|
The global financial crisis has hit the
subcontinent hard--the wealthiest Indians are worth 60% less than
a year ago.
These are painful times for India's richest as the ongoing global
turmoil drastically reshapes their fortunes. The country's once
soaring stock market fell 48% in the 12
months, the rupee depreciated 24% against the dollar
and gross domestic product growth is expected to slow down to 7.5%,
partly owing to double-digit inflation.
All of this conspired to knock 60% off the combined fortunes of
the nation's 40 wealthiest.
Their total net worth fell $212 billion, to $139 billion, down from
$351 billion a year ago.
Last year's No. 1, U.K. resident Lakshmi Mittal, dropped $30.5 billion
amid plunging steel
prices, but he slips only a bit, to No. 2. Mukesh Ambani, who oversees
petrochemicals giant Reliance Industries, grabs the top spot for
the first time, despite losing $28.2 billion in the past year. His
estranged brother, Anil, ranked third, is the biggest dollar loser,
down $32.5 billion.
Others were nearly wiped out entirely. India's wind power man Tulsi
Tanti and his brothers lost 91% of their fortune, amid reports about
the poor quality of Suzlon's wind blades. Real estate fortunes were
among those hit the hardest. K.P.Singh lost $27.2 billion since
we last published our listing but is down an astonishing $39 billion
since his DLF stock peaked in January. Property tycoon Ramesh Chandra's
net worth dropped 91% to $1 billion. His Unitech lost half its market
capitalization in one day last month.
Thirty-three of the 34 tycoons who returned to our ranking of India's
richest are at least 20% poorer than they were a year ago. Only
one fortune from last year's ranks increased, that of brothers Malvinder
and Shivinder Singh, who sold their 34% stake in generic drug firm
Ranbaxy Laboratories to Japan's Daiichi Sankyo at a hefty premium
to its current stock price. They added $550 million to their combined
wealth.
Others with pharmaceuticals fortunes outperformed the market, but
thanks to a sliding rupee, their net worth fell too. Dilip Shanghvi
of SunPharma, India's most valuable drug maker, was poorer by $800
million, despite an increase in his net worth in rupees.
Six people dropped off our list altogether after losing a collective
$7.9 billion. They included flamboyant liquor and airlines tycoon
Vijay Mallya, whose Kingfisher Airlines
is racking up losses, and Gautam Thapar, whose Ballarpur Industries
is India's largest paper maker. Taking their places are four newcomers,
including Micky Jagtiani, who oversees a retailing empire in the
Middle East, and Hemant Shah, son of a Bollywood film producer,
who made his fortune in construction.
Some more sobering statistics: While all 40 tycoons were
billionaires last year, only 27 now have 10-figure fortunes, nine
fewer than in 2006.
These net worths are snapshots of wealth taken on Nov. 3,
when we locked in market prices and exchange rates. Had we
locked in just a week earlier, the losses would have been still
greater, as the nation's main index gained 21% in the days leading
up to our list publication.
Privately held companies were valued by comparing them to similar
public companies. Indian nonresidents like Lakshmi Mittal were included
as long as they still hold Indian citizenship. This ranking, unlike
the Forbes billionaires list, includes family fortunes.
|
Top-20 Richest Indians
|
|
Rank
|
Name
|
Net Worth ($mil)
|
Age
|
City
|
|
1
|
Mukesh Ambani |
1 20,800
|
51
|
Mumbai
|
|
2
|
Lakshmi Mittal |
20,500
|
58
|
London
|
|
3
|
Anil Ambani |
12,500
|
49
|
Mumbai
|
|
4
|
Sunil Mittal |
7,900
|
51
|
Delhi
|
|
5
|
Kushal Pal Singh |
7,800
|
77
|
Delhi
|
|
6
|
Shashi & Ravi Ruia |
7,600
|
64
|
Mumbai
|
|
7
|
Azim Premji |
7,000
|
63
|
Bangalore
|
|
8
|
Kumar Birla |
5,000
|
41
|
Mumbai
|
|
9
|
Adi Godrej |
4,000
|
66
|
Mumbai
|
|
10
|
Gautam Adani |
3,900
|
46
|
Ahmedabad
|
|
11
|
Dilip Shanghvi |
3,100
|
53
|
Mumbai
|
|
12
|
Savitri Jindal |
2,900
|
59
|
Delhi & Hisar
|
|
13
|
Malvinder & Shivinder
Singh |
2,800
|
36
|
Delhi
|
|
14
|
Anil Agarwal |
2,400
|
55
|
London
|
|
15
|
Shiv Nadar |
2,200
|
63
|
Delhi
|
|
16
|
Micky Jagtiani |
2,000
|
57
|
Dubai
|
|
17
|
Indu Jain |
1,800
|
72
|
Delhi
|
|
18
|
Cyrus Poonawalla |
1,600
|
67
|
Pune
|
|
19
|
Uday Kotak |
1,550
|
49
|
Mumbai
|
|
20
|
Chandru Raheja |
1,500
|
68
|
Mumbai
|
Source: Naazneen Karmali, Forbes Magazine, November-08
|