So Where have all the Big Bucks Gone ?

Every year the Sunday Times Newspaper issues it’s Rich List . Every year (nearly) I post about it .

It is not that fabulously rich people fascinate me. They don’t . Or rather the famous ones don’t but the ones I have never heard of, are rather more interesting. Check out https://www.forbes.com/billionaires/ This gives some background and detail of people you may never have heard of. I am also interested in where is this money and what happens with it.

According to the report , there has been a decline in the number of UK Billionaires. As the measure of wealth invariably involves stock values , the UK market was pretty flat in 2023 thereby decreasing the wealth of the few. However, the picture is not always that clear as Forbes , who measure in dollars as opposed to sterling show no such decrease.

Apparently there has also been an exit due to the changes in the Non Dom Status ,as well as their children being mugged for their watches. An oversimplification but if you walk the streets with a twenty grand watch on your wrist you are making yourself a huge target , and saying ‘look what I have got and you will never have‘. Some would say this would never happen in Dubai. Which is probably true but not a realistic or desirable comparison.

What I do not understand is why , if you have assets of £1 Billion sterling or just a mere several hundred million do you need to up sticks and move to some distant region to save even more. What is the point of this excess wealth? Much of it will never be spent. The combined wealth of the 350 in the list exceeds £795 billion. That is a massive amount of money . To what avail?

An example, an Entrepreneur called Alfie Best (not a Billionaire , mere £947 million- here’s another odd thing they don’t say how his valuation has nearly quadrupled within the last 12 months ) ,just ordered a £500,000 Rolls Royce is moving to Monaco (for those who don’t know he owns and runs numerous caravan parks, many are not especially happy campers- most are actually the homes of the owners-as he has a reputation of being quite ruthless in his management style. ) They will be either earning a very average wage, or pensioners and do not have the same opportunity of moving elsewhere.

“Britain needs to wake up — we are losing wealth creators,” he grumbles. “Our tax system and business regulations are sterilising the few strong people who build economies. We need these people to start businesses and create jobs. Brexit was a golden opportunity to create a fast-growing pro-entrepreneur environment. That chance has been completely squandered.”

So if that were the case why were the other (lets assume some might ) 325 other multi millionaires not moving elsewhere and managing to eek out an acceptable lifestyle despite paying the same percentage tax as do millions of employees within middle management.

Now I live in London, and yes the prices of properties in Belgravia and Chelsea are eye watering.

However, these are the World’s expensive cities to live according to www.forbes.com

And according to www.moneyinc.com the most expensive cities for property were Monaco, followed by Basel (Switzerland) and Palm Beach Florida. London does not feature in the top 10.

For the most part these are wealth creators, so along the way they enable many jobs, some very well paid and some not so’ but whatever the case they create money that is in some way spent in various economies. It is the vast wealth that they accumulate that can never be spent .

If you have several billion in your bank account how does that make any difference to your first billion.

The accumulation of vast wealth is exactly that an accumulation for, as far as I can see , just for the sake of it. It brings power and plus a whole load of baggage.

Elon Musk is apparently the wealthiest man in the world . His wealth equates or exceeds (by an enormous margin) to that of the GDP of over 140 of the World’s nations . Or put another way he could feed cloth, house every body in Zambia for each year , for 10 years and still have enough for his planes, trains(don’t know if he has any but makes the comment slightly amusing?) and automobiles .

I am not condemning extreme wealth, wealth creation, or the accumulation of wealth. But I am questioning it. If you stuck your first £1billion in the bank it would earn you £50 million p.a. That is nearly £137,00 per day. Why do you need more ?

I am also aware that as the valuations use stock values the super rich can loose the super bit very quickly. Phillip Green is a great example of no longer being a Billionaire , much in part due to the value of his stock. This is also true of many Chinese Billionaires whose wealth is tied up in property and the collapse of the Chinese Property market. The Forbes list of Billionaires runs to 2600+. That number in terms of world population is not huge but the combined wealth is $14 trillion. That is greater than the combined GDPs of India, Japan, Germany & the U.K . 2600 people have more wealth than 4 of the world’s largest economies put together, leaving only the USA and China has having larger GDPs.

So that might be were the big bucks are , but where do they go ….?

Much Ado about a ‘elluva Bloody Lot…..

I am not . I , truly am not . I am not envious of wealth or rather enormous wealth. I would like a bit , it goes without saying, but I am intrigued by enormous wealth. The easiest way for me to indulge in that intrigue is by looking at The Times Newspaper Annual Rich List.

