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9 books Elon Musk thinks everyone should read

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A tech titan married a Playboy model in a wildly lavish wedding ceremony

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Hope Dworaczyk Robert SmithTech investor Robert Smith, the founder and CEO of Vista Equity Partners, married Hope Dworaczyk, Playboy’s 2010 Playmate of the Year, in an over the top ceremony this weekend on Italy’s Amalfi Coast.

Congrats to Mr & Mrs Smith! @hopedworaczyk you are the most beautiful bride! #dropsthemic #hopeandrobert

A photo posted by Marianna Hewitt (@marianna_hewitt) on Jul 25, 2015 at 11:49am PDT on

 The pair wed at the exclusive Hotel Villa Cimbrone

"The drive to the secluded retreat has been called 'daunting,' so 'helicopters had to fly in each piece of equipment, making over 100 trips back and forth to the five-star resort overlooking dizzying views,'" reports PageSix.

But judging by the Instagram photos, it appears the effort was worth it for the celebrity perfomances alone.

John Legend serenaded the bride down the aisle.

The beautiful @hopedworaczyk walking down the aisle 💍✨ @johnlegend serenades #HOPEandROBERT #JohnLegend

A video posted by Caity Michelle Rose (@caitydariotis) on Jul 25, 2015 at 6:38pm PDT on

He later sang "All of Me" during the ceremony.

#aboutlastnight #johnlegend #mrandmrssmith #hopeandrobert #ravello #music #weddings #overthetop #matrimonio #italianwedding

A video posted by Amedeo Scognamiglio (@amedeokingofcameos) on Jul 26, 2015 at 9:56am PDT on

 It was the couple's first dance.

🙏🏻 TO A STUNNING WEDDING AND A TRULY MAGICAL UNION WITH TWO OF THE BEST SOULS I KNOW🎉 ILOVEYOU #HOPEandROBERT @hopedworaczyk ❤️💀❤️ #mrandmrsSMITH

A video posted by jOYCEBONELLi™ (@joycebonelli) on Jul 25, 2015 at 6:09pm PDT on

Seal performed his hit, "Kiss From A Rose."

Most magical night @sealofficial #HopeandRobert 🌹

A video posted by - Carla DiBello (@carladibello) on Jul 25, 2015 at 6:21pm PDT on

And Brian McKnight sang, too.

Brian McKnight #hopeandrobert #ravello #italianwedding

A video posted by Amedeo Scognamiglio (@amedeokingofcameos) on Jul 24, 2015 at 3:11pm PDT on

The bride even got behind the DJ booth with DJ Cassidy.

Dancing the night away with DJ Hope & @djcassidy #HopeandRobert

A photo posted by - Carla DiBello (@carladibello) on Jul 26, 2015 at 3:24am PDT on

 But the most special guest was the couple's seven-month-old son.

💔❤️ 💍MRS S M I T H #BabyHENDRIX @hopedworaczyk #HOPEandROBERT #LIFETHROUGHMYEYES 📷

A photo posted by jOYCEBONELLi™ (@joycebonelli) on Jul 25, 2015 at 3:31pm PDT on

 The setting and decor were over the top.

The most fabulous wedding of the year at the enchanting Ravello! #hopeandrobert #mrandmrssmith

A photo posted by Thuda aka Marianna's Mom (@stripesnchanel) on Jul 26, 2015 at 1:16am PDT on

 

 

V I L L A C I M B R O N E 🇮🇹 #HOPEandROBERT 💞

A photo posted by jOYCEBONELLi™ (@joycebonelli) on Jul 24, 2015 at 5:15pm PDT on

 

Rehearsal Dinner for the beautiful @hopedworaczyk ✨ #HOPEandROBERT

A photo posted by Caity Michelle Rose (@caitydariotis) on Jul 24, 2015 at 11:36am PDT on

 There was a wall made for Instgramming.

#HopeAndRobert #MrAndMrsSmith #wedding was the most spectacular experience! 🇮🇹 I wish them #Love, #Light and eternal Happiness! ❤️🙌🏻

A photo posted by Amanda Vanderpool (@checkoutamanda) on Jul 26, 2015 at 10:21am PDT on

 And the cake was outrageous.

#repost @mr.edkavishe wearing #Armani Just Couldn't resist the temptation with this beautiful #WeddingCake for #MrandMrsSmith @hopedworaczyk #Ravello #HopeandRobert

A photo posted by Fashion Wire Press ® (@fashion_press) on Jul 27, 2015 at 10:31am PDT on

But it was all nothing compared to the numerous designer gowns the bride wore throughout the weekend.

