Rich get richer in Britain despite credit crunch

Sun Apr 27, 2008 10:24am BST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's rich are getting richer despite the global credit crunch and are now worth more than 400 billion pounds.

The Sunday Times said the collective worth of the top 1,000 in its annual Rich List rose 53 billion pounds in the past 12 months to 412.8 billion.

The fortune owned by Indian steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal and his family grew 8.4 billion to 27.7 billion thanks to booming demand for steel. They top the list for the fourth consecutive year.

Second comes Russian oil tycoon Roman Abramovich, the owner of Chelsea football club, whose coffers expanded by 900 million pounds to 11.7 billion. Although neither man is British they are resident in the country.

In third place is the Duke of Westminster whose property portfolio, much of it in the most select areas of London, stands at an unchanged 7 billion pounds.

There are signs, however, that the credit crunch and an economic slowdown is taking its toll. Islamic art and property mogul David Khalili saw his fortune slashed 3.3 billion pounds to 2.5 billion and the worth of fashion retailer Philip Green dropped 570 million pounds to 4.3 billion.

The Sunday Times said 762 of the richest 1,000 people were self-made millionaires with land and property being the largest single source of their wealth.

Harry Potter creator JK Rowling's fortune was put at 560 million pounds after 545 million a year ago, making her yet again Britain's richest author.

The newspaper put Paul McCartney's wealth at 500 million pounds, close to the 400 million calculated by the judge in his acrimonious divorce this year from Heather Mills, but well short of the 800 million she said he was worth.

(Reporting by Jeremy Lovell; editing by Robert Woodward)

 
This Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) computer screen image shows an online forum called "Dark Market" where it educates users where to buy skimming devices to penetrate bank accounts, how to distribute malware through spam, and buy stolen credit cards among other things. Even as authorities try to stamp out that con and other e-mail and online scams, scammers are getting more wily and finding new loopholes to exploit. The vast majority of e-mail is spam and an unknown percentage of that is meant to defraud.
Cybercrime warning

Criminals are attacking small and medium-sized companies that don't have the inclination, money or expertise to prevent cybercrime.  Full Coverage 

Photo

Most Popular General News on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos