The 500 wealthiest people in the world have lost a combined $1.4 trillion this year, including $206 billion on Monday alone, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, as global financial markets buckle under the weight of higher interest rates and inflation anxiety.
It's a stark contrast to last year, when soaring markets boosted the world’s population of high-net-worth individuals by about 8%, including 13 per cent in North America, according to a Capgemini World Wealth report released Tuesday. The data show that the ranks of the wealthy in Asia-Pacific increased just 4.2 per cent — trailing Europe and falling further behind North America after dominating the growth of rich people for the past decade.
China’s crackdown on technology companies and a cooling real estate market was partly the cause, but it also reflected the ferocious gains in the US stock market, which helped inflate everything from cryptocurrencies to property values. That’s now rapidly reversing as inflation has spiraled, prompting concerns over how sharply the Federal Reserve will raise rates. Still, the Capgemini report illustrates just how much the Covid-19 pandemic and monetary response benefited the economically elite and where they predominantly reside.
The US, Japan, China and Germany remain among the top countries where most of the world’s wealthy live. The four are home to almost 64 per cent of high-net-worth individuals globally, Capgemini’s report showed.
What’s more, even among the world’s high-net-worth individuals, the very rich saw the most benefits. People with investable assets of $30 million or more saw their wealth expand 9.6 per cent compared with 2020, the fastest pace among the cohorts studied by the report. Those with $1
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