 

 

ILOVEYOU 💜 @hopedworaczyk #HOPEandROBERT 🇮🇹 💍💞

A photo posted by jOYCEBONELLi™ (@joycebonelli) on Jul 24, 2015 at 4:48pm PDT on

 

 

Day before our wedding. Friends + family. Poolside glam. Romper & cape by @naeemkhannyc. #mrandmrssmith #wedding #hopeandrobert

A photo posted by Hope Dworaczyk (@hopedworaczyk) on Jul 24, 2015 at 9:19am PDT on

 

The most beautiful fairytale wedding any woman can want!! Congratulations to one of our fave #beauty #fashion #bloggers @hopedworaczyk #mrandmrssmith #HopeandRobert

A photo posted by Amitie Clothing (@amitieclothing) on Jul 25, 2015 at 6:23pm PDT on

 

So who exactly is the couple behind the lavish wedding weekend?

Robert F. Smith, 52, is the founder of Vista Equity Partners, "a firm with $8 billion under management that deals exclusively in the unglamorous business of enterprise software," according to the New York Times.

"Much of Vista’s success can be traced to the unconventional tactics of its hands-on chief executive, Robert F. Smith, who has delivered investors a staggering 31 percent average annual rate of return since co-founding Vista in 2000," the NYT wrote in a 2014 profile on Smith, which detailed his unique rise to becoming one of the "75 Most Powerfu Blacks on Wall Street."

Robert Smith30-year-old Dworaczyk, meanwhile, is the host and co-producer for "Inside Fashion" for the E! channel in Canada and appeared on "Celebrity Apprentice" in 2011.

Hope DworaczykIn 2010, she was named Playboy's Playmate of the Year.

Playboy Hope Dworaczyk
In 2009, she was Playmate of the month and appeared on the cover of Playboy magazine's April issue with Seth Rogen.

Playboy Hope Dworaczyk seth rogen

Cheers to the newlyweds!

 

 

SEE ALSO: Check out Instagrams from Nicky Hilton's fairy tale wedding to British banking heir James Rothschild

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NOW WATCH: Kanye West explains how marriage has helped him become a better man

9 books that Steve Jobs thought everyone should read

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Late Apple cofounder Steve Jobs spent a lifetime learning what it means to be human by reading books.

"The reason that Apple is able to create products like the iPad is because we've always tried to be at the intersection of technology and the liberal arts," Jobs once said.

Here, we've listed the books that had the biggest influence on Jobs and his work.

BI_Graphics_9 books that Steve Jobs thinks everyone should read

Here are the links to find each book:

"King Lear" by William Shakespeare

"Moby Dick" by Herman Melville

"The Collected Poems of Dylan Thomas" by Dylan Thomas

"Be Here Now" by Ram Dass

"Diet for a Small Planet" by Frances Moore Lappe

"Mucusless Diet Healing System" by Arnold Ehret

"Autobiography of a Yogi" by Paramahansa Yogananda

"Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind" by Shunryu Suzuki

"The Innovator's Dilemma" by Clayton M. Christensen

Drake Baer contributed research to this article.

SEE ALSO: 9 books to read if you want to be a billionaire

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9 books to read if you want to be a billionaire

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warren buffett

If there's one habit most super-successful people share, it's this: They read. A lot.

Many of them have shared the books that helped shape them personally and professionally. If you want to emulate these titans of industry, reading their faves seems like a good place to start.

From classic literature to business management guides, we rounded up their top picks, so you can start stocking your shelves.

'The Intelligent Investor' by Benjamin Graham

Among Wall Streeters, Graham is known as the father of value investing. Billionaire investor Warren Buffett credits Graham's book with laying the foundation for his investment philosophy when he read it at age 19.

"To invest successfully over a lifetime does not require a stratospheric IQ, unusual business insights, or inside information,"Buffett said. "What's needed is a sound intellectual framework for making decisions and the ability to keep emotions from corroding that framework. This book precisely and clearly prescribes the proper framework. You must provide the emotional discipline."

Buy it here >>



'Making the Modern World' by Vaclav Smil

This book by an environmental sciences professor focuses on the costs of increasing material consumption and the potential for dematerialization in the future.

Bill Gates, estimated to be the richest man on earth, calls Smil his favorite author and says the book gave him new insight into the materials that make modern life possible.

