Quantcast
Channel: Billionaire
Viewing all 616 articles
Browse latest View live

Wall Street's oldest steakhouse has a secret menu for billionaires — here's what's on it

$
0
0

delmonicos secret menu

Delmonico's, located just a few blocks away from the New York Stock Exchange in downtown Manhattan, opened in 1837 as one of the first sit-down restaurants in America. 

But while the restaurant is perhaps best known for its steaks, it also has a selection of food items you won't find on the menu. Called the "Secret Billionaire's Menu," these dishes will set you back quite a bit — there's a grilled cheese sandwich for $100, for example, and a golden twist on the classic black-and-white cookie for $50. 

"We have a lot of Wall Street guys down here and they're always looking to outdo one another," Executive Chef Billy Oliva told Business Insider.

We recently got to try out the menu in person — here's what it was like. 

SEE ALSO: We visited the new pizzeria that people are saying could be the next Shake Shack — here's why it won't follow in the burger chain's footsteps

Currently celebrating its 180th anniversary, Delmonico's is one of the oldest restaurants in America. Mark Twain (bottom left) and Abraham Lincoln both dined here in their day.



Here, you'll see Chef Charles Ranhofer, who headed up kitchen operations there for much of the late 1800s. Delmonico's credits Ranhofer with inventing Eggs Benedict, Baked Alaska, Lobster Newburg and Chicken A la Keene, all of which are still on the restaurant's menu today.



It's still a favorite with the Wall Street crowd.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Step inside the million-dollar Lake Como wedding of the heir to the $2 billion Boohoo fortune

$
0
0

lake como wedding

Adam Kamani, the 28-year-old heir to the $2 billion Boohoo.com fashion empire, married Charlotte McHale in a three-day wedding in Lake Como last week.

The wedding for the son of Boohoo.com founder Mahmud Kamani reportedly cost more than $1 million ($760,000), and involved stunning lakeside views, a myriad of outfit changes, fireworks, and celebrities.

From a party for guests in traditional Indian dress, to vows at a villa that was a filming location for "Ocean's Twelve," scroll on for a look inside the beautiful — and extravagant — celebration.

Adam Kamani, the 28-year-old heir to the $2 billion Boohoo.com fashion empire, married Charlotte McHale in a three-day wedding in Lake Como last week.

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BYncFqvg4qq/embed/
Width: 658px

 



The weekend involved a lot of outfit changes — and kicked off with a party for wedding guests.

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BYljSyCnxE1/embed/
Width: 658px

 



They all wore traditional Indian dress.

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BYnSSBngDzM/embed/
Width: 658px

 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

This is how the world's youngest billionaires spend their time and money

$
0
0

Screen Shot 2017 09 07 at 14.28.27For most people in their twenties, life is a constant balancing act between paying off student debt and finding the funds to be independent and still have fun.

That's not the case for the world's super-young, super-rich elite.

We took a glimpse at the lives of the world's five youngest billionaires — all 27 years old and under — to see how they spend their days and their seemingly unlimited funds.

From zooming Ferraris to international dressage competitions, scroll down to meet the world's five youngest billionaires, presented by age in ascending order, and see how they spend their fortunes.

SEE ALSO: The fabulous life of Anna Wintour

Meet the world's youngest billionaire: Alexandra Andresen.

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BJqV8IijNH4/embed/
Width: 658px

 



Alexandra has a net worth of $1.3 billion thanks to her father Johan Andresen's work in investment banking.

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BXhf6ujAprj/embed/
Width: 658px

 



21-year-old Alexandra is a keen horse rider and has at least four horses.

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BVZpiFTAIly/embed/
Width: 658px

 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Jack Ma, one of China's richest men, danced on stage to Michael Jackson in front of thousands of employees at a company party

$
0
0

Yes, that is a billionaire executive dressed in black and gold, thrusting his hips to the sound of Michael Jackson music on stage in front of thousands of his employees.

Jack Ma, the founder and executive chairman of e-commerce company Alibaba, delivered a choreographed performance — complete with backup dancers — at his company's 18th annual celebration in Hangzhou, China last Friday.

Chinese financial news site Yicai Global tweeted a video of the performance on Monday, which can be seen above. Ma dances to a medley featuring clips from "Billie Jean" and "Dangerous."

Jack Ma Alibaba celebration

Some 40,000 Alibaba employees from various countries attended the lavish event, which consisted of multiple parades and musical performances, China Daily reported.

The video appears to have been filmed at the gymnasium of the Yellow Dragon Stadium in Hangzhou, which has a capacity of 8,000. From the footage, the venue looks about half full.

Ma has much to celebrate: Alibaba's market cap recently passed the $400 million mark — gradually closing its gap with Amazon — and its shares have almost doubled in value since the beginning of this year, Quartz reported.

The company also announced plans to open its first brick-and-mortar mall in Hangzhou next April, echoing what Amazon did in New York last May.

Jack Ma Alibaba

This isn't the first time Ma has entertained his staff.

At Alibaba's 10th anniversary in 2009, for example, Ma — then company CEO — dressed as a punk, donned a white wig, and performed a segment from "The Lion King" (watch the linked video from 1:07 onward). He also took part in a mass wedding for his employees in 2014.

