billionaire Billionaire businessman launches legal action to keep Origin Energy fracking off NT cattle station By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Sun, 23 Jun 2019 06:04:00 +1000 A businessman and his pastoralist partners launch court action against Origin Energy over its plan for gas exploration on a Northern Territory cattle station. Full Article 783 ABC Alice Springs alicesprings darwin katherine Business Economics and Finance:Industry:Mining Environment:Mining:All Law Crime and Justice:Courts and Trials:All Rural:Mining:All Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870 Australia:NT:Darwin 0800 Australia:NT:Katherine 0850
billionaire Billionaire Ken Fisher’s Dividend Stocks With Upside Potential By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 10:48:41 -0400 Billionaire Ken Fisher is a well-known name on Wall Street, but for those who don’t know or recognize him, he is a money manager who runs Fisher Investments. Fisher Investments has over $80 billion in assets. In addition, Fisher is a popular author, with several of his books becoming New York Times bestsellers and a long-time […] Full Article
billionaire PACs and billionaires continue to fund Colorado’s U.S. Senate candidates By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 22:52:35 +0000 Powered in part by billionaire investors, business titans and a few famous musicians, John Hickenlooper dominated the U.S. Senate race’s fundraising battle in the first three months of 2020. Full Article Colorado News Colorado Politics Election Latest News News Politics Andrew Romanoff campaign finance Cory Gardner Election 2020 John Hickenlooper U.S. Senate 2020
billionaire Kanye Claps Back At Forbes For Labeling Him A Billionaire By feeds.bet.com Published On :: Sat, 25 Apr 2020 11:45:00 EDT He hints at competition with his sis-in-law Kylie Jenner. Full Article Kanye West Music News
billionaire billionaires By www.rosie.com Published On :: Tue, 31 Mar 2020 01:04:08 +0000 how long in time is a million seconds 11 days how long in time is a billion seconds 31 YEARS the country is in lockdown if every American billionaire would donate 2 million dollars a pandemic patriotic tax for the country you love and have profited greatly from for its very survival we look to […] Full Article blog
billionaire Michael Bloomberg Memes That Roast The Cringey Billionaire By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 21 Feb 2020 19:00:00 -0800 You're probably already aware that Michael Bloomberg, cringey billionaire extraordinaire and 2020 presidential candidate, has been reaching out to various big-name meme accounts on Instagram asking them to post content that makes him look a little more...hip to the kids, shall we say? But apparently he's doing something right with his presidential campaign, as he's been soaring in the polls and we're seeing ads for him practically everywhere.Normally we don't like to get too political, but it's clear that Bloomberg was not hugged enough as a child. Full Article cringey michael bloomberg 2020 cringe funny memes president dank memes bloomberg rich people election 2020 billionaire politics
billionaire Billionaire investor sells all airline shares By www.travelmole.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 13:50:01 -0400 Warren Buffett says 'the world has changed' Full Article
billionaire Four billionaires at Glencore By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 04 May 2011 09:04:51 +0000 I can't recall a flotation like it, in terms of the sheer number of executives emerging as wealthy beyond most people's wildest dreams or expectations - not even the conversion of Goldman Sachs into a public company or the listing of Google. When Glencore publishes its full flotation prospectus later this morning, it will show that there are four billionaires working for the world's leading commodities, minerals and energy trader. These are led by the chief executive Ivan Glasenberg, who will be shown to be worth around $10bn. But it is the quartet of billionaires, plus many others worth more than $100m each, and hundreds who are millionaires, that makes Glencore quite extraordinary. Now all the top executives are saying they won't sell any of their shares for five years at least - that they won't use the flotation to cash in. As for Glasenberg, he's pledging not to sell even a single share till he steps down as chief executive. Even so, the stock market listing converts their stakes into currency. These are not paupers. Is there a price for them of this remarkable valuation of their respective Glencore holdings? Well their company is already receiving vastly more public scrutiny - for it's environmental record and tax practices, for example - than it did as a pretty secretive private company over the last 20 years or so. It won't like all this attention - such as claims in this morning's Daily Mail of how Glencore's copper mining operations in Zambia are doing too little