Stocks Recommendations

Business - News

Business News

Thursday, November 13, 2008

India's richest have suffered a value erosion of a massive $212 bn

India's richest have suffered a value erosion of a massive $212 bn largely due to the global financial turmoil, which took a toll on the equity markets as well as property prices, Forbes says.
.rightDiv2{float:right;position:relative;width:220px;BORDER:#787962 1px solid;padding:5px}







Business-Standard ::





window.google_render_ad();

Also Read

News Now
Paper
Specials
-
Nifty Futures on SGX down 1%
-
Xerox India names Mark Pettit as executive director of XGS
-
BT to cut 10,000 Jobs; may impact IT jobs in India
-
Air France flights face severe strike disruption
-
Global fin crisis to slow worldwide 2009 IT spending
-
Mercator, Infy to set up development centre in Chennai
More

Also Read

News Now
Paper
Specials
-
DoCoMo pays $2.7 bn for 26% in Tata Tele
-
Industrial output rebounds in Sept
-
Sun still shines on summer placements
-
Commodity price crash hurts firms
-
Hinduja Foundries to cut production
More

Also Read

News Now
Paper
Specials

-
US Election: Obama elected 44th US President
-
Q2 FY09 Results: Earnings season
-
Subprime Crisis: US faces economic turmoil
-
Fighting Inflation : Inflation at a 13-year high
-
Your Money : Personal finance
-
Credit Policy : RBI's monetary policy review
-
Tracking the downturn :
Economic slowdown and its impact




-
Time Out :
food, travel, sports, health...



-->
More
Mentioning that these are painful times for India's tycoons, Forbes said compared with the last year, the net-worth of the country's 40 wealthiest people fell by $ 212 bn to $139 bn. The combined net-worth of India's 40 richest has nosedived by 60%, hitting steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal the hardest, as he had to vacate the four-year held Numero Uno position to Reliance Industries' Mukesh Ambani. Mittal saw his fortune drop by $30.5 bn amid declining steel prices. Last year, Mittal had a net-worth of $ 51 bn. Meanwhile, the Ambani Brothers -- Mukesh and Anil -- together lost as much as $60.7 bn since the past year. The wealth erosion was across the board as on an average 33 of the 34 people that returned to the list this year have become poorer by at least 20%, Forbes said. "Thirty three of the 34 tycoons who returned to the our rankings of India's richest are at least 20% poorer than they were a year ago," the magazine said. "Only one fortune from last year's ranks increased, that of brothers Malvinder and Shivinder Singh, who sold their 34% stake in Ranbaxy Laboratories to Japan's Daiichi Sankyo at a hefty premium to its current stock price. They added $550 mn to their combined wealth," it added. The factors that were responsible for pulling down the fortune of these billionaires include the massive erosion in the country's benchmark index that fell as much as 48% since last year. Besides, the rupee depreciating 24% against the dollar and slowdown in GDP growth has also impacted the list

No comments:

Blog Archive