"It might seem mundane, but the issue of materials — how much we use and how much we need — is key to helping the world's poorest people improve their lives,"Gates writes."Think of the amazing increase in quality of life that we saw in the United States and other rich countries in the past 100 years. We want most of that miracle to take place for all of humanity over the next 50 years."

Buy it here >>



'The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy' by Douglas Adams

This work of science fiction helped billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk through an existential crisis during his adolescence. In the book, a supercomputer deduces the answer to a meaningful life is the number 42, though it's not clear what the original question was.

"It highlighted an important point, which is that a lot of times the question is harder than the answer," Musk said in an interview. "And if you can properly phrase the question, then the answer is the easy part. So, to the degree that we can better understand the universe, then we can better know what questions to ask."

Buy it here >>



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

15 books by billionaires that will teach you how to run the world

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Bill Gates Summer Books

Whether you want to launch an empire or become the best in your field, who better to consult than those who've achieved the peak of professional and financial success?

That's why we've rounded up 15 books by self-made billionaires. Learn how these masters of industry achieved the impossible, in their own words.

'The Virgin Way' by Richard Branson

Although Branson confesses he's never read a book on leadership, his nearly 50-year entrepreneurial career has taught him a thing or two about building a business.

In "The Virgin Way," the billionaire founder of Virgin Group offers lessons on management and entrepreneurialism, including the importance of listening to others and hiring the right people. Branson is honest about his successes as well as his failures, such as underestimating Coke's influence when he tried to launch Virgin Cola in the 1990s.

Overall, the book is a compelling glimpse into the life of someone who's never shied away from a challenge.

Buy it here >>



'Onward' by Howard Schultz

After resigning as Starbucks CEO in 2000, Schultz returned to the post in 2008, just as the company was struggling through a financial crisis. "Onward" details how the billionaire brought the global coffee chain back to life.

Readers will learn how Schultz made tough decisions — like temporarily shutting down more than 7,000 US stores — in order to help Starbucks grow without neglecting its core values. They'll learn, too, about Schultz as a person, as he weaves together his unique business strategy with anecdotes about growing up in Brooklyn, New York. It's an honest and passionate recounting that will inspire entrepreneurs and everyone else to be brave in the face of adversity.

Buy it here >>



'How to Win at the Sport of Business' by Mark Cuban

In "How to Win at the Sport of Business," Dallas Mavericks owner and "Shark Tank" investor Cuban fleshes out his best insights on entrepreneurialism from his personal blog.

He writes candidly about how he progressed from sleeping on his friends' couches in his 20s to owning his own company and becoming a multi-billionaire. It's a story of commitment and perseverance — Cuban writes that even though he didn't know much about computers, he beat his competition because he spent so much time learning about the software his company sold. 

Buy it here >>



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The fabulous life of Michael Bloomberg, the eighth richest person in America

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Michael Bloomberg gives speech

Michael Bloomberg is not your average billionaire.

Reportedly worth of $37.5 billion, he's pledged half of his fortune to charity after his death.

For over a decade, he served as New York City mayor earning only $1 dollar a year. Before that, he made billions through the company he founded, Bloomberg LP, and its Bloomberg Terminal financial software.

Here's everything we know about his fortune, shiny toys, good and bad habits, and leading ladies. 

SEE ALSO: Billionaire Michael Bloomberg just won a bidding war for this historic London mansion

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Meet Michael Bloomberg: America's eighth richest person, founder of Bloomberg LP, philanthropist, and former New York City mayor.



Bloomberg grew up in Medford, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston. He went to Johns Hopkins University for mechanical engineering and received a MBA from Harvard University.

Source: Wealth X



After reaching partner at Solomon Brothers, he was later in charge of IT. When Solomon merged with Phibro, they let Bloomberg go. He then created Bloomberg LP, a financial services and media company worth a reported $27.7 billion, due in large part to the success of the Bloomberg Terminal.

 

 



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Mexico's wage crisis is so bad 'that it violates what’s stipulated in the Constitution'

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At the end of 2014, Mexico’s 16 billionaires were worth an average of nearly $9 billion.

That same year, the bottom 20% of Mexicans — nearly 25 million people — were worth an average of $80.

Economic hardship is widespread in Mexico, which is home to more than 120 million people, more than half of whom lived in poverty at the end 2012. Now inequality and wage disparity have emerged as further challenges to the development of Latin America’s second-largest economy.

mexico city poverty

According to a study of the 34 member countries of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, the gap between wages and hours worked is larger in Mexico than in any other member country.

The gap in wealth and in wages is visible across Mexico’s economic strata. According to OECD figures, the country’s richest 10% earn more than 30 times what the poorest 10% make — making it the most unequal of the organization's 34 countries. Mexico’s bottom 20% doesn’t make enough to eat three meals a day.

OECD data show that Mexican workers labored 2,327 hours on average during 2014, far ahead of the 1,796 hours worked by Americans.

Those workers, however, were only paid $12,850 (based on purchasing power parity) during the year, which ranks at the bottom of the OECD’s list. Estonia was second to last at $21,020. Americans earned $57,139 during the same period.

mexico workers wage wages

In parts of the country where pay is better (i.e. urban zones), the minimum salary for Mexicans is 70.1 pesos ($4.35) per day, according to El Daily Post. The government also sets a monthly minimum income for well-being, including essential purchases like food, transportation, and hygiene, that stands at 2,628 pesos ($163.13) in urban areas.

A worker making the minimum salary would need to labor for just over 37 days per month to bring in that monthly minimum — assuming they didn’t have any dependents to care for.

In total, writes the El Daily Post, more than half of all Mexican workers fall short of this monthly standard.

This shortfall is worse in less developed areas. In the southern state of Chiapas, 70% of workers don’t earn enough to care for two people, based on the minimum monthly salary level. 

“The situation is serious to such a degree that it violates what’s stipulated in the Constitution. The minimum salary must guarantee a decent standard of living,” Gerargo Esquivel, a Harvard economics professor, told El Daily Post.

Indeed, many Mexicans fall below Mexican, and even Western, standards of living. According to a report from news site Animal Politico, one out of four Mexican municipalities has living conditions similar to sub-Saharan Africa in terms of illiteracy, access to healthcare, and homes without toilets or solid floors.

mexico poverty

This state of affairs, with more than 7 million Mexicans living as if they were in Angola, comes despite a 16% increase between 1990 and 2012 in the budget of a variety of social programs aimed to lift Mexicans out of poverty and hunger. In that time, poverty in Mexico has been reduced by less than two percentage points.

Even though Mexico has made economic advancements over the last few years, in recent decades the rate of individual advancement has slowed. According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, between 1960 and 1980, per-person GDP grew by 98.7%; over the last 20 years, it grew by 18.6%. The poverty rate at the end of 2012, 52.3%, was similar to the rate at the end of 1994. Wages, adjusted for inflation, rose just 2.3% between 1994 and 2012.

The reason some social programs have been ineffective is that “it was expected that the economy would grow, and the economy did not grow," according to Gonzalo Hernández, executive secretary of the National Counsel for Evaluation of Social Development Policy (Coneval).

“Now you have better-fed children, who go to school more but leave [school] for work and don’t have jobs; so they migrate or remain in poverty,” Hernández told Animal Politico.

In Centro Sante Fe, the country’s largest shopping plaza just west of Mexico City, attendants selling books and magazines at chain store Sanborns earn in two weeks what billionaire Carlos Slim — Mexico’s richest man and owner of Sanborns — makes in 20 minutes of banking transactions.

Carlos Slim

In addition to Slim, 2,540 Mexicans hold assets of $30 million or more. They represent an extreme minority in the country — but one that holds 43% of Mexico’s total individual wealth.

Slim’s fortune alone equals 6.3% of Mexico’s gross domestic product. The income of the country’s poorest 20% equates to 4.9% of GDP.

Mexico’s uneven growth has a geographic dimension as well. As Shannon O’Neil of the Council on Foreign Relations noted, industrial and tech areas of north-central Mexico have experienced growth rates in the double digits, and states bordering the US, boosted by industry and trade, have growth rates above the Mexican national average.

However, falling oil prices have hindered growth in southern states (the country now gets more from remittances than oil exports) and the violence-wracked states of Michoacan and Guerrero were both at the bottom of the UN human development index rankings for the country.

“These differing trends threaten to aggravate already deep economic divides, creating virtuous and vicious circles in terms of infrastructure, education, and opportunities,” wrote O’Neil.

sanborns carlos slim

Though new developments may aggravate these divides, the divides themselves are not new.

Inequality in Mexico is longstanding, according to Cristina Bayón, an ecologist specializing in the subject. In Mexico, there is an “extremely high tolerance” for an unequal society, she told El Daily Post, “which explains why the rich can be so ostentatious in this country.”

Ostentatious or not, the rich are certainly aware of their presence.

