Singapore's 50 Richest 2025: Combined Wealth Jumps To $239 Billion; Facebook Cofounder Eduardo Saverin Adds $14 Billion To Remain At No. 1
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Singapore's 50 Richest 2025: Combined Wealth Jumps To $239 Billion; Facebook Cofounder Eduardo Saverin Adds $14 Billion To Remain At No. 1
"On the 60th anniversary of its independence, Singapore posted better-than-expected economic growth of 4.3% in the first half of 2025, thanks to an export overdrive amid tariff-related uncertainties. The city-state's wealthiest have another reason to celebrate: Their collective net worth, up by nearly a fourth, zoomed to a record $239 billion. In the No. 1 position for the third year in a row, Eduardo Saverin is the biggest gainer in dollar terms and leads the group of 41 people whose wealth expanded."
"The Facebook cofounder and longtime Singapore resident added $14 billion to take his net worth to $43 billion as an AI-fueled advertising jump caused shares of Facebook parent Meta Platforms to surge. Real estate magnate Kwek Leng Beng climbed two spots to second place with his fortune, which he shares with his family, rising 24% to $14.3 billion, mainly due to new information about the clan's holdings."
"In a headline-grabbing move earlier this year, Kwek took his son Sherman Kwek, CEO of flagship City Developments, to court for appointing new directors without following due process but two weeks later called a truce and withdrew the lawsuit. Property siblingsRobert & Philip Ng slipped to No. 3 and their combined fortune dipped to $14.1 billion, with the Hong Kong property downturn impacting their interests there."
Singapore recorded 4.3% economic growth in H1 2025 driven by export strength amid tariff uncertainties. The combined net worth of the city-state’s richest rose almost 25% to $239 billion. Eduardo Saverin led gains, adding $14 billion as Meta Platforms shares surged on AI-driven advertising growth, bringing his net worth to $43 billion. Kwek Leng Beng moved to second with a 24% increase to $14.3 billion following new information about family holdings and a brief legal dispute involving his son. The Ng siblings saw a dip due to a Hong Kong property downturn, while the Goh family debuted with $13.1 billion after Nippon Paint gains.
Read at Forbes
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