Such performances by powerful Chinese executives may be more common than we think. In 2016, Wang Jianlin, the CEO of real estate conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group, has sung solo on stage at his company's annual meeting multiple times.

Ma is currently the second-richest man in China and 23rd richest man in the world, with a net worth of $28.3 billion (£21.3 billion), according to Forbes. Wang is currently the richest man in China.

Join the conversation about this story »

A Russian billionaire's $480 million superyacht has been spotted again, this time by Conor McGregor — and he's freaking out

$
0
0

conor mcgregor

The £360 million, or $480 million, Sailing Yacht A, one of the largest private sailing yachts in the world, was spotted sailing in the crystalline waters of Formentera again Tuesday — this time by UFC star Conor McGregor.

Formentera, the tiny Spanish island near Ibiza, is a hotspot for celebrities and billionaires. Its white sand and turquoise water resemble the Caribbean.

McGregor has been living it up in Ibiza with family and friends after losing his fight to Floyd Mayweather in late August. He was enjoying life aboard boats and yachts himself when he spotted Sailing Yacht A, owned by a Russian billionaire named Andrey Melnichenko.

His first post was captioned: "The 360 million dollar 'sailing yacht A' pulls up out the back garden this morning. 'Sailing yacht A' its called. That's how you know the owner doesn't need to give a bollox about anything. Sailing yacht A. Most expensive sailing yacht in the world. 360mill. Owned by a Russian billionaire. Google it. Crazy!"

First he admired it from afar in his Versace dressing gown, before deciding to get a closer look.

He got out a huge lens to zoom in and posted: "Quick scope of it before I depart like a pirate towards it."

Quick scope of it before I depart like a pirate towards it.

A post shared by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on Sep 12, 2017 at 11:01am PDT on

And he got some pretty good close-up shots of it, too.

Concept 2 Rower out the back on the second floor @conormcgregorfast.

A post shared by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on Sep 12, 2017 at 2:50pm PDT on

He even took out a Jet Ski to get a closer look of what he calls a "super boat." He said: "It's like something out of a bond film. Can't believe this just pull up."

Zoom in little super boat comes out the side camouflaged with the yacht like something out of a bond film. Can't believe this just pull up.

A post shared by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on Sep 12, 2017 at 2:48pm PDT on

His photos show the sheer size of the 469-foot-long vessel, which boasts masts that, at 330 feet above the water line, are taller than Big Ben and which counts eight decks (connected by a series of lifts), a free-floating spiral staircase, huge swimming pool, and an underwater observation pod among its stunning features.

Finally, he posted a photo of himself in front of Sailing Yacht A that has been liked almost 1 million times.

The caption says: "That was a mad scene. I only posted 'race to the next yacht' two days ago and then this one pulls up right out my back garden. The biggest one of all. This is an eye opening level of opulence to witness first hand. To me, it is truly motivating. I'm starting to think I don't have a wealth belly just yet. I'm more just rich fat now. I must keep eating. I wonder if my lunch is ready. Happy Tuesday."

McGregor has, however, been living it up in Ibiza on an impressive yacht, joined by family and friends, since losing a fight to Floyd Mayweather on August 26. They appeared to be enjoying the Balearic sunshine.

To an even bigger yoke

A post shared by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on Sep 12, 2017 at 11:03am PDT on

Other Instagram users have also documented the sighting of the superyacht in Formentera.

This one shows the vessel at sunrise.

#sailingyachta #sunrise #formentera #cantmakemymindupyet #yachting #superyacht #macroryshots

A post shared by Sean Rory (@seanmacrory) on Sep 13, 2017 at 1:43am PDT on

#sailingyachta

A post shared by fredrik öberg (@ippii) on Sep 13, 2017 at 1:30am PDT on

Business Insider most recently reported a sighting of Sailing Yacht A, also in Formentera, in June.

SEE ALSO: The 30 highest-paid tennis players of all time

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Qatar is spending $200 billion on the World Cup — here's a first look at its newest stadium

This is what you should study at university if you want to be a billionaire

$
0
0

Students from Cambridge University make their way home after celebrating the end of the academic year at the May Balls.

If you want to be a billionaire, you'd be well served by studying engineering at university or taking a job as a salesperson.

This is according to research from British recruitment agency Aaron Wallis Sales Recruitment, which examined Forbes' list of the 100 richest people in the world to reveal what they studied, their first job, and how rich they became.

The report found that 75 of the world's richest 100 people have a degree, and out of these 75, 22 studied engineering.

Fifty-three of the top 100 also started working in a non-family owned business, with 19% starting in a salesperson role and 17% starting as a stock trader.

Meanwhile, 17% of the world's top 100 billionaires started their careers by setting up their own business.

