New Chinese billionaires outpace U.S. by 3 to 1: Hurun
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[February 26, 2020]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China minted three times as many new billionaires
than the United States in the past year, with fortunes made in drugs and
online entertainment after a mini-boom from the coronavirus outbreak, a
ranking of the world's wealthiest people shows.
The Greater China region, including Hong Kong and Taiwan, created 182
new billionaires in the year to Jan. 31, taking its total to 799,
according to the 2020 Hurun Global Rich List released on Wednesday. That
compares with 59 new U.S. billionaires.
While the outbreak of a new coronavirus in China has hammered the
world's second-biggest economy, it has also driven up stock valuations
of Chinese companies in online education, online games and vaccinations,
the report said.
With much of China stuck at home due to quarantines and travel
restrictions, demand for online services has surged, lining the pockets
of billionaire founders such as Robin Li of Baidu <BIDU.O>, owner of
popular online video platform iQiyi.
Healthcare entrepreneurs specializing in vaccinations did well,
including An Kang of Hualan Biological Engineering <002007.SZ> and Jiang
Rensheng of Zhifei Biological Products <300122.SZ>.
"China today has more billionaires than the U.S. and India combined,"
said Rupert Hoogewerf, founder and chairman of the Hurun Report, which
counted 629 U.S. billionaires and 137 in India.
New Chinese entrants include Cheng Xianfeng of drug maker Yifan Xinfu
Pharmaceutical <002019.SZ> and Shen Ya of online discount retailer
Vipshop <VIPS.N>.
In the past year to end-January, tech stocks in China <.CSIINT> surged
77% and Chinese pharma companies <.CSI300HC> gained 37%, beating a 16%
rise in world stocks <.MIWD00000PUS>.
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People stand near a
window overlooking the financial district in Shanghai, China October
23, 2019. REUTERS/Stringer
"A boom in tech valuations and strong stockmarkets across the U.S., India and
China propelled the billionaires to record heights," said the British
accountant, who began publishing the list in 1999.
U.S. tycoons still led the list, with Amazon.com <AMZN.O> founder Jeff Bezos
retaining the top spot for a third year with a $140 billion fortune.
Jack Ma of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group <BABA.N> topped China's
billionaires with $45 billion and came in No. 21 overall, but he was overtaken
by Elon Musk from Tesla <TSLA.O> due to soaring shares in the U.S. electric
carmaker.
Technology was followed by property, manufacturing, capital and retail as a
major source of wealth in the past year.
Despite the U.S.-China trade war, Ren Zhengfei, founder of Shenzhen-based
telecoms giant Huwei Technologies, blacklisted by the U.S. government, saw his
personal wealth grow 7% to $3 billion, roughly on par with that of U.S.
President Donald Trump.
Beijing is the world's billionaire capital for the fifth year, with 110
billionaires, against 98 in New York. Shanghai overtook Hong Kong to claim third
spot.
(Reporting by Stella Qiu and Ryan Woo; Additional reporting by Luoyan Liu in
Shanghai; editing by Richard Pullin)
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