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The rupee may be weaker, but the rich are richer

A weaker rupee impacted the majority of the richest but that was offset by Gautam Adani's record gain, which made him the new No 1

November 28, 2022 / 19:02 IST
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After nearly tripling his wealth in 2021, Gautam Adani doubled his fortune this year to $150 billion to become the new No 1

India’s post-pandemic demand revival powered its economy to become the fifth-largest in the world, surpassing the UK. But the stock market was down marginally from a year ago with the biggest dampener being a weaker rupee, which fell by 10 percent over the same period. Despite this, the combined wealth of India’s 100 richest grew by $25 billion to touch $800 billion.

The gain was largely due to a record-breaking feat by infrastructure tycoon Gautam Adani, which changed the pecking order at the top for the first time since 2008. After nearly tripling his wealth in 2021, Adani doubled his fortune this year to $150 billion to become the new No 1—and also, for a while, the second richest person on the planet. The biggest gainer this year in both percentage and dollar terms, Adani announced he would be investing $100 billion over the next decade, 70 percent of it in green energy.

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Mukesh Ambani, who controls Reliance Industries [owner of Network 18, the publisher of Forbes India], the oil and gas to telecom giant, is at No 2 with $88 billion, down 5 percent from last year. Between them, Adani and Ambani now account for 30 percent of the total wealth of India’s 100 richest.

The country’s retailing king, Radhakishan Damani, who owns the DMart chain of supermarkets, broke into the top three for the first time though his net worth declined by 6 percent to $27.6 billion. Another year of bumper profits from Covid-19 vaccines pushed up vaccine baron Cyrus Poonawalla to fourth place with a fortune of $21.5 billion.