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Labrish
Nyuuz
Billionaires bag $2.2tn in 2025 as inequality debate flares
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 81568, member: 636"] The world's ultra-wealthy elite just wrapped up a year of absolute financial dominance. According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, the five hundred richest individuals on the planet collectively added two trillion two hundred billion dollars to their net worth throughout the previous cycle. This massive surge pushed their combined total to a staggering eleven trillion nine hundred billion dollars, driven by a perfect storm of soaring equity markets, a frantic rally in cryptocurrencies, and massive investor confidence following political shifts in the United States. While the gains affected many at the top, roughly twenty-five percent of that new wealth flowed into the pockets of just eight individuals. This group features heavy hitters like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Larry Ellison, and Larry Page, whose portfolios benefited immensely from the ongoing gold rush in artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure. Elon Musk cemented his position as the undisputed leader of the pack after adding one hundred ninety billion dollars to his fortune. His total net worth reached six hundred twenty-two billion dollars by the end of the year, fueled by a dramatic recovery in Tesla shares and skyrocketing valuations for SpaceX. Larry Ellison followed closely with a gain of nearly fifty-eight billion dollars, bringing his total to nearly two hundred fifty billion dollars as Oracle transformed into a powerhouse for AI-driven computing. Meanwhile, Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart saw her wealth nearly triple to thirty-seven billion dollars. Her success stems from a strategic bet on rare-earth metals, which have become essential for the global shift toward green energy and high-tech manufacturing. The year was not entirely kind to every billionaire on the list. Manuel Villar, previously the wealthiest individual in the Philippines, watched his fortune vanish by twelve billion six hundred million dollars. His property development firm, Golden MV Holdings, suffered a catastrophic eighty percent stock plunge after a six-month trading suspension ended in a massive market reassessment. This decline left his net worth at approximately ten billion dollars, serving as a reminder that even the biggest fortunes can buckle under regulatory scrutiny and shifting investor sentiment. The scale of these gains has once again sparked intense criticism from global advocacy groups. Oxfam highlighted that the amount added to the wealth of the top five hundred individuals would be enough to lift nearly four billion people out of poverty. Critics argue that this extreme concentration of resources is a deliberate policy choice that leaves public wealth stagnating while private fortunes reach record heights. As the current year begins, analysts expect these trends to continue as long as interest rates remain manageable and the technology sector maintains its aggressive growth trajectory. [/QUOTE]
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Nyuuz
Billionaires bag $2.2tn in 2025 as inequality debate flares
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