for that country. And it certainly didn't enjoy the furore sparked by remarks of the new chairman, Simon Murray, about how women's desire to have babies prevents them rising to then top in business. But some of you might feel that whatever embarrassment is caused to Glencore's bosses will be softened by all that personal wealth. Update 16:44: Oh dear. There’s another billionaire at Glencore I somehow missed.The prospectus – which is longer than Proust, and racier than Proust in parts – shows that the chief executive, Ivan Glasenberg is worth just under $10bn.Also, two of his lieutenants are each worth around $3.7bn, one other has a $3.2bn holding and the fifth in this billionaire quintet has a $2.8bn stake.The poor finance director, Steven Kalmin, is worth a mere $610m.As the FT points out, each one of these has a holding worth more than what the famous (some would use a less flattering epithet) founder of Glencore, Marc Rich, pocketed when he sold the business to management less than 20 years ago. Full Article
billionaire Undercurrents: Episode 13 - India's Billionaires, and Sexual Exploitation in the UN By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Jul 2018 00:00:00 +0100 Full Article
billionaire Episode 34 - The Internet of Vampire Billionaires (IoVB) By play.acast.com Published On :: Fri, 30 Sep 2016 10:20:00 GMT The team are back for the 34th episode of tech chat goodness as host ‘Mysterious’ David Price, acting Editor of Macworld UK invites Henry Burrell, Staff Writer at PC Advisor to talk about FIFA 17 and yearly game cycles. Next into the ring is Tamlin Magee (14 mins), Online Editor at ComputerWorld UK to discuss Oculus Rift’s Palmer Luckey and his odd meme-based support of Trump and the wider net of good-natured tech billionaires. Finally, Charlotte Jee (29 mins) Online Editor at Techworld lets us know why Elon Musk wants to sell you a ticket to space, and why it might actually be possible quite soon. Fill yer boots. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Full Article
billionaire Episode 49 - The Internet of Beans and Dickens (IoBaD) Samsung Galaxy S8, billionaire bunkers and Resident Evil 7 By play.acast.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Jan 2017 11:47:34 GMT Matt Egan hosts as we delve into the tech headlines of the week. Senior Staff Writer at PC Advisor Henry Burrell talks the gang through the latest on Samsung's upcoming smartphone and why it's been delayed, plus another brand comes back from the brink. Online Editor at Techworld Tamlin Magee then explores the strange but true story of Silicon Valley billionaires buying private islands with underground bunkers in case everything really does go Pete Tong. Finally Staff Writer at Macworld UK and PC Advisor Dominic Preston talks us through the frights of the latest Resident Evil game while everyone agrees they can be more terrifying than most horror films. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Full Article tech technology podcast pod samsung samsung galaxy s8 samsung galaxy note 8 galaxy s8 silicon valley resident evil 7
billionaire The billionaire’s dirty little secret / L.J. Diva. By www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au Published On :: Originally published as "Her Secret Island of Sex and Torment" in 2014. Rereleased as "Her Secret Island" in 2016. Full Article
billionaire Billionaire Elon Musk Donates $480K to Help Flint Schools Deal With Water Crisis By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 08 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 The donation comes as Flint city and school leaders continue to grapple with the fallout from a contaminated-water crisis that began in 2015. The filtration systems, which will be installed by January, should allow students to once again district students and staff to drink from and fill up water bo Full Article Michigan
billionaire Fin24.com | Pakistan's 'penniless billionaires' expose money laundering frenzy By www.fin24.com Published On :: Mon, 29 Oct 2018 13:24:13 +0200 It took rickshaw driver Mohammad Rasheed a year to save 300 rupees to buy his daughter a bike, so when he found three billion rupees ($22.5 million) had passed through an unused bank account in his name, he was stunned ... and scared. Full Article
billionaire Elon Musk says he's selling all his possessions so people can't attack him for being a billionaire By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-07T18:00:00Z Tesla CEO is back on Joe Rogan's podcast Full Article
billionaire Elon Musk, Cash-Poor Billionaire... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:38Z Elon Musk, Cash-Poor Billionaire... (Second column, 12th story, link) Related stories:Why Is Stock Market Rallying When Economy Is So Bad?Tech firms emerge as big winners...GRUBHUB Collected Record Fees From Restaurants Struggling To Stay Alive...Hispanic unemployment rate sets new record high: 18.9%... Full Article