“They let the boss know in advance,” Óscar, a salesperson at Sanborns, said of a visit by Carlos Slim’s son to the store. “A lot of bodyguards came first and closed the store, so he had the store and the restaurant all to himself. But he was very nice.” 

SEE ALSO: Popular anger could derail Mexico's economic recovery

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Meet Carlos Slim Helu, the wealthiest man in Mexico

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Carlos Slim

Carlos Slim Helu, Mexico's wealthiest man and one of the richest self-made billionaires in the world, flies under the radar more than you might expect, considering he owns more than 200 companies in Mexico, which is also known as "Slimlandia." 

With a net worth of at least $35.4 billion, Slim's influence is far-reaching in Mexico and abroad.

So what drives the man who built a giant business empire across one of the poorest countries in the Americas? Read on to find out.

SEE ALSO: The 25 richest self-made billionaires in the world

SEE ALSO: Meet Len Blavatnik, the richest man in Britain

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Slim's parents were Lebanese immigrants who moved to Mexico before his birth. They endowed their son with strong values, and his father taught him to read financial documents and invest at a young age. Slim has carefully preserved his childhood home and keeps a photograph of his father on his desk.

Source: Wealth-X, Telegraph UK



After moving to Mexico, Slim's father was successful in both retail and real estate; upon his death in 1953, his son, Carlos, inherited his businesses.

Source: Wealth-X



Slim also holds a deep love for his country. He said, “Mexico is so rich in culture and history, and I have always enjoyed that.”

Source: Telegraph UK



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The insane life of Facebook billionaire Sean Parker (FB)

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sean parker

Sean Parker found immense success at an incredibly young age. 

At the age of 19, he cofounded Napster, a file-sharing service that would change how the world consumes music. 

By 24, he was the founding president of Facebook, a startup that was then tiny but would go on to become the biggest social network in the world. 

The 35-year-old, whose net worth is now estimated to be about $3 billion, hasn't slowed down a bit. He recently launched Brigade, a social platform meant to encourage civic engagement, and donated $600 million toward his own foundation. 

He's found a bit of controversy along the way, developing a reputation for being a big partier and an even bigger spender. 

 

Parker cofounded file-sharing service Napster in 1999, when he was only 19 years old. Napster became one of the fastest growing businesses of all time, as well as one of the most controversial. Parker and his cofounder, Shawn Fanning, are often credited with revolutionizing the music industry.

Source: Fortune



After several law suits from music associations eventually shut down Napster, Parker went on to found a social networking site called Plaxo. He was ousted two years later.

Read more about Plaxo »



Parker joined the Facebook team in 2004, when it was just a fledgling college startup. As the social network's founding president, he would play a huge role in the site's early investments, design, and transition into a viable company.

 



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17 billionaires who were once dirt poor

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John Paul Dejoria Describes Rags To Riches Story

Some of the world's wealthiest people started out dirt poor.

These 17 rags-to-riches stories remind us that through determination, grit, and a little bit of luck anyone can overcome their circumstances and achieve extraordinary success. 

This is an update of a story originally written by Vivian Giang.

SEE ALSO: From welfare to one of the world's wealthiest women — the incredible rags-to-riches story of J.K. Rowling

Russian business tycoon and Chelsea Football Club owner Roman Abramovich was born into poverty and orphaned at age two.

Net worth: $8.2 billion

Abramovich was born in southern Russia, into poverty. After being orphaned at age two, he was raised by an uncle and his family in a subarctic region of northern Russia.

While a student at the Moscow Auto Transport Institute in 1987, he started a small company producing plastic toys, which helped him eventually found an oil business and make a name for himself within the oil industry. Later, as sole leader of the Sibneft company, he completed a merger that made it the fourth biggest oil company in the world. The company was sold to state-run gas titan Gazprom in 2005 for for $13 billion.

He acquired the Chelsea Football Club in 2003 and owns the world's largest yacht, which cost him almost $400 million in 2010.

 

 



Montpellier rugby club president and Entrepreneur of the Year Mohed Altrad survived on one meal a day when he moved to France.

Net worth:$1 billion

Born into a nomadic tribe in the Syrian dessert to a poor mother who was raped by his father and died when he was young, Altrad was raised by his grandmother, who banned him from attending school, in Raqqa, the city that is now capital of ISIS.