These were the top five degrees amongst the world's billionaires:

1. Engineering — 22

2. Business — 16

3. Finance & Economics — 11

4. Law — 6

5. Computer Science — 4

And these were their five most common first jobs:

1. Salesperson — 10

2. Stock trader — 9

3. Software developer — 5

4. Engineer — 5

5. Analyst — 4

Rob Scott, managing director at Aaron Wallis Sales Recruitment, said: "Today we are seeing that nearly all of the top people in business are graduates and that a degree can be a great first-step into preparing you for your career ahead."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here are all the major changes coming to your iPhone September 19

This is how long the average person in the UK would need to work to become a billionaire

$
0
0

wealthy ascot

Sometimes it may feel like your whole life revolves around work — and if you want to be a billionaire, a lifetime still might not be enough.

A worker in the UK on the average wage of £28,000 would need to work roughly 35,715 years to make their first billion, according to new data from Budget Insurance.

The company's "The World's Richest: How Do They Compare"report used July 2017 data from Forbes to examine the characteristics of the 10 richest people in the world, including their age, net worth, and the number of cars and properties they own.

The report revealed that the net worth of the 10 richest people in the world has increased by $26.88 billion (£19.82 billion) (78%) over the last decade, while the average net worth of the world's current top 10 richest is $61.28 billion (£45.2 billion).

Meanwhile, the average British person currently has a net worth of £147,134.

Better re-think that year off.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Terrifying NASA footage from space shows the giant Hurricane Harvey about to slam the Texas coast

Meet Alice Walton: How America's wealthiest woman spends her Walmart fortune

$
0
0

Alice Walton of Wal-Mart

Alice Walton, the only female heiress to the Walmart fortune, is the richest woman in the US.

The 67-year-old is worth an estimated $38.4 billion.

Walton briefly became the richest woman in the world following the death of Liliane Bettencourt, French heiress of cosmetics giant L'Oreal. Bettencourt's daughter, Françoise Bettencourt-Meyers, has taken the top spot, after inheriting the family's fortune.

That makes Walton the second-richest woman — and 19th richest person — in the world once again, according to Bloomberg.

The three Walmart heirs have a combined wealth of $130 billion — about $48 billion more than the Kochs, the second richest family in the America.

Despite the Walton's high status, their personal lives remain largely private. Scroll through to find out what we know about how America's richest woman spends her fortune, from collecting expensive art to breeding horses.

SEE ALSO: MEET THE WALTONS: How America's wealthiest family spends its Walmart fortune

DON'T MISS: 24 mind-blowing facts about Warren Buffett and his $77 billion fortune

Unlike her brothers, Rob and Jim, Alice has never taken an active role running Walmart and has instead become a patron of the arts. She fell in love with the arts at a young age. When she was 10, she bought her first work of art: a reproduction of a Picasso painting for $2.

Source: The New Yorker



She has an immense private art collection, with original works from legendary American artists, Andy Warhol, Norman Rockwell, and Georgia O'Keefe.

Source: Business Insider



Alice opened a $50 million museum called Crystal Bridges in 2011 to house her $500 million private art collection. When it opened, it had four times the endowment of the famous Whitney Museum in New York.

Source: The New Yorker



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The childhood friends who created the Hatchimals toys that ruled last year are now billionaires

$
0
0

Hatchimals_Thumb_3

Canada has two new toy billionaires.

Ronnen Harary and Anton Rabie, the childhood friends who founded Spin Master and still each own about 30% of the company, are now in the exclusive billionaire's club, according to Bloomberg's calculus.

The company, which was founded in Toronto in 1994, got a 56% stock boost this year after the release of their hit toy, the Hatchimals, in 2016.

That makes both Harary and Rabie worth about $1.4 billion.

Hatchimals have been nothing short of a sensation for the brand, which has become one of the fastest-growing in the toy business. Hatchimals were one of the hardest-to-find toys of the 2016 holiday season, and they were widely considered the "it" toy every kid wanted.

In 2016, Spin Master had $1.2 billion in sales amid a toy market that has seen giants like Mattel and Lego miss sales expectations in the last year.

hatchimals founders

SEE ALSO: This robot monkey that attaches to your finger and sings when you clap is set to become the hottest toy this holiday

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Scott Galloway correctly predicted Amazon would buy Whole Foods — here's who he thinks Amazon should acquire next

America's billionaires overwhelmingly choose this common college major

$
0
0

Bob Kraft

  • The most common major among American billionaires is economics.
  • Business administration and history are the second and third most popular majors.
  • Steve Cohen, Meg Whitman, and Bob Kraft all studied economics in college.

If you want to make it into the billionaire's club, picking the right college major might be a good place to start.

That's because for the richest people in America, the most common major selected was economics, according to a Forbes analysis of the billionaires who made the latest Forbes 400 list.

The next most popular majors were business administration and history.

Hedge fund manager Steve Cohen, Hewlett Packard Enterprise CEO Meg Whitman, and New England Patriots owner Bob Kraft all chose to major in economics as undergraduates, before launching successful careers.

Warren Buffett graduated with a degree in business administration and U-Haul CEO Joe Shoen studied history.

Economics is also popular at some of the top schools in America. At nearly all of the Ivy League schools, from which many of the billionaires hail, the most popular major is also economics.

It's a smart move. College graduates with an economics degree earn a starting salary of $48,500 on average, almost 20% more than those who major in business administration, according to Payscale.com.

With a masters degree, economists can make even more. Median income for economists in 2016 was $101,050 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics— almost double the median income in the US.