billionaire Yeezus! Kanye West is a billionaire, Forbes Magazine reveals By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-25T10:31:01Z Rapper and fashion designer Kanye West is officially a billionaire, according to Forbes Magazine. Full Article
billionaire Nigeria-born billionaire and Mike Tyson associate confident of Barcelona naming rights deal for Camp Nou By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T11:52:00Z David, who was born in Nigeria but has a British passport, owns two companies and also shares a CBD (cannabidiol) business with former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson. Full Article
billionaire Alki David, the British billionaire trying to buy Barcelona stadium's naming rights, plans to 'clone his wife' By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-28T10:27:35Z British billionaire Alki David remains interested in securing the naming rights deal for Barcelona's Camp Nou stadium with his cannabis company and claims he could bring 'great ideas' to the Catalan club, before revealing plans to 'clone his wife'. Full Article
billionaire Chinese billionaire Huang Xiangmo says 'dark forces' behind his $141m tax bill By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Wed, 23 Oct 2019 17:19:00 +1100 Billionaire property developer Huang Xiangmo publishes a lengthy and scathing attack at the ATO, which is pursuing him over a $141 million tax bill, and ASIO, which revoked his permanent residency. Full Article ABC Radio Sydney sydney Government and Politics:All:All Government and Politics:Political Parties:All Law Crime and Justice:All:All Law Crime and Justice:Corruption:All Australia:NSW:Sydney 2000
billionaire While Zaraâs Billionaire Owner Is Lauded For Help, Workers Forced To Work Amid COVID-19 Crisis By www.mensxp.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 13:49:05 +0530 Full Article Trends
billionaire 6 Billionaires Who Filed For Bankruptcy And Went Completely Broke Within No Time By www.mensxp.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 17:34:47 +0530 Full Article Features
billionaire Pharma Billionaire Charged With Penny Stock Fraud By www.forbes.com Published On :: Fri, 07 Sep 2018 20:22:00 +0000 Miami’s Phillip Frost, who built a $2.8 billion fortune in the generic drug business, was allegedly involved in a tawdry stock promotion scheme, the Securities and Exchange Commission says. Full Article ticker=NYSE:OPK byline=Matthew Herper
billionaire Former UBS Banker Sentenced to 40 Months for Aiding Billionaire American Evade Taxes By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 21 Aug 2009 11:59:12 EDT Former UBS banker, Bradley Birkenfeld of Weymouth, Mass., has been sentenced to 40 months incarceration by Judge William J. Zloch in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. On June 19, 2008, Birkenfeld pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud the United States. Full Article OPA Press Releases
billionaire The global poverty gap is falling. Billionaires could help close it. By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Wed, 20 Jan 2016 10:26:00 -0500 This week, the richest business leaders and investors from around the world will gather in Davos, Switzerland, for the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. In keeping with tradition, a small portion of the agenda will be devoted to global development and the plight of people living at the other end of the global income distribution. Philanthropy is one way of linking the fortunes of these disparate communities. What if some of the mega-rich could be persuaded to redistribute their wealth to the extreme poor? This question may feel hackneyed, but it deserves a fresh hearing in light of a dramatic reduction in the global poverty gap over the past several years (Figure 1). The theoretical cost of transfers required to lift all poor people’s income up to the global poverty line of $1.90 a day stood at approximately $80 billion [1] in 2015, down from over $300 billion in 1980. (Values expressed here are in 2015 market dollars.) Figure 1. Official foreign aid now exceeds the annual cost of closing the poverty gap Source: Authors’ calculations based on OECD, World Bank This reduction can be unpacked into two parts. The first is a steep decline in the number of people living below the global poverty line. This is increasingly recognized as one of the defining features of the era. A U.N. goal to halve the poverty rate in the developing world between 1990 and 2015 was nearly achieved twice over. The second and lesser-known factor is the shrinking average distance of the world’s poor from the poverty line. In 1980, the mean daily income of those living below $1.90 was $1.09. In 2012 it was 25 cents higher at $1.34. (Values expressed here in 2011 purchasing power parity dollars.) Despite this good news, global poverty still demands attention. Hundreds of millions of people continue to suffer this most acute form of deprivation. In several