Donald Trump may be the Republican frontrunner for the White House, but he is slipping behind in the world billionaire’s race, Forbes magazine’s new list of the planet’s richest people shows.
Trump, who has made his enormous wealth a key selling point in his presidential bid, came in 324th in the magazine’s 2016 ranking of the world’s billionaires, which was published Tuesday.
That means that more than 200 billionaires have jumped ahead of the ever competitive real estate mogul since 2015 when he placed 121st on the annual list.
The magazine put Trump’s net worth at an above average $4.5 billion, the same as last year but about half the $10 billion fortune candidate Trump often claims to have amassed.
In other highlights, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is still ranked the world’s richest person with an estimated net worth of $75 billion, $4.2 billion less than last year.
Facebook chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg had the best year of all, adding $11.2 billion to his fortune.
Forbes put the 31-year-old’s net worth at $44.6 billion, ranking him number six, just behind Amazon’s Jeff Bezos ($45.2 billion). It was the first time either of them made the top ten.
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It hasn’t been a banner year for billionaires, however.
According to Forbes, their number has slipped to 1,810, 16 fewer than last year, and their aggregate net worth shrank by $570 billion to $6.48 trillion.
This is also the first year since 2010, that the average individual billionaire’s fortune has dropped, settling at $3.6 billion, $300 million less than last year, it said.
A volatile stock market, catering oil prices and the strong dollar have reshuffled the ranks of billionaires, the magazine said.
Only two held on to their previous year’s rank — Gates, who has been number one for three straight years, and investor Warren Buffet, whose $60.8 billion fortune put him in third place.
Mexico’s telecoms magnate Carlos Slim slipped to fourth place, giving up second to retailer Amancio Ortega of Spain ($67 billion). Slim’s fortune plunged from $77.1 to $50 billion.
Forbes said 221 people fell off the list altogether, replaced by 198 newcomers.
The youngest billionaire was 19-year-old Danish heiress Alexandra Andresen. Her 20-year-old sister Katharina is the second youngest on the list.
In all, 66 billionaires are under 40 years of age. The richest of the 190 women on the list was Liliane Bettencourt of France, who was ranked 11th with $36.1 billion, down from $40.1 billion last year.
The United States is still the country with the most billionaires (540), followed by mainland China (251) and Germany (120).
Russia has 77 billionaires, Hong Kong 69, and Brazil 23, down from 31 last year.