Mark Zuckerberg is now world’s second-richest person, ahead of Jeff Bezos

Mark Zuckerberg is now world’s second-richest person, ahead of Jeff Bezos


At the Meta Connect developer conference, Mark Zuckerberg, head of the Facebook group Meta, shows the prototype of computer glasses that can display digital objects in transparent lenses.

Andrej Sokolow | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has surpassed Jeff Bezos as the world’s second richest person.

Zuckerberg’s net worth reached $206.2 billion on Thursday, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, topping the $205.1 billion net worth of the former Amazon CEO and president. The Facebook co-founder now trails Tesla chief Elon Musk by roughly $50 billion, the index showed.

With his 13% stake in Meta, Zuckerberg’s net-worth has risen by $78 billion since the beginning of the year, which is more than any member of the of the 500 richest people that the Bloomberg Index tracks. Meta shares closed at a record high on Thursday at $582.77, representing a roughly 68% jump from early January when its shares were trading at $346.29.

Zuckerberg’s rise to the second spot on the index on Thursday underscores how his personal wealth has grown alongside investor enthusiasm over the social media giant’s rising profits this year.

Wall Street has continuously cheered Meta throughout 2024 as the company has consistently reported quarterly earnings that have surpassed analyst estimates. In July, Meta said that its second-quarter sales grew 22% to $39.07 billion, marking the fourth straight quarter of revenue growth topping 20%.

Meta has pointed to its hefty artificial intelligence investments as helping improve the performance of its online advertising platform as a reason for its sales growth. The company’s online advertising system suffered a major setback in 2021 when Apple introduced an iOS privacy update that weakened its ability to track users across the web. Meta in February 2022 said that the privacy changes would cost it $10 billion in revenue.

In late 2022, Zuckerberg instituted a major cost-cutting plan that extended into the next year and ultimately resulted in 21,000 Meta workers losing their jobs, or roughly a quarter of the company’s workforce.

Investors reacted favorably to Meta’s cost cutting while the company’s online advertising business began to rebound and was bolstered by the massive digital ad spending campaigns by Chinese-linked retailers Temu and Shien.

While Meta has continued spending billions of dollars on the virtual and augmented reality technologies needed to underpin the futuristic concept of the metaverse, investors have become more tolerant of the investments as long as the company’s core ad business remains healthy.

Last week, Meta debuted its Orion AR glasses, which garnered positive reviews from the few people who have tested the prototype.

Watch: CNBC reviews Meta’s Orion AR glasses prototype

Meta's Orion AR glasses prototype: CNBC reviews



Source

Airbus CEO says Europe’s ‘digital battlefield’ will take a decade to build
World

Airbus CEO says Europe’s ‘digital battlefield’ will take a decade to build

Key Points Europe’s ambitions to create a “combat cloud,” where defense-related data is exchanged between nations securely, could take over a decade. That’s according to Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury, who sat down with CNBC’s Charlotte Reed in a fireside chat at the Adopt AI conference in Paris. The combat cloud part of a range of space-based […]

Read More
From stocks to property, here’s what the Autumn Budget means for UK assets
World

From stocks to property, here’s what the Autumn Budget means for UK assets

U.K. Finance Minister Rachel Reeves delivered her long-awaited Autumn Budget on Wednesday, which included a swathe of tax hikes that will impact most of the British population. CNBC rounded up the headline announcements for investors and spoke to market watchers about the implications for U.K. assets. Stocks and bonds Among the raft of measures announced […]

Read More
Saba Capital activist Boaz Weinstein calls for removal of Baillie Gifford-run tech investment trust’s entire board
World

Saba Capital activist Boaz Weinstein calls for removal of Baillie Gifford-run tech investment trust’s entire board

Boaz Weinstein is calling for the removal of the entire board of a tech-focused fund managed by Baillie Gifford, in a bid to reverse what the activist investor sees as “unprecedented” value destruction. In a letter to the Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust’s board on Thursday, Weinstein — whose activist investment firm Saba Capital owns around […]

Read More