Source : THE AGE NEWS

By Dylan Sloan
April 6, 2025 — 11.33am

The world’s 500 richest people suffered the biggest two-day loss ever on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index as fallout from US President Donald Trump’s tariff announcement decimated markets across the globe.

Billionaires on the wealth list lost a collective $US536 billion ($887 billion) from Thursday’s sharemarket open to Friday’s close as the S&P 500 Index dropped 10.5 per cent over the two days and the Nasdaq Composite fell 11.4 per cent.

Billionaire hit: Mark Zuckerberg (left) and Elon Musk.Credit: AP

Friday’s $US329 billion drop was the largest since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, swamping Thursday’s $US208 billion slide. Almost 90 per cent of the billionaires tracked by the wealth index saw their fortunes fall on Friday, with an average decline of 3.5 per cent.

No one lost more over the two-day stretch than Tesla chief executive Elon Musk. The carmaker’s stock plunged more than 10 per cent on Friday, dragging Musk’s net worth down $US31 billion from Thursday’s open and bringing his yearly losses to $US130 billion.

Meta Platforms founder Mark Zuckerberg followed with a $US27 billion loss as the social media company dropped almost 14 per cent over the two-day stretch.

Carvana chief executive Ernest Garcia III’s two-day loss of $US2 billion was enough to push him off the list of the world’s 500 richest people. His used-car retailer’s stock lost 28 per cent over the period.

Nike founder Phil Knight was one of few winners on Friday. The shoe company’s stock gained 2.8 per cent after Trump said that he’d had a “very productive call” with Vietnamese leader To Lam over possibly eliminating a 46 per cent tariff unveiled yesterday on the South-East Asian country, where much of Nike’s manufacturing is done. The stock’s rise added $US84 million to Knight’s net worth on the day, reversing Thursday’s $US3 billion loss.

Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim fared opposite. The mogul behind mobile-phone operator America Movil narrowly was in the black on Thursday as Mexico’s exclusion from the White House’s list of tariff targets pushed the country’s main index up slightly.

On Friday, though, Slim reversed those gains and then some, losing $US5.5 billion as the Mexican Bolsa fell 4.9 per cent.

Bloomberg

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