countries, the prospects for ending poverty over the next generation, in line with a recently endorsed successor U.N. goal, appear challenging at best. Figure 1 illustrates that in 2006, global aid flows exceeded the cost of the global poverty gap for the first time. This suggests that the elimination of extreme poverty should be possible simply through a more efficient allocation of aid. However, this confuses foreign aid’s goals and functions. The bulk of official foreign aid is used in the provision of public goods, such as physical infrastructure and strengthening institutions. Only 2 percent is directed to social payments and their administration. If the elimination of extreme poverty is to be achieved through targeted transfers, it depends on sources other than foreign aid. The main source of transfers to the poor is welfare programs run and financed by developing countries themselves. These social safety nets have emerged as an increasingly prominent instrument in the toolkit of developing economy governments. Eighty-three percent of developing economies employ unconditional cash transfer programs, although many are small in scale. Several countries are in the process of building the apparatus for more accurate targeting and authentication through the assembly of beneficiary registries and the rolling out of identity programs. In at least 10 developing countries, social safety nets have succeeded in establishing a social floor by lifting all those people under the poverty line up above the threshold. In the vast majority, however, safety nets are insufficiently targeted or generous for that purpose, reflecting not only resource constraints, but also political choices that can be resistant to change. A complementary approach is to consider the role of private mechanisms and wealth. NGOs were among the original pioneers of cash transfers in the developing world. More recently, the NGO GiveDirectly has designed a compelling new method of charitable giving that sends money directly to the poor using digital monitoring and payment technology. Its approach has received strong endorsements from independent charity assessors and has been validated by impact evaluations. Yet the scale of its existing donations remains tiny relative to the global poverty gap. This is where Davos’s global elite could come into play: What difference could a philanthropic donation from the world’s richest people make? Comparing billionaire wealth with the global poverty gap To explore this question, we begin by identifying those developing countries that are home to a least one billionaire. (Our analysis is restricted to billionaires by data, not by the potential largesse of the world’s multi-millionaires. We focus our attention on billionaires in the developing world given the traditional focus of philanthropy on domestic causes.) Let’s assume that the richest billionaire in each country agrees to give away half of his or her current wealth among his or her fellow citizens, disbursed evenly over the next 15 years, roughly in accordance with the Giving Pledge promoted by Bill Gates. That money would be used exclusively to finance transfers to poor people based on their current distance from the poverty line. Transfers would be sustained at the same level for the full 15-year period with the aim of providing a modicum of income security that might allow beneficiaries to sustainably escape from poverty by 2030. Table 1 summarizes the key results. In each of three countries—Colombia, Georgia, and Swaziland—a single individual's act of philanthropy could be sufficient to end extreme poverty with immediate effect. Swaziland is an especially striking case as it is among the world’s poorest countries with 41 percent of its population living under the poverty line. In Brazil, Peru, and the Philippines, poverty could be more than halved, or eliminated altogether if the billionaires could be convinced to match Mark Zuckerberg’s example and increase their donation to 99 percent of their wealth. Table 1. The potential impact on poverty of individual billionaire giving pledges Country Cost per year to close the poverty gap Wealthiest billionaire Net worth Poverty rate pre-transfer Poverty rate post-transfer Nigeria $12,070 m A. Dangote $14,700 m 45% 43% Swaziland $85 m N. Kirsh $3,900 m 41% 0% Tanzania $1,645 m M. Dewji $1,250 m 40% 39% Uganda $1,035 m S. Ruparelia $1,100 m 33% 32% Angola $1,277 m I. dos Santos $3,300 m 28% 25% S. Africa $1,068 m J. Rupert $7,400 m 18% 14% Philippines $648 m H. Sy $14,200 m 12% 3% Nepal $144 m B. Chaudhary $1,300 m 12% 8% India $5,839 m M. Ambani $21,000 m 12% 10% Guatemala $215 m M. Lopez Estrada $1,000 m 12% 10% Venezuela $870 m G. Cisneros $3,600 m 11% 9% Georgia $40 m B. Ivanishvili $5,200 m 10% 0% Indonesia $845 m R. Budi Hartono $9,000 m 9% 6% Colombia $444 m L. C. Sarmiento $13,400 m 7% 0% Brazil $1,223 m J. P. Lemann $25,000 m 4% 1% Peru $95 m C. Rodriguez-Pastor $2,100 m 3% 1% China $3,072 m W. Jianlin $24,200 m 3% 2% Source: Authors’ calculations based on Forbes, International Monetary Fund, PovcalNet, and the World Bank. Poverty rates post-transfer calculated based on average distance of the poor from the poverty line. In other countries—Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda, and Angola—the potential impact on poverty is only modest. A number of factors account for differences between countries, but two factors that penalize African countries are especially noteworthy. First, the depth of poverty in Africa remains high, with 15 percent of the population living on less than $1.00 a day; and second, Africa has relatively high prices compared to other poor regions, which means more dollars are required to deliver the same amount of welfare. For those nations that have more than one billionaire, an alternative scenario is that the country’s club of billionaires makes the pledge together and combines resources to tackle domestic poverty. This would end poverty in China, India, and Indonesia—countries that rank first, second, and fifth globally in terms of the absolute size of their poor populations. The last two columns of Table 2 describe the results. Table 2. The potential impact on poverty of collective billionaire giving pledges Country Cost per year of closing the poverty gap No. of Billionnaires Net Worth Poverty rate pre-transfer Poverty rate post-transfer Nigeria $12,070 m 5 $22,900 m 45% 42% Swaziland $85 m 1 $3,900 m 41% 0% Tanzania $1,645 m 2 $2,250 m 40% 38% Uganda $1,035 m 1 $1,100 m 33% 32% Angola $1,277 m 1 $3,300 m 28% 25% S. Africa $1,068 m 7 $28,550 m 18% 2% Philippines $648 m 11 $51,300 m 12% 0% Nepal $144 m 1 $1,300 m 12% 8% India $5,839 m 90 $294,250 m 12% 0% Guatemala $215 m 1 $1,000 m 12% 10% Venezuela $870 m 3 $9,600 m 11% 7% Georgia $40 m 1 $5,200 m 10% 0% Indonesia $845 m 23 $56,150 m 9% 0% Colombia $444 m 3 $18,500 m 7% 0% Brazil $1,223 m 54 $181,050 m 4% 0% Peru $95 m 6 $8,750 m 3% 0% China $3,072 m 213 $564,700 m 3% 0% Source: Authors’ calculations based on Forbes, IMF, PovcalNet, and the World Bank. Poverty rates post-transfer calculated based on average distance of the poor from the poverty line. This exercise is of course laden with simplifying assumptions. [2] It is intended to provoke discussion, not to provide definitive figures. Moreover, it is open to debate whether transfers represent the most cost-effective way of sustainably ending poverty, the extent to which transfers ought to be targeted, the efficacy of building private transfer programs alongside public safety nets, and whether cash transfers represent the most appropriate use of billionaires’ philanthropy. What is less contestable is that a falling global poverty gap presents an opportunity for more systematic efforts for poverty reduction. This raises the question: How low does the poverty gap have to fall before we explicitly design programs to bring the remaining poor above the poverty line? We would argue that we are already beyond this point, not least in countries that remain a long way from ending poverty. Were a billionaire at Davos to commit to using his or her wealth in this fashion, it could trigger a powerful demonstration effect of innovative solutions—not just for other billionaires, but for countries that are currently at risk of being left behind. [1] The cost of the global poverty gap in 2015 is an overestimate compared with the World Bank’s tentative poverty estimate for the same year. This is due to a different treatment of Nigeria. For this exercise, we rely on data from the 2009/10 Harmonized Nigeria Living Standards Survey reported in PovcalNet, despite its well-documented problems, whereas the Bank draws on the 2010/11 General Household Survey. [2] Simplifying assumptions include: zero administrative costs in identifying the poor, assessing their income, and administering payments with no leakages, or no portion of those costs being borne by billionaires; the efficacy of administering miniscule transfers to those who stand on the margin of the poverty line; and no change in the cost of closing the poverty gap in a country over time, whether due to population growth, an increase or decrease in poverty, or a change in prices relative to the dollar. Authors Laurence ChandyLorenz NoeChristine Zhang Full Article
