"Buried deep in the millions of pages known as the Epstein files, one document offers a rare glimpse into how the 0.0001% live: a list of billionaire Mortimer Zuckerman's personal expenses for a year. Think of it as a financial diary from the uppermost stratosphere of wealth, where the ordinary rules of budgeting simply don't apply. Tucked at the bottom of a portfolio performance report conducted by financial advisors at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, the accounting tracks Zuckerman's spending from 2011."
"It includes the everyday and inexpensive, like $140 in parking tickets, to the extravagant, a $220,000 outlayto buy and keep horses. Zuckerman, who is worth $2.8 billion, according to Forbes, made his money in real estate investing; he now owns and serves as the editor in chief of US News & World Report. He's donated hundreds of millions to various causes, including six-figure sums to fund neuroscience research at Columbia University and cancer research at Memorial Sloan Kettering."
An accounting from 2011 details Mortimer Zuckerman's personal expenses, from $140 parking tickets to a $220,000 outlay to buy and keep horses. Zuckerman, worth $2.8 billion, made his fortune in real estate and serves as editor in chief of US News & World Report. He owned properties in East Hampton, Manhattan, and Aspen, plus a yacht named the Lazy Z, luxury cars, and at least one private plane. The Morgan Stanley Smith Barney portfolio report lists detailed bills for clothes, home repairs, childcare, parties, wine, and fine art. The Epstein files include a draft agreement proposing a $20 million payment to Epstein's Southern Trust for estate planning and show prior collaboration financing Radar magazine.
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