Altrad attended school anyway, and when he moved to France to attend university, he knew no French and lived off of one meal a day. Still, he earned a PhD in computer science, worked for some leading French companies, and eventually bought a failing scaffolding company, which he transformed into one of the world's leading manufacturers of scaffolding and cement mixers, Altrad Group.

He has previously been named French Entrepreneur of the Year and World Entrepreneur of the Year.



Kenny Troutt, the founder of Excel Communications, paid his way through college by selling life insurance.

Net worth: $1.5 billion 

Troutt grew up with a bartender dad and paid for his own tuition at Southern Illinois University by selling life insurance. He made most of his money from phone company Excel Communications, which he founded in 1988 and took public in 1996. Two years later, Troutt merged his company with Teleglobe in a $3.5 billion deal.

He's now retired and invests heavily in racehorses.



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T. Boone Pickens' strict morning routine will inspire you to plan your days better

This Brazilian billionaire could make or break Bill Ackman's latest big investment

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Jorge Lemann

Activist investor Bill Ackman has made the food and beverage multinational Mondelez International his newest target.

The hedge fund manager is likely to push for the company to cut costs or sell itself to a rival, according to The Wall Street Journal.  

One potential suitor is the recently-merged Kraft Heinz company — now the fifth-largest food company in the world.

The merger of Kraft and Heinz was orchestrated by 3G Capital, which is helmed by Brazilian billionaire Jorge Lemann, and Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway.

Ackman himself is an investor in 3G's funds.

The private-equity firm has wasted little time in shaking up the upper ranks of the newly-combined company, and has a reputation for savage cost-cutting.

Lemann, a Swiss-Brazilian, has gone from journalist to national tennis champion to banker and now billionaire investor. Buffett likes to call him, "Georgie Paolo."

"Money is simply a way of measuring if the business is going well or not, but money in and of itself doesn't fascinate me," Lemann said in January 2008, according to an interview published in HSM Management magazine.

Shows you that he's just in it for the love of the game.

Lemann was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1939. His father was a Swiss businessman who immigrated to Brazil in the 1920s.



He left Brazil to attend Harvard, earning his bachelor's degree in economics in 1961. Lemann still has a great relationship with Harvard, helping Brazilian students study there and setting up scholarships.



After Harvard, Lemann's life was a mixed bag. He trained at Credit Suisse for a while and worked as a journalist at Brazil's third-oldest paper, Jornal do Brasil.



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The same stock that scorched David Einhorn is burning Leon Cooperman

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David Einhorn

Solar and wind-energy company SunEdison is brutalizing two big names on Wall Street, Greenlight Capital's David Einhorn, and Omega Advisers' Leon Cooperman.

Einhorn said on a call earlier this week that his fund lost 5.9% in July, the portfolio's worst monthly performance since October 2008.

"The losses were broad-based, but the biggest loss is coming from SunEdison", he said.

Cooperman's Omega Advisors, which is the 11th biggest shareholder of SunEdison with 8.8 million shares, is also feeling the pain.

The stock started to collapse on July 20th and has fallen 45% since, giving up all the gains it made in the second quarter.

Here's what the collapse looks like in chart form.

It's not pretty:

sunedison chart woof

Cooperman jumped on the company's earnings conference call on Thursday to ask executives exactly what they planned to do about the plunging stock price.

"I must admit to having a certain amount of lack of knowledge of your business, but I have a partner that's done a terrific job in staying on top of you," Cooperman said.

Leon Cooperman"My question really is more philosophical. Is there a massive change in the absolute relative prices of a number of your entities you're involved with? Does this create an opportunity for you creating additional value for shareholders by capitalizing on the short-term pessimism in midterm market or is that financial resource pretty much earmarked for reinvestment in the business?"

In English, Cooperman was basically asking CEO Ahmad Chatila and CFO Brian A. Wuebbels if the company would buy back more stock to increase its share price, or if any cash they had lying around would be reinvested into the business.

"Lee, I think you said it well," Wuebbels began carefully. "I mean – for us these movements of dislocationprovide opportunities. I think for us, though, the most important thing at this moment is execution."

In English, that means no.

Omega and Greenlight will have to wait this one out.

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The 25 richest self-made billionaires

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bill gatesThere are two types of billionaires: those who inherited their wealth, and those who built it from nothing.

Our friends at Wealth-X, a firm that does research and net worth valuations on ultra-high net worth individuals, focused on the latter to compile a list of the wealthiest self-made billionaires in the world.

From tech mogul Bill Gates to Alibaba founder Jack Ma, here's who made the list. 

