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More Billionaires in U.S.
September 23, 2004
NEW YORK (AP)--The nation's billionaire's
club may not be quite as exclusive as it once was.
There are now 313 billionaires in the U.S.,
the largest number ever and a huge jump over last year's 262
members, according to Forbes magazine, which Thursday released
its annual ranking of the 400 richest Americans.
The combined net worth of the 400 rose $45
billion, reaching $1 trillion this year for the first time
since 2000, before the dot-com bust.
Retaining the top spot was Microsoft (MSFT)
founder Bill Gates, whose $48 billion in estimated wealth
was up $2 billion from 2003. Gates was again followed by investor
Warren Buffett with $41 billion, the list's biggest dollar
gainer with a $5 billion increase, and Microsoft co-founder
Paul Allen, who held the No. 3 spot although his net worth
fell $2 billion to $20 billion.
Members of the Walton family, whose fortune
comes from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT), again swept spots four
through eight, with each having estimated wealth of $18 billion.
The only change in the top 10 came from
Dell Computer's (DELL) Michael Dell and Oracle Corp.'s (ORCL)
Lawrence Ellison, now No. 9 and No. 10, respectively, after
swapping places from 2003. Michael Dell had a net worth of
$14.2 billion; Ellison, $13.7 billion.
There were 45 new names, including Google
Inc.'s (GOOG) Sergey Brin and Larry E. Page - also the youngest
members at 31. They tied for No. 43 with $4 billion each.
Fifty-four people dropped off the list, including Disney's
(DIS) Michael Eisner.
The city with the most members is New York
with 38; California is the top state with 98 members.
Donald Trump's net worth edged up to $2.6
billion, but he slipped to No. 74 from 71. Returning after
a year's absence was Teresa Heinz Kerry, wife of Democratic
presidential nominee John Kerry; her $750 million tied her
for last place.
Forbes senior editor Peter Newcomb attributed
the list's overall gains to the improving economy, as well
as a good year in the financial sector and industries including
food and wine.
If the economy's upward trend continues,
"it won't be too long before our entire list consists
of billionaires," he said.
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