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UBS sees shift in new billionaires away from entrepreneurs to inherited wealth

Published 2023-11-30, 03:10 a/m
© Reuters. The logo of UBS is seen prior to a press conference of the Swiss bank after the takeover of Credit Suisse, in Zurich, Switzerland, August 31, 2023. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
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ZURICH (Reuters) - Billionaires increased in numbers and overall wealth last year, Swiss bank UBS said on Thursday, with the fortunes inherited by the newly-minted super-rich exceeding cash generated by self-made billionaires for the first time in years.

The number of billionaires rose by 7% to 2,544 people globally, UBS said in its 2023 Billionaires Ambitions Report, with their total worth rising by 9% to an estimated $12 trillion.

For the first time since the study started in 2015, billionaires accumulated more wealth via inheritance than through their own business activities.

Among the 137 new billionaires, a total of $150.8 billion was inherited by 53 heirs over the last year, exceeding the 84 new self-made billionaires' total of $140.7 billion, the bank said.

The generational wealth transfer is gaining momentum as more money passes through the generations, said UBS, which oversees $5.5 trillion in invested assets and is one of the world's biggest wealth managers.

"This is a theme we expect to see more of over the next 20 years, as more than 1,000 billionaires pass an estimated $5.2 trillion to their children," said Benjamin Cavalli, head of strategic clients at UBS Global Wealth Management.

Cavalli said the generational shift presented a big opportunity for UBS, but was also was risky as years-long relationships ended and the owners of massive wealth changed.

The bank, which has a business relationship with around half of world's billionaires, works with the second, third and fourth generations of families.

"Over the next 20 – 30 years you can either be on the winning side or receiving side of it," he said referring to the wealth transfer. "Or you also happen to be in a vacuum and lose substantial assets if you do not know the potential beneficiaries," he told reporters.

The study highlighted a trend away from self-made billionaires, created by the tech industry boom and symbolised by the rise of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) boss Elon Musk and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) founder Jeff Bezos.

But this development has paused as many business founders - who also benefited from expanding financial markets, rising property prices and the growth of emerging markets - age and pass on their wealth to the next generation, UBS said.

A reduced number in company flotations in 2022 and early 2023 has also limited the opportunity for entrepreneurs to realise the value of their businesses, UBS said.

© Reuters. The logo of UBS is seen prior to a press conference of the Swiss bank after the takeover of Credit Suisse, in Zurich, Switzerland, August 31, 2023. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

Still, despite the large inherited wealth, this did not necessarily mean a new generation of super-rich 20 somethings.

"Very often they are rather 50+," Michael Viana, head of strategic client coverage at UBS. "It is actually more the King Charles effect, they actually are quite advanced in age as well when taking over."

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