billionaire Can Billionaires Buy Elections? By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 10:00:00 -0500 The news that Charles and David Koch and their network of conservative activists plan to spend $889 million on the 2016 elections has sent shockwaves throughout the political landscape. Publicized this week at a California gathering hosted by the business group Freedom Partners, this declaration of financial war raises the question of whether billionaires and their allies can buy elections. As I note in my Brookings Institution Press book Billionaires: Reflections on the Upper Crust, the answer in 2012 clearly was no. A few billionaires devoted several hundred million dollars seeking to defeat President Barack Obama yet lost. Republicans nominated a candidate who was easy to caricature as an out-of-touch plutocrat who did not share the values of ordinary Americans. The President was successful in using that stereotype to mobilize voters, expand the electorate, and appeal to basic fairness on the part of the general public. Yet 2014 was a different story. Conservative billionaires were far more successful in helping Republicans regain control of the Senate, boost their House numbers, and increase their domination over governorships and state legislatures. The country now has GOP control of the House and Senate, and 31 governorships across the country. In analyzing why they lost the 2012 presidential campaign, conservative billionaires decided they needed to recalibrate their message and strategy for the midterms. For example, Americans for Prosperity (AFP) focused on ads that employed moving personal stories to deliver policy messages and a robust field operation. Central to their approach was the idea that Obamacare was a failure and hurting ordinary people. Explaining this communications shift, AFP President Tim Phillips told a reporter that “too often, we did kind of broader statistical ads or messages, and we decided that we needed to start telling the story of how the liberals’ policies, whether it’s the administration or Congress, are practically impacting the lives of Americans every day.” Media expert Elizabeth Wilner of Kantar Media/CMAG correctly anticipated that those kinds of ads would have a greater likelihood of electoral success. “Ads that tell stories are more compelling than ads that don’t,” she said. “And ads that use sympathetic figures are more compelling, generally, than those that don’t.” In looking ahead to 2016, there are ominous signs that big money may distort the election outcome. Wealthy interests were far more likely in 2012 to contribute to Republicans than Democrats. Even if Democrats mobilize liberal billionaires, the GOP nominee is going to have a substantial fundraising advantage. Money alone, of course, does not dictate elections. Research shows clearly that public opinion, media coverage, campaign strategies, policy positions, and the nature of the times matter as well. However, during a time of rising campaign costs and limited public engagement in the political process, big money sets the agenda, affects how the campaign develops, and shapes how particular people and policy problems get defined. It takes skilled candidates, favorable media coverage, and strong organizational efforts to offset the power of great wealth. There are no guarantees that the future Democratic nominee will replicate Obama’s 2012 success. If Republicans nominate someone who relates well to ordinary voters and they tone down policies that disproportionately benefit the wealthy, the money story in 2016 likely will turn out very different from the last time. Billionaire activism very well could tilt a close election in favor of conservative interests. Authors Darrell M. West Image Source: © Carlo Allegri / Reuters Full Article
billionaire Should Billionaires Be Forced to Pay a 1% Tax for International Development? By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Jul 2012 12:32:00 -0400 A new UN report says that a 1% tax levies on the world's 1,225 billionaires would more than make up for the shortfall in development aid from governments. Full Article Business
billionaire The billionaire fighting to stop Keystone XL By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 09 Sep 2013 11:55:17 -0400 In the current issue of the The New Yorker, Ryan Lizza tells the story of how Tom Steyer, "a fifty-six-year-old billionaire" has thrown his clout and money behind the effort to stop the Keystone XL pipeline. Full Article Energy
billionaire Elon Musk's lavish LA mansions appear to be listed for sale days after billionaire pledged to 'own no house' By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 00:16:37 GMT The homes have a combined value of $39.5 million. Full Article
billionaire Billionaire Barry Diller says bail out everyone and 'worry about paying the bills later' By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 13:15:55 GMT "The damage that is being done every day is enormous," Expedia and IAC Chairman Barry Diller told CNBC on Thursday. Full Article
billionaire Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris sees oil at $100 in 18 months, says he would buy airlines By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 09:58:55 GMT Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris said he would buy airlines, going against fellow billionaire investor Warren Buffett, who announced that Berkshire Hathaway sold all airline stocks at the firm's annual meeting on Saturday. Full Article
