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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Michael Sainato

Billionaires added record $2.2tn in wealth in 2025

People dressed as the super-rich hold signs that say 'Tax Day is my favorite holiday' and hold champagne flutes.
Activist group Trillionaires for Trump protest outside the IRS on tax day, 15 April 2025. Photograph: Melissa Bender/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

The richest 500 individuals in the world added a record $2.2tn to their wealth in 2025, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, with just eight billionaires accounting for a quarter of the gains.

The gains increased their collective net worth to $11.9tn, bolstered by billionaire Donald Trump’s 2024 election victory and booming markets in cryptocurrencies, equities and metals.

Around a quarter of the gains were attributed to eight billionaires, including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Oracle chair Larry Ellison and Alphabet Inc co-founder Larry Page, though 2024 saw more concentrated net worth gains with the same eight billionaires making up 43% of total net worth gains for the wealthiest 500 individuals in the world.

Ellison saw a net worth gain in 2025 of $57.7bn, bringing his total net worth to $249.8bn.

Elon Musk’s net worth soared by $190.3bn, to $622.7bn. Australian billionaire Gina Rinehart saw her net worth nearly triple from $12.6bn to $37.7bn through her rare -earth metals portfolio.

A handful of billionaires experienced declines in their net worth, including Philippine billionaire Manuel Villar, who lost $12.6bn.

Villar’s net worth dropped to $10bn after shares of his property development firm, Golden MV Holdings Inc, dropped by 80% at the end of a six-month trading suspension for the firm.

According to OxFam, a global confederation of non-government organizations, the $2.2tn growth in net worth for the world’s wealthiest 500 individuals would have been enough to lift 3.8 billion people out of poverty.

“Inequality is a deliberate policy choice. Despite record wealth at the top, public wealth is stagnating, even declining, and debt distress is growing,” said Oxfam’s international executive director, Amitabh Behar, in a statement.

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