Billionaire bonanzas and bombshells: how the super-rich fared in 2018
Annus mirabilis or annus horribilis for these billionaires?

Bill Gates (up 1%)

Mukesh Ambani (up 3%)

Bernard Arnault (up 3%)

Phil Knight (up 4.7%)

Francoise Bettencourt Meyers (up 5%)

Francois Pinault (up 8%)

Pallonji Mistry (up 13%)

Leonid Mikhelson (up 17%)

Steve Ballmer (up 19%)

Elon Musk (up 20%)

Tadashi Yanai (up 21%)

Rupert Murdoch (up 23%)

Vagit Alekperov (up 26%)

Jeff Bezos (up 27%)

Jeff Bezos, founder of online retailer Amazon, became the world’s richest man last year thanks to Amazon stock – and in 2018 his wealth rose by a staggering $36.9 billion (£29.37bn), to $136 billion (£108.28bn), as stock hit record highs. Not bad for someone who earns just over $80,000 (£63,682) a year in salary.
Lei Jun (up 73%)

Our final winner of 2018 is Chinese businessman Lei Jun, founder and CEO of smartphone maker Xiaomi. Its mega-IPO has sent Lei soaring into the billionaires list, with almost $9 billion (£7.bn) of his $12.2 billion (£9.71bn) fortune made this year; the flotation made instant billionaires of five of its eight co-founders, a rare highlight for China’s billionaires in recent times.
Leonardo Del Vecchio (down 7%)

Now we turn our attention to the losers of 2018. In October Leonardo Del Vecchio oversaw the merger of his spectacle business, Luxottica, with lens-maker Essilor to form EssilorLuxottica, the world’s largest eyewear company, selling brands such as Ray-Ban and Oakley. He lost $1.55 billion (£1.24bn) in 2018 to leave him with $21.1 billion (£16.82bn), having re-joined the company in 2014 after he took a back seat for a decade.
Charles & David Koch (down 9%)

David Koch (left) and brother Charles (right) have each seen their wealth drop by $3.82 billion (£3.04bn) to $44.4 billion (£35.35bn), in a year that saw younger brother David forced to retire due to ill health. The reclusive pair together ran Koch Industries, which is involved in everything from energy to agriculture, finance and electronics. Highly political, they have been busy campaigning against US President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs this year.
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Amancio Ortega (down 12%)

Lee Shau Kee (down 15%)

Carlos Slim (down 17%)

Susanne Klatten (down 18%)
Jack Ma (down 20%)

Li Ka-Shing (down 21%)

Sheldon Adelson (down 21%)

The house always wins, so the saying goes, but casino magnate Adelson has seen his fortune reduced by $6.31 billion (£5.02bn) to $29.6 billion (£23.53bn) this year. Adelson has been using trusts to pass on $8 billion (£6.36bn) to his children tax-efficiently, as well as pouring $100 million in donations to the Republican Party – so actually, the house probably is winning.
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Pony Ma (down 29%)

Shares in Chinese web giant Tencent, the company behind WeChat, fell almost a third this year thanks to the Chinese government freezing approvals for new video games, the trade war with the US and an economic slowdown in China. Founder and chairman ‘Pony’ Ma Huateng saw his personal wealth nosedive by a similar level, dropping $9.14 billion (£7.26bn) to $31.8 billion (£25.27bn).
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Gina Rinehart (down 29%)

Mark Zuckerberg (down 30%)

Lakshmi Mittal (down 42%)

Jorge Paulo Lemann (down 44%)
This Brazilian billionaire (pictured with his wife) is the brains behind 3G Capital, which owns brands such as Burger King and Kraft Heinz. Warren Buffett – whose Berkshire Hathaway group regularly backs 3G – has called Lemann “my professor”. Yet since Kraft made a failed bid for Unilever in 2017, it has seen $30 billion (£23.82bn) wiped off its market value – and Lemann has seen his personal fortune drop $9.04 billion (£7.18bn) to $20.6 billion (£16.36bn).
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Wang Jianlin (down 63%)
Asia’s 120 wealthiest people have collectively lost $99 billion (£78.62bn) this year, according to Bloomberg – a plummet led by Wang Jianlin, once China’s richest man. The head of property conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group has been battered by tumbling stocks, trade troubles and a falling yuan, and has seen his fortune free fall by almost two-thirds this year, by $11 billion (£8.74bn) to $17.6 billion (£13.98bn).
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