Harvard economics professor and renowned economist Gregory Mankiw believes the college major provides huge benefit. "I think it's a great gateway into a lot of different careers," Mankiw told Business Insider in February.

Studying economics is important "so you can read the newspaper, so you can be an intelligent voter, make intelligent decisions as you go about your personal financial life," he continued. "It's a great place to start to learn how the world works."

SEE ALSO: An intro to economics course at Harvard is the class everyone wants to take — its professor explains why

DON'T MISS: The 10 schools that have produced the most billionaires in the US

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here's how much money you actually take home from a $75,000 salary depending on where you live

The world's billionaires are now worth $6 trillion — but succession is a big problem

$
0
0

Richard Branson

  • The biggest risk facing the world's billionaires is how to pass on their wealth, according to UBS.
  • Over a third of the world's billionaire's combined wealth is held by individuals over the age of 70.
  • Billionaires are living in a "gilded age" that may not last, with wide gaps between the richest and poorest in society and wealth concentrated among a few.

 

LONDON — The biggest risk facing the world's billionaires is how to pass on their wealth, according to leading advisors to ultra high net worth individuals.

The world's billionaires are worth a combined $6 trillion and 39% of it is owned by individuals over the age of 70, according to UBS and PwC's Billionaires Insights report. $2.4 trillion will be transferred to the next generation over the next 20 years, the report predicts. It will be "a huge windfall for their heirs but also for charities."

"The biggest idiosyncratic risk is succession," said Josef Stadler, head of global ultra high net worth at UBS.

In the past, billionaires have passed their wealth on to younger generations of their family but this is changing, Stadler said. Often this takes the form of passing on the family business.

But younger generations increasingly don't want that and are instead looking to invest in other sectors and in philanthropic projects. There is also a decision to be made about whether passing on the business to an outsider with more experience and skills would be better for the firm itself.

"The risk is to convince the family to do the best thing for the firm," says Stadler.

Another problem is complex tax law, the report says. This has made planning "increasingly convoluted."

The problems are compounded in very old, large families, Stadler said.

"The more family members you have, the more liquidity you need to generate for those not involved in the business," he said. "There could be 600 people in a family if the empire was started in the 1800s," and "everybody wants a piece of that pie."

The wealth of the world's billionaires increased by 17% in 2016 to $6 trillion, driven largely by entrepreneurs and strong growth in Asia. The majority of wealth is now created, rather than inherited.

"We believe this growth is sustainable," Stadler said.

However, he concedes billionaires are living in a "gilded age," which may not last. "We are at an inflection point" in which the world's wealth is highly concentrated among a very few individuals, he said. Wealth concentration is now as high as it was at the start of the twentieth century.

"The last gilded age lead to the Sheridan [Antitrust Act of 1890] Act," he says, a competition law that broke up the monopolies held by a few powerful families.

"We're at the peak point again now," he says, "will that happen next?"

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The head of investment themes at UBS explains the big trends every investor should know

China is churning out a new billionaire every 5 days

$
0
0

china luxury car

  • A new report by UBS and PwC found the total wealth of the world's billionaires grew by 17% in 2016 to $6 trillion. 
  • The reports says that growth is being driven by Asia, with three quarters of all new billionaires coming from India and China. 
  • China had the highest number of new billionaires, adding one every 5 days.  

 

The US might be the wealthiest country in the world, but it's not churning out the most billionaires. 

That title goes to China, which added 67 new billionaires in 2016, or one about every five days, according to a report on billionaires by UBS and PwC released Thursday.

"According to the Asian billionaires we interviewed for this report, a combination of geopolitical stability in Greater China, rising Chinese real estate prices, infrastructure spending, the growing middle class and buoyant commodity prices all joined together to boost wealth," the report said. 

For the first time ever, Asia had more billionaires (637) than the US (538), the report found. Still, the US maintained a higher concentration of billionaire wealth, but Asia top that measure in the next three to four years. 

The major driver of wealth in Asia, according to the report, was technology. John Matthews, the report's coauthor, told Business Insider that Asian countries are better at deploying and integrating new technology, which for the most part is first conceived of by companies in the US.

"Asia is the land of implementation and integration," Matthews said. For instance, the US gave birth to new finance apps like Venmo and PayPal, but it's in Asian countries where such apps have scaled the most. 

"People don't use cash or credit cards in China, they use apps," Matthews said. 

Still, billionaire wealth in Asia, Matthews noted, is very volatile because it is so closely linked to the public markets. 

"So they can be a billionaire one day, but not the next," he said. "Only 40% of billionaires [in the US] have their wealth tied to public markets, compared to 70% in Asia."

Screen Shot 2017 10 26 at 12.29.59 PM

SEE ALSO: Billionaires are buying sports teams for different reasons than they used to

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This is what separates the Excel masters from the wannabes

Want to become a billionaire? Move to Asia and start a tech company

$
0
0

unveiled in 2014 the galactica star won a neptune trophy at an event described as the oscars of the super yacht industry

  • The wealth of the world's billionaires rose to $6 trillion in 2016, driven by self-made entrepreneurs, according to a new report by UBS and PwC.
  • Growth occurred fastest in Asia, with one new billionaire in the region created every two days.
  • Growth was largely driven by four sectors: technology, minerals, industrials, and financial.


