American billionaires dominate FORBES’ first ever list of the 100 Richest People In Tech. Just over half, or 51 people, are from the U.S. Tech barons fromAsia made a strong showing as well, with 33 people hailing from that region. Eight people from Europemade the cut – a minimum net worth $2 billion — as did two from the Middle East (namely, from Israel) and one from Latin America. Forty of the 100 live in California.
Bill Gates –who’s also the world’s richest man – ranks number one among tech tycoons, with a net worth of $79.6 billion. Gates, who left the Microsoft MSFT +1.21% board in 2014 to focus full time on philanthropy, continues to sell shares in the software firm he founded with Paul Allen 40 years ago. Less than 13% of his estimated fortune now comes from Microsoft stock.
Number two on the list is Larry Ellison, founder of database software firm Oracle, with a net worth estimated at $50 billion. Ellison ceded the CEO spot at Oracle last year to two co-CEOs, Safra Catz and Mark Hurd, but still serves as Oracle’s chairman and chief technology officer. Oracle is finding it harder to grow as a company; revenues for the fiscal year that ended in May were down slightly from the previous year to $38.2 billion.
The third richest on the list is Jeff Bezos, whose net worth shot up dramatically in July after Amazon.com surprised analysts and reported a rare profit for its second quarter. Amazon typically loses money. Forbes pegs Bezos’ net worth at $47.8 billion, more than 90% of which lies in his 18% stake in Amazon. Bezos’ fortune has soared up $13 billion since the beginning of the year; for the 2015 Forbes World’s Billionaires List, which was published in early March, he was worth $34.8 billion. The July surge in Amazon stocked propelled Bezos into the top 10 richest in the world for the first time.
Altogether, the world’s 100 richest tech billionaires are worth $842.9 billion. Just seven women made the list, the wealthiest of whom is Laurene Powell Jobs, the widow of Steve Jobs, with an estimated net worth of $21.4 billion. The average age of the group is 53, which is a decade younger than the average age of all billionaires; 15 of the 100 are under age 40. The youngest is Snapchat founder and CEO Evan Spiegel, who is 25 and worth an estimated $2.1 billion; the oldest is Intel cofounder Gordon Moore, who is 86 and worth an estimated $6 billion. Nearly all of the 100 are self-made billionaires: 94 made their own luck, 3 inherited their fortunes, and 3 have inherited fortunes but have been actively expanding them. (According to forbes.com)
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