Two Nigerian billionaires have made the Forbes’ list of the world’s richest.
Dangote Group of Companies President Aliko Dangote is number 43,
moving up from 76 last year, on the list of about 1,500 billionaires.
His net worth is $16.1 billion.
Globacom chief Mike Adenuga Jnr. is number 267 on the list, with a net worth of $4.7 billion.
Mexican telecoms giant Carlos Slim is, once again, the world’s
richest person, followed by Bill Gates. Amancio Ortega of Spanish
retailer Zara moves up to No. 3 for the first time. He is the year’s
biggest gainer, adding $19.5 billion to his fortune in one year. He
moves ahead of Warren Buffett, despite the fact that the U.S. investing
legend added $9.5 billion to his fortune. This is the first year since
2000 that Buffett has not been among the top three.
Dangote retains his position as Africa’s richest man for the third
year in a row.
The past year has been eventful for 55-year-old Dangote.
In October, he sold off a controlling stake in his flour milling company
to Tiger Brands of South Africa. He pocketed $190 million in cash. In
February, his Dangote Sugar Refineries acquired a 95% stake in Nigerian
sugar producer Savannah Sugar, in a bid to maintain its dominant
position in the Nigerian sugar industry.
Dangote stepped up his philanthropy in the past year, giving over
$100 million to causes ranging from education to health, flood relief,
poverty alleviation and the arts. He also acquired a yacht, which he
named after his mother, Amiya. Dangote started building his fortune more
than three decades ago when he began trading in commodities, such as
cement, flour and sugar, with a loan he received from his maternal
uncle. He delved into full production of these items in the early 2000s
and went on to build the Dangote Group, West Africa’s largest
publicly-listed conglomerate, which now owns sugar refineries, salt
processing facilities and Dangote Cement, the continent’s largest cement
producer. A fitness buff, Dangote jogs every day.
Adenuga built a fortune in mobile telecom and oil production. He
founded Globacom, Nigeria’s second largest mobile phone network, in
2006. It has 24 million customers in Nigeria, operates in the Republic
of Benin and recently acquired licences to roll out in Ghana and Cote
d’Ivoire. His Conoil Producing is one of Nigeria’s largest independent exploration companies, with a
production capacity of 100,000 barrels of oil per day. Adenuga made his
first fortune at 26 in the 1970s by distributing lace and other
materials.
Other Africans who made the list include Mohammed Al-Fayed, Isabel dos Santos and Desmond Sacco.
More women have joined the ranks of the world’s wealthiest. Of the
1,426 people on the new 2013 Forbes list of the world’s billionaires,
138 are women. That’s up from 104 women last year. New women
billionaires include fashion designer Tory Burch and Hong Kong finance
executive Pollyanna Chu.
The world’s richest woman is Liliane Bettencourt, the 90-year-old
heiress to a 30% stake in cosmetics group L’Oreal. With a fortune that
Forbes pegs at $30 billion –up $6 billion from last year – she ranks
ninth wealthiest overall. A surge in the value of L’Oreal shares over
the past year helped put her back among the top ten richest for the
first time since 1999. Bettencourt, a widow who suffers from dementia,
was replaced on the L’Oreal board in February 2012 by her grandson,
Jean-Victor Meyers. In 2011, her fortune was put under the guardianship
of her daughter, Francoise Bettencourt-Meyers, after a three-year legal
battle.
The second richest woman is Christy Walton of the U.S., who inherited
her husband John Walton’s stake in Wal-Mart when he died in a plane
crash in 2005. She clocks in at $28.2 billion — up nearly $3 billion
from a year ago due to an increase in the price of Wal-Mart stock.
The third richest woman is yet another Walton family member — Alice
Walton, daughter of visionary retailer Sam Walton, who founded Wal-Mart
with his brother in 1962. Alice Walton, ranked number 16, has a net
worth Forbes estimates $26.3 billion, up several billions from the
previous year. Walton opened her Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art
in Bentonville, Arkansas in 2011. It features works from her personal
collection.
curled from Vanguard
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