The combined wealth of the world's billionaires rose by 17% to $6 trillion in 2016, according to a UBS and PwC's Billionaires Insights report.

The surge in wealth was driven by self-made entrepreneurs and rapid wealth creation in Asia, the report said.

"What we are seeing is the acceleration of entrepreneurs in the billionaire cohort," said Josef Stadler, head of global ultra high net worth at UBS. While only 45% of billionaires were self-made in 1995, the percentage of entrepreneur billionaires has now risen to 80%.

For the first time, Asian billionaires outnumber those in the US: there are 637 billionaires in Asia compared to 563 in the US. One new billionaire was created in Asia every two days in 2016. Although the average wealth of US billionaires is still greater, their Asian counterparts are expected to overtake them within 3-4 years.Screen Shot 2017 10 26 at 12.37.36In the US, almost all wealth is now "self-made," said John Mathews, head of private wealth management and ultra high net worth at UBS Americas.

"The entrepreneur is alive and well," Matthews said, and the US is still "the land of innovation."

But tech companies and products that begin their lives in the US are increasingly moving to Asia, which is "the land of implementation and integration into society."

It is this widespread adoption in Asia that is creating wealth at a much more accelerated pace, he said.

zhou qunfei1Prominent Asian billionaires include real estate mogul Wang Jianlin, with a net worth of $29.7 billion and one of China's richest men, and Indian industrial magnate Mukesh Ambani, who has a net worth of $41.4 billion.

New additions to the billionaire list in 2016 included Zhou Qunfei, founder of Lens Technology, who is the world's richest self-made woman and worth an estimated $10.2 billion. Cheng Wei also joined the list after cofounding Uber's biggest competitor in China, Didi Chuxing.

Last year's surge in wealth creation was driven by four sectors: materials, industrials, financial and technology. While growth in the materials industry is largely cyclical, James Purcell, head of hedge funds at UBS, said that the boost in the tech industry is structural and likely to generate future and sustainable growth.Screen Shot 2017 10 26 at 11.36.49The tech industry creates the youngest billionaires — although most of the wealth creation was still driven by those over the age of 50.

"It takes time to create this type of wealth," said Marcel Widrig, a partner at PwC. "It's not an overnight success."Screen Shot 2017 10 26 at 12.27.26Stadler said there is a growing cohort of next-generation "serial entrepreneurs." The report also found:

  • The total wealth of billionaires rose from $5.1 trillion to $6 trillion, double the rate of the MSCI World Index.
  • Billionaires own or partly own companies that employ at least 27.7 million people worldwide, roughly the same as the UK's working population.
  • The new billionaires created in 2016 employ at least 2.8 million people.

UBS said the biggest problem facing the current crop of billionaires is the issue of succession. Many younger generations don't necessarily want to inherit the family business but to instead invest in other sectors as well as in social projects.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: TOP STRATEGIST: Bitcoin will soar to $25,000 in 5 years

A billionaire spent $10 million on an ad calling for Trump's impeachment

$
0
0

Billionaire Democratic mega-donor Tom Steyer is spending over $10 million to run a national advertisement calling for Trump's impeachment. Steyer made his fortune as a hedge fund manager. In 2016, he spent $65 million supporting Democrats and environmental causes, including Martin O'Malley.

Steyer is considering challenging Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein in California, he's also mulling a 2020 presidential run. 

In the ad, Steyer calls Trump "a clear and present danger" who is "mentally unstable" and armed with nuclear weapons. Friday morning Trump attacked Steyer on Twitter calling him "wacky and totally unhinged." 

Join the conversation about this story »

Trump called a billionaire Democratic activist pushing for his impeachment 'wacky & totally unhinged'

$
0
0

Donald Trump

  • President Donald Trump attacked Democratic megadonor Tom Steyer, who is funding a campaign calling for the president's impeachment.
  • Steyer has poured millions of dollars into Democratic campaigns and is reportedly considering a run for Senate or governor in his home state of California.
  • Trump may have seen the ad when it ran on "Fox & Friends."

President Donald Trump attacked Democratic megadonor Tom Steyer, who has launched a $10 million national television and digital ad campaign calling for Trump's impeachment.

"Wacky & totally unhinged Tom Steyer, who has been fighting me and my Make America Great Again agenda from beginning, never wins elections!"Trump tweeted on Friday morning.

Steyer, a California billionaire environmentalist and former hedge fund manager, released the campaign's first ad last week. In the ad Steyer accuses the president of obstructing justice by firing former FBI Director James Comey, threatening the news media, and taking money from foreign governments.

"A Republican Congress once impeached a president for far less, yet today people in Congress and his own administration know that this president is a clear and present danger, who's mentally unstable and armed with nuclear weapons," Steyer says in the ad, which directs viewers to sign a petition on needtoimpeach.com.

"Fox & Friends" aired the ad for the first time on Friday morning, and Trump praised the show in a tweet just minutes after attacking Steyer.

Steyer responded to Trump's tweet on Friday, calling on Democratic leaders to "take a stand" against the president.