I can easily swat aside those who say ‘of course you would want to fabulously wealthy’. I really couldn’t handle all the crap that goes with it. When you reach a point that you don’t know how many properties you own, or how many cars sit in your underground garages and making sure that every second of your day is covered by sufficient security and whether your family is safe, what is the point ? Perhaps that is part of the problem . Money no longer has a value, it is purely all about numbers and they are driven by that thought of continually upping the numbers . I digress, but only a bit.

Within the Rich list there is a whole bunch of guys and gals ( mainly guys) with heaps of money . During the Pandemic (2020) their combined wealth grew by 22%. I suppose it is not entirely surprising as this bunch of happy bunnies will own and control a greater many resources and when things are tough and resources or access to them becomes tough so their value increases exponentially.

Whilst there are the obvious players such Abramovich, Blavatnik, Dyson , The Hinduja family, there is a group of players who I class as the much ado about nothing, or rather their fortune is built on nothing tangible. I will return to this after taking a pokey at the retailers that still remain in the list . There being a good number, both in terms of bricks and mortar and online.

Bricks & Mortar

Stephen Rubin- £6+billion . family owned Pentland Group amongst the Group are brands such as Kickers, Speedo, Berghaus and a big junk of JD Sports.

Weston Family -£11+billion ,Primark and Selfridges to name but two

Tom Morris £4+billion -Home & Bargain Discount Stores

Mike Ashley £1.9+ -billion Sports Direct

Bernard Lewis £1.9 Billion-River Island

Will Adderley £1.78 billion -Dunelm

Jonas & Mathias Kamprad £1.74 billion -Ikea- Admittedly inherited but they are London based

Chris Dawson -£2+billion -The Range

The Arora Bros £2.5 billion -B&M Stores

Internet (retailers)

Mahmud Kamani £1.4+ billion -Boohoo

Tim Steiner £625 million – Ocado

Alex Chesterman £750 million – Cazoo

I haven’t included those whose operations no longer exist such the worlds favourite retailer Mr Green and Arcadia. But it is surprising, in terms of retail , in the UK, the wealthiest are those with bricks and mortar…… for the moment.

The two wealthiest in the world are both retailers- One primarily stores(but not exclusively) – the other needs no explanation.

No 1 The Walton Family (yes the family that were constantly on our TV’s several years ago -err no actually the owners of Walmart ) £166 Billion.

No 2 Jeff Bezos, soon to be Rocket man, the founder of Amazon £128 billion.

Here’s an illustration of how not bad 2020 was for some…..

The last column on the right illustrates how they ‘suffered’ (Times Rich List- My words ‘suffered’ – not theirs).

But all that, is not what irks me . I have no issue with wealth creation, I have a problem with The Much Ado’s

There are, of course the Peskie Ruskies or more accurately , as they are not all Russian, former Soviets. The Abramoviches, Usmanov, German Khan(actually Ukrainian), Michael Fridman and a whole bunch more whose original assets were obtained by dubious means . It is the wealth that is created by legal but by not creating anything but confidence or analysed and calculated hope . By that I mean people believing that an idea is going to work even though the idea is not even an actuality . For example Denis Sverdlov whose British Manufacturing company of electric vehicles is worth £8.1 billion and not a vehicle has yet been made. This, in itself, is no bad thing if indeed the vehicle is made and successful . But Elon Musk who has been making vehicles for some time, has become one of the worlds richest men without yet making a profit ( I know he made a load of dosh via PayPal, but not through Tesla apart from its share price). Alex Chesterman, Cazoo fame (online car selling platform) , a loss making operation to date was valued at £5 billion on the New York Stock Exchange. It has yet to sell 20,000 cars.

Then there is the readily available lines of credit . Readily ,often for those who don’t need it, but sparse for those that do. There are the Issa brothers, for example, who raised £6.8 Billion , and contributed £780 million to buy Asda. I don’t want to start on cryptocurrency. A concept understood by few, creates nothing tangible, yet (in the case of Bitcoin) has increased in value by over 400% even with having fallen back from its peak. The latest wealth creator being digital art . where has that come from or rather where has the value come from?

it all leads to whole bunch of guys that actually don’t contribute a lot in terms of products, services, or indeed anything useful yet in doing their Much about doing nothing, are worth a ‘elluva lot. At very least Charles Ponzi and Bernard Madoff grafted at being thieving bastards.