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Looking at the richest people in the world these past few months, I am always struck by how the tech sector has completely reshaped the map of global wealth. It’s no longer a matter of inheritance or traditional finance, but of who invested in the right future at the right moment.
Elon Musk continues to dominate in an almost surreal way with $726 billion. It’s even hard to process numbers of this magnitude. The growth of SpaceX, Starlink, and his involvement in AI have created a situation where no one else can even come close. In second place, Larry Page with $270 billion, thanks to Alphabet’s dominance and the race for artificial intelligence. Then Jeff Bezos with $255 billion, with AWS and logistics still printing money.
What strikes me when analyzing this list of the world’s richest is the emerging pattern: AI, cloud computing, space, semiconductors. These are the sectors that have truly multiplied fortunes. It’s no coincidence that Sergey Brin, Larry Ellison, Mark Zuckerberg, and Jensen Huang occupy positions 4 through 9. All have made farsighted bets on technologies that are exploding today.
Bernard Arnault is the only one breaking the tech pattern in seventh place, but he has also benefited from global growth and luxury consumption. Steve Ballmer with $170 billion made the right move by holding onto his Microsoft shares. Jensen Huang of NVIDIA quickly rose thanks to the explosion in demand for AI chips. Warren Buffett rounds out the top 10 with $151 billion, the old-school value investing style that endures.
If you look at the current list of the world’s richest, it’s practically a certification of who understood early on where the money was heading. American tech dominates, it’s undeniable. Europeans? Practically absent, except for Arnault. It’s an interesting signal for those trying to understand where innovation and value are truly concentrated in 2026.