The biggest winners and losers in the billionaires club in 2018

Plenty of fortunes were made this year despite a market rout

epa06689621 Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos attends the Axel Springer Award 2018, in Berlin, Germany, 24 April 2018. Amazon CEO Bezos, who also owns US newspaper 'Washington Post', is awarded with the Axel Springer Award. Axel Springer SE is one of the largest digital publishing houses in Europe and owner of numerous multimedia news brands.  EPA/CLEMENS BILAN
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The markets may be tanking, but that hasn’t stopped plenty of mega-fortunes from being unearthed in 2018.

The popularity of Fortnite, the phenomenon that inspired video-game obsessions, gave gamemaker Tim Sweeney a $7.2 billion (Dh26.4bn) fortune this year. Autry Stephens has $11.4bn after his closely held Endeavour Energy Resources attracted bids that valued the oil company at as much as $15 billion.

“It was a good year for wealth creation,“ said Michael Zeuner, managing partner of WE Family Offices. “It was a tough year in financial markets, but for people who are creating wealth through companies, the economy itself is very strong.“

Mr Sweeney and Mr Stephens were just two of the 31 individuals who vaulted onto the Bloomberg Billionaires Index in 2018, even as increasing global trade tensions and a downdraft in the markets saw half a trillion dollars of wealth on the ranking wiped out.

Denise Coates, the British founder and chief executive officer of online bookmaker Bet365 Group, is another addition. Ms Coates is nearly 10 times richer than Queen Elizabeth II, according to the ranking.

While Ms Coates had a good year, market turmoil pushed many wealthy people into the red. The world’s 500 richest people lost $451 billion this year. That’s a sharp reversal from 2017 when they added $1 trillion to their fortunes.

Here are the billionaires who gained and lost in 2018.

Winners

Singaporean billionaires fared the best in dollar terms, gaining $2.5 billion. That pushed the wealth of the country’s richest to a collective net worth of $38 billion.

Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder and the richest person in the world, was 2018’s biggest gainer for the second year running. His net worth grew about $24 billion to $123 billion. But even he was a loser in the second half of the year as stock markets were routed. From a September peak, Mr Bezos has since seen his fortune drop $45 billion.

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Despite Chinese billionaires’ total loss of nearly $76 billion this year, some of the country’s richest still came out ahead, including Lei Jun, founder of Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi. Mr Jun trailed only Bezos among the biggest gainers of 2018, adding $8.6 billion to his fortune.

Losers

American billionaires saw the biggest loss this year, collectively dropping $76 billion, largely because of December’s market rout. Mark Zuckerberg saw the sharpest drop in 2018 as Facebook veered from crisis to crisis. His net worth fell nearly $20 billion, leaving the 34-year-old with a $53 billion fortune.

China’s Wang Jianlin, Jack Ma and Ma Huateng made up three of the 10 biggest losers this year. Fifty people dropped off the index, including 11 from China or Hong Kong, nine from the US and four from Russia.

Among those who fell off the list were Andrej Babis, the prime minister of the Czech Republic whose fortune is derived from his chemical and agricultural company Agrofert, and Russian tycoon Oleg Deripaska, whose net worth plunged to a record low as stock of Rusal fell on concern that the aluminium giant could halt some production because of US sanctions.

And 13 billionaires on the ranking died this year, including Microsoft’s Paul Allen, Hong Kong real estate developer Walter Kwok and Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, owner of Premier League football club Leicester City.