"You're right about one thing, Mr. Trump,"Steyer wrote on Twitter. "I have been fighting your racism and corporate groveling from the beginning—and always will ... Americans across the board know you’re a danger to the people of this country. @NancyPelosi @SenSchumer it's time to take a stand."

Steyer spent over $90 million on the 2016 presidential race and a number of other Democratic campaigns and initiatives last year. His super PAC, NextGen Climate, supports candidates committed to slowing the effects of climate change.

He also invested tens of millions of dollars in the 2014 election cycle.

Steyer is reportedly considering a run for Senate or governor in California.

Watch the ad below:

SEE ALSO: One of the biggest Democratic donors explains why he doesn't regret dropping $75 million on the 2016 election

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Meet the three women who married Donald Trump


8 mind-blowing facts about Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos' $90 billion fortune

$
0
0

Jeff Bezos

It's hard to overstate the immensity of a $90 billion fortune.

On Friday, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos became the richest person in the world after third-quarter earnings sent the company's stock soaring.

In addition to founding the online retail behemoth, Bezos owns The Washington Post and an aerospace company, Blue Origin.

Below, check out seven mind-blowing facts about Bezos and his billions.

SEE ALSO: There are over 1,500 billionaires worldwide — here are the 14 countries where the world's richest people live

DON'T MISS: A day in the life of the world's richest person, Jeff Bezos — who made $6.44 billion in one day, wakes up without an alarm, and washes dishes after dinner

Bezos' net worth jumped $6.44 billion in a matter of hours.

Amazon shares jumped more than 8% after the company reported third-quarter earnings on October 26, each share rising by about $79.64 from the previous day's close.

Bezos, as CEO of the company, owns about 81 million shares of Amazon stock according to a recent SEC filing. A little back-of-the-envelope map means he made $6.44 billion in a single day, putting his net worth just over $90 billion.

 



Bezos makes more money in one minute than the average millennial makes in a year.

In the last year alone, Bezos made $19.3 billion.

That equals out to about $52 million per day, over $2 million per hour, and $36,000 a minute, or close to the average millennial salary.



Warren Buffett was worth $30 billion when Bezos became a billionaire — now the Amazon founder is richer.

Bezos became a billionaire in 1998, when Amazon went public. At the time, Buffett was the second richest person in the US, with a net worth of nearly $30 billion

Nearly 20 years later, Bezos is about $9 billion richer than Buffett. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

All the people who made at least $10 billion so far this year

$
0
0

Jeff Bezos

  • 14 people have made at least $10 billion in 2017 so far, according to Bloomberg.
  • There are only 5 Americans on the list, and all but one are men.
  • The list includes: Jack Ma, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, and Hui Ka Yan.


According to a new UBS/Pricewaterhousecoopers report, the world's billionaires have seen their net worths climb by more than $900 billion in the past year, collectively topping a mind-boggling $6 trillion.

Thanks to Bloomberg's billionaires index, we can see the individuals benefitting most from this surge. There are 14 on Bloomberg's list who have already made more than $10 billion through October (and, of course, the year is not over).

Combined, these billionaires have seen their net worths climb $224.5 billion this year so far.

The demographics of the list are fairly uniform (all but one, Chinese heiress Yang Huiyan, are men) — but there are only five Americans, representing just four companies (albeit giant ones).

Here are the 14, with how much they've made year-to-date according to Bloomberg:

14. Francois Pinault (founder, Kering): Up $10.8 billion (net worth $25.8 billion, 29th in the world)

13. Sergey Brin (co-founder, Google): Up $10.9 billion (net worth $50.1 billion, 10th in the world)

12. Carlos Slim (chairman, América Móvil): Up $11.3 billion (net worth $61.1 billion, 6th in the world)

11. Larry Page (co-founder, Google): Up $11.4 billion (net worth $51.3 billion, 9th in the world)

10. Yang Huiyan (majority shareholder, Country Garden Holdings): Up $11.4 billion (net worth $19.5 billion, 46th in the world)

9. Jack Ma (founder, Alibaba): Up $12.7 billion (net worth $46 billion, 14th in the world)

8. Larry Ellison (founder, Oracle): Up $14.4 billion (net worth $56 billion, 8th in the world)

7. Wang Wei (founder, S.F. Express): Up $14.7 billion (net worth $19.4 billion, 47th in the world)

6. Pony Ma (co-founder, Tencent): $14.8 billion (net worth $35.6 billion, 21st in the world)

5. Mukesh Ambani (CEO, Reliance): Up $17.2 billion (net worth $40 billion, 20th in the world)

4. Bernard Arnault (chairman and CEO, LVHM): Up $19 billion (net worth $58.2 billion, 7th in the world)

3. Mark Zuckerberg (co-founder, Facebook): Up $25.4 billion (net worth $75.4 billion, 5th in the world)

2. Jeff Bezos (founder, Amazon): Up $28.5 billion (net worth $93.8 billion, 1st in the world)

1. Hui Ka Yan (chairman, Evergrande): Up $33.4 billion (net worth $40.8 billion, 19th in the world)

The top-5 richest people in the world are now:

