A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jan 26, 2017

How Bill Gates Could Become the World's First Trillionaire

And that's even as he's attempting to give much of it away. Which raises questions about what's wrong with all those still trying to grow their pile. JL

Chris Weller reports in Business Insider:

Wealth is hard to shrink once someone is so rich that spending is no longer an option. The super-rich can achieve returns not available to the ordinary saver, helping the gap to grow between the wealthy and everyone else. The bigger the initial investment, the higher returns one can make as the initial costs of sophisticated advice and high-risk investments can be justified with the potential for super-lucrative returns.
Bill Gates may be $915.6 billion away from becoming the world's first trillionaire, but new research suggests he's closer than some might think.
A new Oxfam report on wealth and inequality, entitled "An economy for the 99%," finds super-rich people like Gates have seen their wealth collectively grow by huge margins over the last decade. Within the next 25 years, Gates' wealth could jump like never seen before.
According to Oxfam's report, there were 793 billionaires worldwide in 2009. Added up, their net worths totaled $2.4 trillion. By 2016, the richest 793 people maintained net worths of $5 trillion — an annual growth of 11%.
"If these returns continue, it is quite possible that we could see the world's first trillionaire within 25 years," the report states.
In other words, Oxfam estimates that if trends hold, Gates — who's leading the pack on Forbes' list of the wealthiest individuals, at $84.4 billion in net worth — could stand alone on Forbes' future list of "The World's Trillionaires."
Not that Gates necessarily wants the distinction. Since leaving Microsoft in 2006, he has devoted his time and resources to eradicating infectious disease and improving education worldwide through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
In partnership with Warren Buffett, Gates and his wife have created the Giving Pledge for other billionaires who want to help public causes by giving away part or most of their fortunes. The Gateses have also said they don't plan on leaving their children billions — millions perhaps, but not so much that working will be optional.
But as Oxfam notes, wealth is incredibly hard to shrink once someone is so rich that spending is no longer an option.
"The super-rich can achieve returns that are not available to the ordinary saver, helping the gap to grow between the wealthy and everyone else," the report states. "The bigger the initial investment, the higher returns one can make as the initial costs of sophisticated advice and high-risk investments can be justified with the potential for super-lucrative returns."
As of 2013, Gates had donated at least $28 billion to the Gates Foundation. Unless the 61-year-old can figure out how to give even more away in the coming years, he could enter a never-before-seen class of wealth by the time he's 86.

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