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I was looking at the latest richest people in the world over the past few months, and I have to say the numbers are truly impressive. The concentration of wealth among tech founders has become almost surreal, especially when you look at how it has evolved from January to now.
Elon Musk continues to dominate historically with around $726 billion. It's not just Tesla; it's the entire ecosystem: SpaceX, which is changing the space industry; Starlink, expanding global connectivity; and then there's the AI and neurotechnology components. It's hard to find a precedent in modern history for this level of personal wealth concentrated in a single individual.
After him, the list of the world's richest people features Larry Page and Jeff Bezos in very solid positions. Page is around $270 billion thanks to Alphabet's dominance in artificial intelligence, while Bezos is at $255 billion with AWS and logistics continuing to drive growth. Sergey Brin, Larry Ellison, and others are not far behind, but the gap remains significant.
What strikes me is how this list of the world's richest is entirely driven by three factors: the explosion of AI, the growth of semiconductors, and space valuation. It's no coincidence that the names at the top are those who bet heavily on these technologies years ago and have maintained their stakes.
Mark Zuckerberg at $233 billion, Bernard Arnault at $205 billion, Steve Ballmer at $170 billion, Jensen Huang at $156 billion, and Warren Buffett at $151 billion complete the picture. It's interesting to see how the list is dominated by founders who understood the trend before others.
Looking at the list of the world's richest with this perspective, it's not just about money. It's a map of where global capital is heading and which technologies are truly driving the future. AI, space, chips: these are the assets that matter right now.