5. Mark Zuckerberg: $75.4 billion

4. Amancio Ortega (founder, Zara): $77.2 billion

3. Warren Buffett (chairman, Berkshire Hathaway): $81 billion

2. Bill Gates (co-founder, Microsoft): $88.7 billion

1. Jeff Bezos: $93.8 billion

SEE ALSO: How Mark Cuban, Mark Zuckerberg, Richard Branson, and 15 other millionaires and billionaires got their start

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The 5 most annoying changes in the new iPhone update — and how to fix them

5 strategies billionaires used to go from having nothing to massive wealth

$
0
0

Jan Koum WhatsApp

  • There are 5 key strategies billionaires have used to build their wealth.
  • They created products with an abundance of value, inserted themselves as a service provider in a high-growth industry, or improved systems of communication.
  • Two other strategies include creating a consumable product, and investing in real estate.


You're likely asking yourself what it takes to get rich. But not just rich. Rich at the highest level.

How do you go from broke to billionaire? Most people might simply want to have positive cash flow or even a million dollars in the bank. But does a million dollars really cut it these days? I suppose that depends on where you live and what you do.

But billionaires are a different breed. It's a different world. Spending time with them is more likened to fabled fantasies rather than actual reality. The world truly is their oyster. Now, if you want to get there, or you're just looking to become a multi-millionaire, there are some strategies that will propel your growth.

In fact, there are five strategies these billionaires have used to go from broke and hopeless, to absolutely on top of the world.

One thing to keep in mind is that you're far less likely to attain this type of success without owning your own business. But if you're already an entrepreneur or a business owner, then it's a matter of adapting — look at the following strategies and see how you can adapt them to your business, or to potentially pivot your business to strike while the proverbial iron is hot in one sector or another.

Most people think that it's impossible to go from broke to billionaire. But it's been done repeatedly. Individuals including Roman Abromovich,  Francois Pinault, Howard Schultz, Oprah Winfrey, Shahid Khan, Do Won Chang, Ralph Lauren, John Paul DeJoria, Larry Ellison and Mohed Altrad were once broke. But they all became billionaires.

How did they do it? First, and foremost, by harboring the following skills. And second, by wielding one of the five strategies that you'll find below. As you read the list and the strategies, ask yourself the following question. How many of these skills am I employing and how can I adapt these strategies to my business today, right now? 

1. Create something that adds an abundant amount of value to the world.

Today, as it's been for all our recorded history, getting rich entails building and adding an abundant amount of value to the world. The richest and most successful people have added the most value. That's how real wealth is attained. Find some way that you can add an excessive amount of value to the world. This is not a short-term strategy. This takes time.

But it also involves seizing opportunities as they arise. Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard got incredibly rich not by inventing new products, but by improving on existing products. While Patagonia is a giant clothing retailer today, at the age of 50, Chouinard's company went bankrupt after the fallout from a series of lawsuits.

However, Chouinard stayed the course. He added value. Improved on iterations of products to make them better for the environment, longer lasting, and higher in quality. That's how Patagonia grew into a behemoth. He added an abundant amount of value.

2. Create a consumable product that people love.

There are a number of industries in consumable products that are simply taking off like wild fire. From cold-brewed coffee to energy shots and drinks and even electronic cigarettes have become industries that have begun to balloon. Manoj Bhargava, founder of the 5-Hour Energy Drink, grew his business from a 2003 startup to over $1 billion in sales by 9 years later. 

In 2010, Howard Panes was $600,000 in debt and lost his house to a short sale when he entered into the e-cigarettes industry, ramping it up within 18 months to over $100 million in sales. Several years later, after an astounding exponential growth, Japan Tobacco International, a corporate giant with 27,000 employees and $20 billion in annual revenue acquired the company.

With no experience in the industry, Panes, like Bhargava, did what it took to see things through, traveling and living in Shenzhen, China where the company refined its product and delivery systems. Today, as an avid car collector with a near-$15 million collection of rare and exotic hypercars, Panes has become one of South Florida's wealthiest residents.

John Paul Dejoria, who was not only once broke, but also homeless and living in his car with his son, also did the unimaginable. He created salon-quality products and went door to door to sell them. He focused on quality and he took action every single day. At the age of 36, with a $700 loan and while living in a car with his son, he grew Paul Mitchell Systems into a behemoth, becoming one of the world's richest persons in the process. 

3. Insert yourself as a service provider into a high-growth industry.

We saw Airbnb grow from obscurity and blow-up air mattress rentals on floors into a global behemoth, making its three founders, Brian Chesky, Nathan Biecharczyk and Joe Gebbia, who were all once broke, into billionaires. Airbnb blazed a trail. But they weren't the first. Vacation rentals had already begun to take off, but VRBO was first. Yet, Airbnb did it better.

The goal? Identify a high-growth industry and become a service provider. Whether that's vacation rentals, ecommerce, financial services, insurance, virtual reality, chat bots, or any other industry for that matter, insert yourself into the industry by finding a unique way that you can provide the same service, but better, more efficiently and with greater reliability.

