Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Here are the 44 new members of The Forbes 400 (net worths are as of September 3, 2021)
    • Miriam Adelson. Net Worth: $30.4 billion. Source of wealth: Casinos. Adelson inherited her late husband’s 57% stake in Las Vegas Sands, the publicly traded gambling empire with casinos in Singapore and Macau, after his death in January.
    • Sam Bankman-Fried. Net Worth: $22.5 billion. Source of wealth: Cryptocurrency. The 29-year-old MIT grad owes most of his $22.5 billion fortune to his stake in the cryptocurrency derivatives exchange FTX—which he cofounded in 2019—and his share of its FTT tokens.
    • Jeff Yass. Net Worth: $12 billion. Source of wealth: Trading, investments. The former pro gambler joins The Forbes 400 thanks to his stake in trading firm Susquehanna International Group, which he cofounded in 1987 and built into one of the most successful firms on Wall Street.
    • Sergei Klebnikov
    • Jim Simons. Forbes 400 Rank: #28. Net Worth: $24.4 billion. 2020 Net Worth: $23.5 billion. America’s richest hedge fund manager for the fourth year running, Jim Simons founded Long Island-based Renaissance Technologies in 1982.
    • Ray Dalio. Forbes 400 Rank: #36. Net Worth: $20 billion. 2020 Net Worth: $16.9 billion. Ray Dalio famously started Bridgewater Associates in 1975 out of his two-bedroom apartment in New York.
    • Carl Icahn. Forbes 400 Rank: #43. Net Worth: $16.6 billion. 2020 Net Worth: $14 billion. Another Wall Street legend, activist investor Carl Icahn has been making an impact on corporate America for decades.
    • Ken Griffin. Forbes 400 Rank: #47. Net Worth: $16.1 billion. 2020 Net Worth: $15 billion. Ken Griffin runs Citadel, a Chicago-based hedge fund firm he founded in 1990 that manages roughly $39 billion in assets.
    • Here are the 24 real estate billionaires on The Forbes 400: (Net worths are as of September 3, 2021)
    • Donald Bren. Net Worth: $16.2 billion (Up from $15.3 billion in 2020) Residence: Newport Beach, California. The founder of real estate colossus the Irvine Company retains his spot as the richest real estate billionaire in the U.S. As the owner of Irvine, Bren oversees an empire with more than 126 million square feet of real estate across southern California, much of it in Orange County, as well as more than 560 office buildings—including a 97% stake in Manhattan's MetLife Building—and 125 apartment complexes.
    • Stephen Ross. Net Worth: $8.3 billion (Up from $7.2 billion) Residence: New York, NY. A former tax attorney, Ross founded Related Companies as a developer of affordable housing in 1972 and grew it to a giant that has developed or acquired more than $60 billion in real estate.
    • Sun Hongbin. Net Worth: $6.9 billion (New) Residence: Tianjin, China. The Tianjin-based real estate developer is the only real estate tycoon on The Forbes 400 who doesn’t live in the U.S. His Hong Kong-listed Sunac China Holdings owns nearly 150,000 acres of real estate and land across China, with the largest footprint in the southwestern city of Chongqing.
  1. Apr 2, 2022 · Richard Hayne. Net worth: $1.2 billion. The Hayne File: Philadelphia’s Hayne is the Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Urban Outfitters. He is the 2,313th wealthiest person in...

    • Abigail P. Johnson
    • Edward C. Johnson III
    • John E. Abele
    • Peter M. Nicholas
    • Amos Barr Hostetter Jr.
    • (Tie) Herb Chambers
    • John P. “Jack” Manning
    • (Tie) James S. Davis
    • Arthur S. Demoulas
    • Stephen R. Karp

    44, Milton; president, Fidelity Employer Services $13.5 billion The sixth-wealthiest woman in America, Johnson last year abruptly left the Fidelity funds’ board of trustees and was transferred from her job at the head of the underperforming mutual-funds division. But don’t worry: She’ll be okay. Johnson is reportedly the company’s single-biggest sh...

    75, Nahant; CEO and chair, Fidelity Investments $6.5 billion Some speculate that Johnson will finally go out to pasture within five years. But make no mistake: The old lion still roars. When the SEC said it would bar executives who chair mutual fund companies from having a financial interest in the funds they manage, Johnson fired off a scathing op...

    69, Concord; director, Boston Scientific $3.3 billion After meeting at their kids’ soccer game, Abele and Peter Nicholas (No. 4) cofounded Boston Scientific in 1979 and together still own about a third of the medical equipment leader, which stands to become the state’s largest publicly held company with its $27 billion acquisition of Guidant. Abele...

    64, Boston; chair, Boston Scientific $2.8 billion The businessman to cofounder John Abele’s scientist, Nicholas knows exactly what money can buy. At his alma mater, Duke, for example, $20 million got him the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences in 1995 (he’s gone on to donate another $100 million to the university). Boston Scientif...

    69, Boston; chair, Pilot House Associates $2.3 billion Hostetter saw the potential of cable TV when everybody else was still struggling with rabbit ears. Foresight like that pays off: He sold Continental Cablevision, which he cofounded with Celtics CEO Wyc Grousbeck’s father, Irv, for $11.6 billion. Now he lives on Beacon Hill, near the Kerrys and ...

    64, Boston and Old Lyme, CT; president, the Herb Chambers Companies $1.8 billion Chambers, who never went to college, was a Dorchester boy just out of the Navy when he talked his way into a job fixing copy machines in Cambridge. By the time he was 22, he had started his own copier distribution company, which he eventually sold for $80 million. Cham...

    57, Boston; CEO and president, Boston Capital $1.8 billion Manning’s company is the fifth-largest owner of apartments in America, with 147,000 of them in 48 states. His wealth and his role as a Democratic fundraiser also make him very well connected; if his friend John Kerry had been elected president, Manning might now be our ambassador to Ireland...

    62, Newton; CEO and chair, New Balance $1.6 billion Davis hustled to put together the $10,000 down payment for New Balance, which he bought on Marathon Monday in 1972. Good deal. Now New Balance and Reebok are neck and neck for the title of America’s second-largest athletic shoe brand (Nike is first).

    47, Concord; director, Demoulas Super Markets $1.6 billion The longest (15 years), costliest (at least $13 million) civil litigation in state history whittled away at the Demoulas fortune as two sides of the family struggled for control of their $2 billion-a-year Market Basket chain. But the Supreme Court has now put an ostensible end to the saga b...

    65, Weston; CEO and chair, New England Development $1.6 billion A few years after making his way through BU by working summers in construction, Karp convinced his then employer, a real estate development firm, to go in with him on a shopping center in Danvers. The Liberty Tree Mall became the first in a string of 20 malls he would develop, before s...

  2. www.cbre.com › people › richard-levineRichard P. Levine | CBRE

    Richard P. Levine has 25 years of experience in the commercial real estate industry. Since joining CBRE in 1988, he has represented New York based clientele throughout the New York region, and coordinated the firm’s resources to serve these groups nationally. He is a senior member of CBRE's Downtown New York office.

  3. Richard P. Levine was born on October 22, 1945 in the USA. Richard P. is a producer, known for A Bridge Too Far (1977), Magic (1978) and Tattoo (1981).

  1. People also search for