billionaire Oil could hit $100 in next 18 months: Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 09:40:45 GMT Oil prices could rise to $100 in the next 18 months, given that the fallout from the Russia-Saudi oil war has effectively killed the shale industry in the United States for the next year or so, says Naguib Sawiris, chairman and CEO at Orascom Investment Holding. Full Article
billionaire Individual investors pulled $20 million from Fisher Investments following billionaire's sexist comments By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2019 18:15:02 GMT While institutional investors have pulled more than $3 billion from the Camas, Washington-based firm in the wake of Ken Fisher's comments, retail clients have had a more muted reaction. Here's why individual investors may be slow to divest. Full Article
billionaire America's billionaires are giving to charity – but much of it is self-serving rubbish | Robert Reich By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-04-12T05:00:33Z Well-publicized philanthropy shows how afraid the super-rich are of a larger social safety net – and higher taxes As millions of jobless Americans line up for food or risk their lives delivering essential services, the nation’s billionaires are making conspicuous donations – $100m from Amazon’s Jeff Bezos for food banks, billions from Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates for a coronavirus vaccine, thousands of ventilators and N95 masks from Elon Musk, $25m from the Walton family and its Walmart foundation. The list goes on. Related: Call for super-rich to donate more to tackle coronavirus pandemic Why should we believe that Gates or any other billionaire’s 'boldness' necessarily reflects society’s values and needs?Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a columnist for Guardian US Continue reading... Full Article Coronavirus outbreak US news US politics US taxation US healthcare US domestic policy Amazon Jeff Bezos Elon Musk Tesla Bill Gates Microsoft Walmart
billionaire billionaire soup By www.toothpastefordinner.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Feb 2019 04:00:00 EST Today on Toothpaste For Dinner: billionaire soupThe Worst Things For Sale is Drew's blog. It updates every day. Subscribe to the Worst Things For Sale RSS! Full Article comic
billionaire billionaires in space By www.toothpastefordinner.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Sep 2019 04:00:00 EDT Today on Toothpaste For Dinner: billionaires in spaceThe Worst Things For Sale is Drew's blog. It updates every day. Subscribe to the Worst Things For Sale RSS! Full Article comic
billionaire With net worth of USD 44 billion, Mukesh Ambani top Indian in Forbes world billionaires' list By www.mid-day.com Published On :: 6 May 2020 10:27:59 GMT Reliance Industries' Chairman Mukesh Ambani has been ranked 17th in the latest world billionaires list by Forbes with a net worth of $44.3 billion – once again leading the tally from India's perspective. Mukesh Ambani chairs and runs $88 billion (revenue) oil and gas giant Reliance Industries, among India's most valuable companies. Reliance Jio has signed on more than 340 million customers by offering free domestic voice calls, dirt-cheap data services, and virtually free smartphones, said the report. The next Indian on the 34th annual list -- veteran Mumbai investor Radhakishan Damani who is touted as India's retail king after the March 2017 IPO of his supermarket chain DMart – is at a distant 65th position with a net worth of $16.6 billion. Damani got into retailing in 2002 with one store in suburban Mumbai and has been unstoppable since. His property portfolio includes the 156-room Radisson Blu Resort in Alibag and a popular beach-front getaway close to Mumbai, according to the report. At 114th position, HCL Technologies Founder Shiv Nadar is worth $12.4 billion. One of India's leading philanthropists, Nadar has donated $662 million to his Shiv Nadar Foundation. While Hinduja brothers are at 116th position with $12.2 billion net worth. Srichand and Gopichand live in London and Prakash resides in Monaco while the youngest sibling Ashok oversees their Indian interests from Mumbai. At 138th position, Uday Kotak is worth $10.7 billion. His Kotak Mahindra Bank is now among India's top four banks in the private sector, boosted by its 2014 acquisition of ING Bank's Indian operations. In January this year, the bank reached an agreement with the Reserve Bank of India over the issue of reducing Kotak's stake in the bank to 26 per cent. Telecom tycoon Sunil Mittal is at 154th position with $9.5 billion net worth. Bharti Airtel today is among India's largest mobile phone operators with more than 418 million customers. Others in the latest list are Cyrus Poonawalla who is founder of Serum Institute of India (at 161th position with $9.2 billion net worth), Gautam Adani at 162th position with $9.2 billion net worth and steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal with $8.9 billion net worth at 170th spot, among others. Catch up on all the latest Crime, National, International and Hatke news here. Also download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates. Mid-Day is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@middayinfomedialtd) and stay updated with the latest news Full Article