You could also find a way you can cater to the rich themselves by building up a service that attracts wealthy individuals. Whether that means renting out exotic cars, private jets, or becoming a global concierge for the uber wealthy like Annastasia Seebohm's Quintessentially Group, find a way you can do something more effectively than everyone else around you.

Kenny Trout, the founder of Excel Communications, achieved his success in the early telecom industry by becoming a long-distance reseller after deregulation took hold, selling over 200,000 franchises using the multi-level marketing model. Trout, who grew up with a dad who worked as a bartender, never had much money. He sold life insurance early on and identified a high-growth industry that he trail-blazed his way into.

4. Find a way to improve communications or connection online.

Mark Zuckerberg became one of the world's wealthiest individuals by improving connection and communications online. Today, we all know about the success of Facebook. But Zuckerberg was never poor or broke. He hailed from an upper-middle-class heritage.

However, what's most intriguing is the story of WhatsApp founder, Jan Koum. In 2007, while working at Ernst & Young, and shortly after the launch of the iPhone, Koum, who was an immigrant from Ukraine, where he was born, decided to create a communications app with Brian Acton that was released in January of 2010.

Koum, who had been passed over for a job at Facebook just shortly prior, grew WhatsApp into a wildly popular communications application that was later acquired by Facebook for $19 billion. Like other billionaires, Koum seized on the new industry and identified an opportunity that others might have missed.

5. Invest in real estate and grow your portfolio over time.

Real estate has given a platform to the world's richest individuals. If you think that making money through real estate is impossible, especially if you have no money to start with, then you've got a few lessons to learn. Some of the biggest real estate moguls in the world have started with nothing. It's called wholesaling and creative financing. Once you understand it, it truly can propel tremendous growth.

The goal is to focus on positive cash flow. Like Robert Kiyosaki's iconic, Rich Dad Poor Dad book and series, discover how to create assets rather than liabilities. Whether you just want to be a millionaire or a billionaire, real estate will give you a solid foundation or platform from which you can grow.

Leon Charney became a billionaire through his real estate investments. But he was the child of two immigrants, and at the time of his father's death, his family became destitute. He had nothing, and he worked his way through college and through law school.

Carl Berg, another billionaire real estate investor, also lost his father early on and was raised by his mother who was a school teacher. While working at a hotel, he met someone who turned out to be the largest home builder in the United States, who later offered him a job to run his mortgage company after he graduated from college. 

SEE ALSO: How to trick yourself into saving more money

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here's how to figure out exactly how your take-home pay could change under Trump's new tax plan

Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel & his supermodel wife, Miranda Kerr, are worth $3.4 billion — see their houses, cars, and travels

$
0
0

Evan Spiegel Miranda Kerr

Snapchat cofounder and CEO Evan Spiegel, 27, is one of the richest millennial billionaires in America, with a fortune around $3.4 billion.

In May, he married Miranda Kerr, an Australian supermodel and owner of cosmetics line Kora Organics. The 34-year-old is wealthy in her own right, with an estimated net worth of $45 million.

Like any good power couple, Spiegel and Kerr purportedly share interests in each others' endeavors. He's graced the cover of Vogue Italy, and she's active on Snapchat and has come to the defense of the company— and her husband — in interviews.

Here's how the newlyweds spend their billions.

SEE ALSO: How Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, makes and spends his $20 billion fortune

DON'T MISS: Meet 7 of the world's richest power couples, who have a combined fortune of over $260 billion

Spiegel and Kerr began dating during the summer of 2015 after first meeting at a dinner for Louis Vuitton the year before.

Source: The Sydney Morning Herald



In July 2016, Spiegel proposed to Kerr with a a 1.75 to 2.5 carat diamond that cost an estimated $75,000 to $100,000.

Source: E! News

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BIFrCEajY6y/embed/
Width: 800px

 



A few months before the engagement, the couple purchased a 7,164-square-foot home in Brentwood, a wealthy Los Angeles neighborhood, for $12 million. The home was previously owned by Harrison Ford and has a gym, pool, and guest house.

Source: Business Insider



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Roku's stock has more than doubled since its first earnings report — making its founder a billionaire (ROKU)

$
0
0

Roku CEO Anthony Wood

  • Roku, a video streaming platform and hardware company, blew past Wall Street estimates in its first earnings report as a public company on Thursday.
  • Since then, the stock has more than doubled.
  • Founder Anthony Wood, who owns 27.3% of Roku, is now a billionaire. 


Shares of Roku have skyrocketed 125% in the three days after the streaming-video platform company released its first earnings report as a public company.

Anthony Wood, the 51-year-old founder and CEO, owns 27.3% of the company, according to public filings. The surge in Roku’s stock price has grown Wood's net worth by $652 million to $1.07 billion, according to Bloomberg.

In its first earnings report as a publicly-traded company, Roku crushed estimates, reporting an adjusted loss of $0.10 on revenues of $124.78 million. Wall Street was expecting a loss of $0.40 per share on revenue of $118.75 million.

Shares rose 13% on Friday, and another 26% on Monday  after the company announced discounted streaming sticks ahead of the holiday season.

Shares of Roku have gained 82% since they began trading in September.

Roku stock price

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Tesla's biggest problem is one nobody saw coming

Viewing all 616 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>