Alibaba
founder Jack Ma has become China's richest person following his company's
record listing, according to a wealth survey by the Hurun Report.
Mr
Ma tops its annual rich list with a fortune of $25bn (£15bn), followed by Wanda
Group chairman Wang Jianlin.
Internet
billionaires account for five of China's 10 richest people this year, eclipsing
property tycoons who have traditionally dominated the list.
The
list also includes the head of Tencent, Pony Ma.
Other
tech titans on the list include the co-founder of Chinese search group Baidu,
Robin Li, and the founder of online retailer JD.com, Richard Liu Qiangdong.
Mr
Liu, who is ranked 10th on the super-rich list, also saw his company listed in
New York in August this year.
Hurun
Report chairman and chief researcher Rupert Hoogewerf said the list shows
"the entrepreneurial spirit that has caught China seems not to be abating".
"Jack
Ma is the
11th Number One we have had in China in the last 16 years, showing
the dynamism of the Chinese economy, and a stark reminder of the growth
potential that is being realised in the emerging markets".
The
Hurun Report's rich list is one of the most closely-watched and accurate
assessments of wealth in China. The annual report has been published for the
past 16 years.
Individuals
or families required at least $2.3bn this year to make it onto the list, which
is more than 15 times the amount needed a decade ago.
There
are a record 354 so-called "dollar billionaires" in China this year,
Hurun said, which is a 13% increase from last year.
Overall,
the total wealth of the 1,271 people on the list is worth $1.4tn this year.
Hurun
said it had been "an amazing year" for the online retail and other IT
sectors and a "good year" for entertainment, investments, cars,
renewable energy, pharmaceuticals and manufacturing.
On
the flipside, Hurun said it had "been a bad year for steel and
shipping" and that real estate "could have done a lot worse, bearing
in mind the state of the market".
The
world's second-largest economy has been slowing down amid concerns its property
sector may have overheated and that levels of local debt are too high.
As a
result, the government has unveiled measures meant to cool the housing market,
which has seen growth stall for several quarters.
Perhaps
reflecting this shift, four of the six property tycoons in last year's top 10
list have dropped down the rankings.
BBC
Business
No comments:
Post a Comment