25. Len Blavatnik

Estimated net worth: $20.1 billion

Though he's known as one of Britain's richest residents, Blavatnik is a native of Ukraine. He earned degrees at Moscow State University, Columbia, and Harvard Business School before founding Access Industries in 1986 and investing in aluminum and chemical companies. In recent years he began investing in tech, with stakes in Spotify and Beats. Blavatnik also owns Warner Music, which he bought in 2011 for $3.3 billion.

Source: Wealth-X



24. Li Ka-Shing

Estimated net worth: $20.1 billion

Ka-Shing is one of the richest men in Asia, but his power far exceeds his wealth. He's known for investing in new, blossoming tech startups and was an early Facebook backer. Recently, the company he chairs, Hutchison Whampoa, bought the UK's second-largest mobile operator, O2. Last year he invested $23 million in plant-based egg-replacement company Hampton Creek through his firm Horizon Ventures.

Source: Wealth-X 



23. Patrick Drahi

Estimated net worth: $21 billion

The third-richest person in France, Drahi founded Altice, a multinational cable and telecommunications holding company, in 2002. Altice operates throughout France, Belgium, Israel, Portugal, and the Dominican Republic, and garnered international attention for its $1.8 billion IPO in January 2014. Drahi is coming to the US soon, too — he's taking over American cable company Suddenlink.

Source: Wealth-X



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Africa's billionaire boom: The 13 tycoons whose wealth has exploded in the last four years

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Aliko Dangote

Africa is undergoing an explosion of wealth as countries open up to the global economy. Many have seen major economic expansions in recent years.

And that's benefiting a small number of already incredibly wealthy individuals — Africa's growing contingent of billionaires.

We looked at Forbes' African rich list from 2011 and compared it to the 2015 list of African billionaires. We stripped out those who hadn't become billionaires in the intervening four years as well as those whose wealth has declined.

Some of those included will have seen massive increases in the value of things they already own — particularly those that own significant shares in major listed companies. Some will have had their wealth re-evaluated and increased considerably by Forbes. 

Take a look at how the richest of the rich in Africa have seen their wealth surge since 2011.

SEE ALSO: Africa's millionaire explosion: The 16 countries where the ultra-wealthy are booming

13. Nicky Oppenheimer, South Africa — $6.6 billion (+$100 million) — As chairman of De Beers, Oppenheimer's wealth comes from the diamond industry, and has sneaked up by 1.5% since 2011.



12. Naguib Sawiris, Egypt — $3 billion (+$100 million) — Naguib is one of three Sawiris family billionaires, and has seen the smallest increase in his wealth since 2011, compared to his brothers.



11. Samih Sawiris, Egypt — $1.05 billion (+$490 million) — though he's only just in the billionaire category, the middle Sawiris brother's net figure rose by 87.5% over four years.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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The 10 countries with the highest percentage of female billionaires

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Switzerland

There are 1826 billionaires in the world but only 197 of them are women.

While some countries will have hundreds of them, like China, some nations have a higher proportion of female billionaires. 

Approved Index, a UK-based business-networking group, crunched the numbers from Forbes' 2015 billionaire list using this latest July data and found that the top 10 countries for gender equality among the super rich is quite surprising.

10. South Korea

Number of female billionaires: 6

Number of male billionaires: 24

% of female billionaires: 20%

South Korea transformed its economy over the last 40 years, following an embracing of high-tech industry. It's citizens' wealth is also burgeoning and is fast becoming one of the biggest markets for luxury goods and fashion. It is perhaps then unsurprising that is has six female billionaires under its belt.

 



9. Sweden

Number of female billionaires: 5

Number of male billionaires: 18

% of female billionaires: 21.74%

Sweden's highly skilled workforce and high-tech capitalism has led to it being voted fifth best country in the world to do business. That's one reason why billionaires like Birgit Rausing, of the family packaging empire Tetra Laval, managed to amass a wealth of $14 billion (£9 billion). 



8. Spain

Number of female billionaires: 5

Number of male billionaires: 16

% of female billionaires: 23.81%

Spain may have several year long recession since the onset of the credit crisis in 2008 but it still manages to count 16 billionaires under its belt.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Inside the London flats that billionaires spend £100 million to rent

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MandarinOriental,Knightsbridge

London's most exclusive areas sees crowds of the super rich descend on its streets every summer.

While some of the world's richest people like to spend part of their holidays in either a second home in Britain's capital or a luxury hotel, high-end lettings agency EJ Harris revealed today that the insanely rich will likely spend up to £100 million ($156 million) this summer on incredibly lavish apartments, collectively. 

