shareholders to vote again on massive compensation package for Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk that was nixed by a Delaware court early this year.
Tom Oxley came up with his idea for a brain chip while at Melbourne University in the late 2000s. Now his company has attracted some of the richest people in the world as investors.
Billionaires now account for $US14.2 trillion of the world’s wealth. To put this into perspective,this is larger than the gross domestic product of any country other than the US and China.
Trump’s business empire was supposed to be in peril. Instead,it turned into the single-greatest day on record for the former president’s wealth.
Marking a new high of ultra-wealthy individuals is one record we shouldn’t be cheering about.