ASIAN
RICH LIST 2006
(23 April 2006)
Topping
the Asian Rich List 2006 is Lakshmi Mittal, valued at £14,881
million. Published by Asian radio station, Sunrise Radio and compiled
by Dr Philip Beresford - author of the Sunday Times Rich List -
the Asian Rich List 2006 finds the combined wealth of these 300
millionaires is more than £35 billion. Anurag Dikshit and
Vikrant Bharagava of recently-floated online gambling site Party
Gaming, make a new entry into the Asian Rich List as Gibraltar has
been included in this year's geographical coverage.
The
value of this year s Rich List stands at £35.3 billion. There
are a total of 44 new entries, who together have a value of £4,336.4
million There are a total of 253 entrepreneurs over the age of 40.
The youngest millionaire is 27-year-old Zahier Ahmed, born in August
1979, who is valued at £6m.
|
ASIAN
RICH LIST 2006
|
|
NAME
|
COMPANY
|
VALUE
|
|
|
|
2006
|
2005
|
| 1.
Lakshmi Mittal |
LNM
Group |
£14.8bn
|
£13.5bn
|
| 2.
GP & SP Hinduja |
Sangam
Group |
£3.6bn
|
£2.1bn
|
| 3.
Anurag Dikshit |
Party
Gaming |
£1.7bn
|
--
|
| 4.
Anil Aggarwal |
Vedanta
Resources |
£1.68bn
|
£620m
|
| 5.
The Jatania Brothers |
Lornamead
Int'l |
£850m
|
£650m
|
| 6.
Naresh Goyal |
Jet
Airways |
£780m
|
--
|
| 7.
Vikrant Bharagava |
Party
Gaming |
£592m
|
--
|
| 8.
Lord Paul |
Caparo
group |
£465m
|
£275m
|
| 9.
Gulu Lalvani |
Binatone |
£450m
|
£400m
|
| 10.
Bhikhu & Vijay Patel |
Waymade
Healthcare |
£444m
|
444m
|
LAKSHMI
MITTAL
Lakshmi
Mittal, 55, stunned the City in January with an audacious takeover
bid for Arcelor, the world's second largest steel maker after Mittal
Steel. Arcelor rejected the £12.7 billion offer while the
governments of France and Luxembourg, where many of its plants are
based, were also hostile. Mittal's aim is to create a world leader
producing 115m tons of steel a year - about 11% of the market.
Mittal
Steel, which is quoted on the American and Dutch Stock markets,
is 88% controlled by the Mittal family and trusts. A week after
the Arcelor bid, the family stake was worth £12.6 billion.
London-based Mittal, who retains his Indian passport, paid a reputed
£70m to Bernie Ecclestone, the Formula One supremo, for a
house in Kensington Palace Gardens. In 2004, he splashed out £30m
on his daughter Vanisha's wedding. He is estimated to be worth more
than £14.8 billion.
SRI
& GOPI HINDUJA
The
Hinduja brothers celebrated victory in New Delhi high court last
year when they were cleared of accepting kickbacks from the Swedish
arms firm Bofors to clinch a £750m deal to sell field guns
to the Indian army in 1986. Subsequently many doors are opening
and they have gone into Insurance and real estate, developing hundreds
of acres of land in Hyderabad, Bangalore, Madras and Bombay.
London-based
Sir, 70 and Gopi, 66 are two of four brothers (the others are in
Europe and India). They inherited a business empire from their late
father that embraces oil, banking, telecommunications and trucking
in India, Europe and the Middle East. The Hindujas are worth more
than £3.6 billion.
ANURAG
DIKSHIT
Dikshit,
a computer programmer, was recruited in 1998 by Californian businesswomen
Ruth Parasol, to write software for a fledgling Internet poker site.
Party Gaming floated on the London stock market last year valued
at £4.7 billion, making a fortune for Dikshit and his friend
Vikrant Bhargava, the marketing director. The company showed nearly
£372m profit on £601m sales in 2004. Dikshit lives in
Gibraltar, where Party Gaming is based. He sold nearly £490m
worth of shares in the float and retains a stake in Party gaming
worth £1,214 billion.
ANIL
AGARWAL
Higher
zinc prices have pushed by the shares of Vedanta resources, the
London-based metals group. The company's pre-tax profits more than
doubled to close to £150m for the six months to the end of
September 2005. Agarwal, 53, Vedanta's London-based founder, started
out as a metals trader in his native India. In 2003 Vedanta floated
on the London Stock Market, valuing Agarwal's stake at £537m.
This has soared to £1.6billion and he has other interests.
THE
JATANIA BROTHERS
The
Jatania family bought Yardley, one of England's older cosmetics
brands, last year for a reported £60m. It has sales of about
£57m and is the first global name to the join the family stable,
which includes 'Harmony' hairspray. The family is headed by Mike
Jatania,41, and his brothers George 55, Vin 50 and Danny, 47. Their
Lornamead company is moving its headquarters to Dubai from London,
where the brothers are based. Valued conservatively against its
quoted rivals, the company is worth £760m. The brothers have
also built up a £90m property portfolio. The Jatanias are
worth £850m as a family.
NARESH
GOYAL
Naresh
Goyal, 56, founded Jet Airways in 1993 and turned it into India's
largest private airline before expanding into International Services.
The company listed on the Indian stock market in March last year.
Goyal commutes between Bombay and London, where his family lives.
He is estimated to be worth £780m.
VIKRANT
BHARGAVA
Gambling
does not appear to be a mug's game for Indian-born Bhargava, 32,
the marketing director of Internet poker firm Party Gaming. He is
friends with fellow founder Anurag Dikshit, the software genius
who designed the site, as they both graduated from the Indian Institute
of Technology. Bhargava, who lives in Gibraltar where Party Gaming
is based, confesses that he has never played a hand of poker in
a real casino.
The
company floated on the London Stock Exchange last June with a £4.7
billion valuation. Bhargava, who teamed up with entrepreneurs Russell
De Leon and Ruth Parasol as the business took shape says "None
of us could have predicted what has happened, it has grown faster
than we ever thought possible. We've never had a dull day - it's
been exciting and fun all the way". Bhargava sold shares worth
£123m in the float and retains a holding worth £468m.
Other wealth takes him to £592m.
LORD
SWARAJ PAUL
The
Caparo Group is looking to invest in the Indian economy. It will
be a case of coming home for the steel and industrial group's Indian-born
founder Paul, 75, who moved to England 40 years ago. One of his
sons, Ambar, is expanding the family's Contemporary Hotels operation.
The Caparo Group, owned by the Paul family trusts, is valued at
£365m with at least £100m for Indian assets.
GULU
LALVANI
Gulu
Lalvani, 67, started the Binatone electronics firm when he as a
Leeds student in 1956 and has been looking at floating the business.
The group is estimated to be worth £350m with £100m
for other assets.
BHIKHU
& VIJAY PATEL
Brothers
Bhikhu, 58, and Vijay 56, own the Essex-based Waymade Healthcare
which is worth £394m. Property and other assets add £50m.
Click
here for the Asian
Rich List 2005.
Click
here for the Asian
Rich List 2004.
Click here for the Asian
Rich List 2003.
Click here for the Asian
Rich List 2002.
Click here for the Asian
Rich List 2001.
Copies
of the Asian Rich List can be purchased from www.asianrichlist.co.uk
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