Mukesh Ambani tops 200 Indians on Forbes’ World’s Billionaires list
With his net worth shooting up to $116 billion, from $83 billion, Mukesh Ambani became the first Asian to break into the exclusive $100 billion club India sets another record on 2024 Forbes’ World’s Billionaires list, with 200 names —up from 169 last year.
The combined wealth of India’s record crop of billionaires is approaching a trillion dollars, with a record total of $954 billion—up 41% from $675 billion last year and well exceeding 2022’s total of $750 billion, according to the US business magazine.
Ambani also retained his position as the ninth richest person in the world and remains both India’s and Asia’s richest person. But the biggest dollar gainer among Indian billionaires this year is infrastructure and commodities tycoon Gautam Adani, who added $36.8 billion to cement his position as India’s second wealthiest citizen.
READ: Jio success: Mukesh Ambani tops Forbes’ 2017 Global Game Changers List (May 17, 2017)
Shares of Adani Group, which includes his flagship Adani Enterprises, Adani Green Energy and Adani Power, among others, were battered last year after allegations of fraud by US-based short-seller Hindenburg Research, but rebounded strongly after it reduced debt and secured investors such as Indian-American billionaire Rajiv Jain’s GQG Partners.
Adani Group has denied the allegations. All this helped Adani claw his way back into the top 20 wealthiest in the world to No.17 with a fortune of $84 billion.
The richest woman in India remains Savitri Jindal, matriarch of a steel and power fortune, whose O.P. Jindal group listed its infrastructure unit last year. She is now the fourth richest in India, up from sixth a year ago, with a net worth of $33.5 billion.
READ: Mukesh Ambani is India’s richest person, Dilip Shanghvi 2nd: Forbes list (September 22, 2016)
Overall, the wealth of more than two-thirds of the Indian billionaires on the list swelled from last year. A dozen of them at least doubled their fortunes since 2023, including property magnate Kushal Pal Singh, whose developer DLF benefited from a buoyant real estate market.
Singh is now worth $20.9 billion and ranked No.92 in the world, still far off his record high in 2008 when he ranked 8th richest on the planet worth $30 billion.
Only two in the group of top ten Indians saw their wealth decline: the country’s vaccine billionaire Cyrus Poonawalla’s fortune dropped to $21.3 billion as sales of Covid-19 vaccines made by his Serum Institute of India dwindled.
Poonawalla, whose son Adar was in the news for buying a Mayfair mansion in London for 138 million pounds in December, has slipped to the position of the country’s sixth richest person from number four.
The other notable fortune to shrink was that of steel baron Lakshmi Mittal, whose Arcelor Mittal shares fell in a weak market; he’s now the tenth richest in the country, down from number five last year (Mittal was the third-richest in the world in 2005).
Twenty-five new Indian billionaires made their debut. Among them are Naresh Trehan, a leading cardiac surgeon-turned-healthcare entrepreneur, who owns and runs the Medanta chain of hospitals in north India; Ramesh Kunhikannan, founder of Kaynes Technology, which supplied electronic systems for India’s moon mission in August that powered the rover and the lander; and Renuka Jagtiani, who oversees Middle East retailing giant Landmark Group.
She inherited her fortune from her late husband Micky Jagtiani, Landmark’s founder, who died last year after a long illness. He was one of three Indian billionaires to die in the past 12 months.
The others were : Keshub Mahindra, chairman emeritus of Mahindra & Mahindra, and paints billionaire Ashwin Dani of Asian Paints.
A dozen people returned to the list after previously falling off, including financial services veteran Raamdeo Agrawal, whose business partner Motilal Oswal makes his debut this year.
India’s infrastructure push propelled expressway builder Virendra Mhaiskar back into the ranks after a 13-year gap.
Only four people from last year’s list dropped off this time, including former edtech star Byju Raveendran, whose firm Byju’s was enveloped in multiple crises and its valuation was marked down by BlackRock to $1 billion, a fraction of its peak $22 billion valuation in 2022.
Rohiqa Mistry is excluded this year as disclosures revealed that her late husband Cyrus Mistry’s share of the family’s fortune that is tied to a valuable stake in Tata Sons, the holding company of the Tata conglomerate, was inherited by her two sons Firoz Mistry and Zahan Mistry. Both hold Irish passports and therefore are not included among Indian billionaires.
Here are India’s 10 richest people.
1. Mukesh Ambani, World Rank 9
Net worth: $116 Billion, Source of wealth: Diversified, City: Mumbai
2. Gautam Adani, World Rank 17
Net worth: $84 Billion, Source of wealth: Infrastructure, City: Ahmedabad
3. Shiv Nadar, World Rank 39
Net worth: $36.9 Billion, Source of wealth: Software Services, City: Delhi
4. Savitri Jindal, World Rank 47
Net worth: $33.5 Billion, Source of wealth: Steel, City: Hisar
5. Dilip Shanghvi, World Rank 69
Net worth: $26.7 Billion, Source of wealth: Pharmaceuticals, City: Mumbai
6. Cyrus Poonawalla, World Rank 90
Net worth: $21.3 Billion, Source of wealth: Vaccines, City: Pune
7. Kushal Pal Singh, World Rank 92
Net worth: $20.9 Billion, Source of wealth: Real Estate, City: London/Dubai
8. Kumar Birla, World Rank 98
Net worth: $19.7 Billion, Source of wealth, Commodities, City: Mumbai
9. Radhakishan Damani, World Rank 107
Net worth: $17.6 Billion, Source of wealth: Retail, Investments, City: Mumbai
10. Lakshmi Mittal, World Rank 113
Net worth: $16.4 Billion, Source of wealth: Steel, City: London