billionaire From Ambani to Jeff Bezos: 9 most ridiculous things owned by world's top billionaires By Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 18:25:06 +0530 From Mukesh Ambani's Antilla to Roman Abramovich's Eclipse yacht, check out the nine most ridiculous things owned by the world's top billionaires. Full Article
billionaire Billionaire vs president — Assad family dispute grips Syria By www.ft.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 04:00:10 GMT Rami Makhlouf’s complaints against his cousin show strains in power structure Full Article
billionaire Billionaires have never had it so good By www.ft.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2019 05:00:37 GMT Fortunes are created by technology and globalisation, as well as talent and enterprise Full Article
billionaire Replacing plastic with plant pulp for sustainable packaging attracts a billionaire backer By techcrunch.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 18:22:58 +0000 In a small suburb of Melbourne, two entrepreneurs are developing a technology that could mean big changes for the packaging industry. Stuart Gordon and Mark Appleford are the co-founders of Varden, a company that has developed a process to take the waste material from sugarcane and convert it into a paper-like packaging product with the […] Full Article GreenTech Recent Funding Startups TC Australia economy european union Horizons Ventures Intel Labels Li Ka-shing Marketing materials Melbourne nestle New Zealand packaging plastics potato chips product management sustainable packaging Varden Walmart
billionaire The REAL Belgravia: How district which inspired ITV drama went from marshland to Billionaire Square By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Mon, 16 Mar 2020 17:48:03 GMT Following the premier of Belgravia, FEMAIL takes a look at the historical references weaved into Julian Fellowe's narrative - including the real life scandal that inspired the protagonists' love affair. Full Article
billionaire Kanye West officially becomes a billionaire according to Forbes report By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Sat, 25 Apr 2020 03:28:49 GMT Kanye West has officially joined the billionaires club. Full Article
billionaire Kanye West buys his childhood home after being named a billionaire by Forbes By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 23:49:57 GMT Kanye West has reportedly purchased his childhood home in Chicago's South Shore neighborhood, just a week after Forbes Magazine named him as a billionaire. Full Article
billionaire Kourtney Kardashian feels pressure by Kylie Jenner becoming a billionaire By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 17 Sep 2019 11:32:16 GMT When stopping by season six of The Real in LA on Monday, the 40-year-old TV star revealed there is plenty of sibling rivalry in her family. Full Article
billionaire Billionaire Christian Candy has bought up whole Surrey neighbourhood By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 21 Aug 2019 10:08:09 GMT Billionaire Christian Candy and wife Emily Crompton live with their children in a £30 million Surrey house. Over the past four years, they have spent a further £20 million buying up four neighbouring properties. Full Article
billionaire Trump mocks Rand Paul's low poll numbers and says 'he will announce soon' that he's quitting – but the feisty Kentucky senator says he'll outlast the billionaire 'clown' By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 29 Sep 2015 23:18:45 GMT DEJA VU? Eight days before Trump rival Rick Perry dropped out on September 11, The Donald publicly predicted it – and Perry issued a vehement denial. Full Article
billionaire Bernie Sanders learns Mike Bloomberg has dropped out on live TV HOURS after billionaire quit By Published On :: Wed, 04 Mar 2020 21:02:38 +0000 Bernie Sanders learned Wednesday from a reporter during a press conference that Mike Bloomberg had dropped out of the Democratic primary race. Full Article
billionaire Billionaire Mike Bloomberg launches presidential bid promising to make wealthy 'pay more in tax' By Published On :: Sun, 24 Nov 2019 15:20:58 +0000 Michael Bloomberg has officially announced he is running for president, bringing the Democratic primary field back up to 19 candidates. Full Article
billionaire Jeff Bezos is Lizzo's 'biggest fan' as billionaire cozies up to performer at the Super Bowl in Miami By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Mon, 03 Feb 2020 17:52:51 GMT The 31-year-old singer looked incredible in a form-fitting pink dress while snapping photos with the Amazon billionaire at the Hard Rock Stadium. Full Article