From several story flats with bedrooms bigger than the average sized apartment, to grand pianos in an office – no demand is too big or too small for EJ Harris' clients that sometimes pay up to £10,000 ($15,622) per week on a serviced apartmentin Knightsbridge, Mayfair, and Marylebone in London.

Just take a look at how awesome these apartments are.

The super-rich spend so much money on rental flats in London during the summer because they're serviced and absolutely massive. This includes having security, a reception, and in-house staff that would also clean and tend to requests from tenants 24/7.



The properties usually include incredible meeting areas like these for parties or business catch ups.



The world's richest usually rent flats in Knightsbridge, like here in the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, which is close to Harrods and the luxury boutiques of Brompton Road and Sloane Street. Other properties are available in Mayfair.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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These African billionaires have seen their net worth boom since 2011

How IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad became one of the richest self-made billionaires

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Ingvar Kamprad

Swedish business magnate Ingvar Kamprad has been at the helm of IKEA, one of the world's largest furniture stores and most beloved brands, for more than 70 years.

With a net worth of $48.1 billion, he's now one of the world's richest self-made billionaires.

Kamprad remains boldly innovative, inherently simplistic, and incredibly wealthy.

From humble beginnings selling holiday tchotchkes to his neighbors as a child, here's how Kamprad started a privately held $11.8 billion furniture revolution and became a billionaire.

 

SEE ALSO: The 25 richest self-made billionaires

SEE ALSO: Ikea's Strategy For Becoming The World's Most Successful Retailer

Kamprad was born in the south of Sweden in 1926 and by the age of 5 began selling matches for profit. At 10, he rode his bike around the neighborhood to sell Christmas decorations, fish, and pencils.

Source: Business Insider, Sweden.se



In his teens, Kamprad became involved in a Nazi youth movement by the influence of his German grandmother, who was "a great admirer of Hitler." He later described that time as "the greatest mistake of my life" and even penned a letter to his employees asking their forgiveness.

Source: Telegraph, Fortune



When Kamprad was 17, his dad gave him a cash reward for making good grades in school despite his dyslexia. He used the money to found IKEA in 1943. Kamprad didn't introduce furniture until five years in; he'd started by selling small household items, like picture frames.

Source: Business Insider



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The wealthiest people in the world under 35

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elizabeth holmes theranosSome of the most successful people in the world didn't become millionaires, let alone billionaires, until after age 40. Some, however, experienced the opposite trajectory.

Our friends at Wealth-X, a firm that does research and net-worth valuations on ultra-high net worth individuals, compiled a list of the richest people in the world under 35.

From Norwegian and Chinese heirs to the self-made billionaire founders of Snapchat and Facebook, here are the 20 wealthiest people under 35. 

SEE ALSO: The 25 richest self-made billionaires

SEE ALSO: The 15 most billionaire-dense countries

20. Adrian Cheng

Net worth: $1.4 billion

Cheng, 34, is the executive vice chairman of New World Development, a property-development company based in Hong Kong that was founded by his grandfather in 1970. Cheng joined New World Development in 2006 after earning his bachelor's from Harvard. He also sits on the board of his family's Chow Tai Fook Jewellery Group as well as Modern Media Holdings and Giordano International. 

Cheng is founder of K11 Art Foundation, a non-profit that aides young contemporary artists and promotes art education. 

Source: Wealth-X



19. Camilla Hagen Sørli

Net worth: $1.5 billion

Norwegian-born Sørli is the daughter of Stein Erik Hagen, cofounder of supermarket chain RIMI. Hagen went on to found Canica to oversee the family's expanding business portfolio. In 2006, Canica became the largest shareholder of Orkla, a Norway-based industrial conglomerate. 

Thirty-four-year-old Sørli and her two siblings are co-owners and directors of Canica, now one of the largest privately-owned investment companies in Norway. Sørli also serves as chairwoman of Centurie, a marketing and distribution company and entity of Canica.

Source: Wealth-X



18. Caroline Hagen Kjos

Net worth: $1.5 billion

Sørli's younger sister, Caroline, is the chairwoman of Canica, her family's private holding company that recently relocated from Norway to Switzerland. Virtually all of Kjos' fortune is family inheritance.

Kjos, 31, also serves as a board member of Komplett, the largest e-commerce firm in Scandinavia with a total of 13 webshops in the region.

Source: Wealth-X



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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