Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | SciTech | SOEs | Tax | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | More Categories

 


Hart retains top spot on shrinking Rich List

Hart retains top spot on Rich List as kiwis’ wealth shrinks

July 24 – Graeme Hart, whose investments range from packaging to food, held onto his top spot on the National Business Review’s 2009 Rich List, which showed the impact of the credit crunch and global economic slump has trimmed the net worth of New Zealand’s wealthiest people.

Hart’s wealth fell NZ$500 million to an estimated NZ$5.5 billion in the latest Rich List survey, keeping him comfortably atop the list he has led for seven of the past eight years.

The global financial crisis cut the combined wealth of Rich Listers by NZ$5.7 billion to $38.7 billion, and resulted in 17 being dropped from the list. The

Todd family, with interests in energy, mining and media companies, was second on the list, with an estimated NZ$2.6 billion, unchanged from a year earlier.
Dairy farm and property investor Eamon Cleary ranked third, with his wealth falling by NZ$100 million to NZ$2 billion.

Fund managers Richard and Christopher Chandler, who oversee Sovereign Asset Management, had a combined wealth of NZ$3.6 billion, rank fourth, according to the NBR’s annual survey.

Lynette Erceg, widow of liquor baron Michael Erceg, was sixth-ranked, at NZ$1.2 billion, down NZ$200 million.

Rich List valuer Neville Glaser said it was clear 2008-2009 wasn’t a good year to be wealthy, according to the NBR.

(BusinessWire)

 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

Scoop Business: Will Good Politics Fix Broken Tax System?

Prime Minister John Key is obsessed with two things about the New Zealand economy. One is the fact that productive industry has been shrinking as proportion of the economy for more than five years.

The other is the price of houses – an issue that Reserve Bank governors and other politicians have identified for years and done nothing about. More>>

 
 

I Want A New Drug: Paradex And Capadex To Be Withdrawn From NZ

All medicines containing dextropropoxyphene will be withdrawn from the New Zealand market after a review of the safety and efficacy of these medicines showed that their risks outweighed their possible benefits. More>>

Keith Rankin: Personal Income Tax Reform In New Zealand

While I agree that the system is far from perfect, few of us understand the basics of our present personal tax scales, and workable suggestions of alternatives are few and far between. More>>

ALSO:

Q+A Transcript: Catching Australia By 2025 LOL

- Bollard dismisses government’s aim of catching Australian incomes by 2025: “I don’t think we can catch up with Australia”
- Bollard says New Zealand should aim to benefit from the “crumbs [that] come off the Australian table”
- New Zealand recovery from recession “still fragile” More>>

ALSO:

DOC vs. National: Government Pressure To Privatise Mackenzie

Independent conservation organisation Forest & Bird has obtained documents under the Official Information Act that reveal the Government is stopping the Department of Conservation (DOC) from trying to protect the Mackenzie Basin from destruction by intensive irrigation. More >>

ALSO:

Employment: NZ Jobless Rate Jumps To 7.3% Sending Kiwi Down

New Zealand’s unemployment rate surged more than expected in the fourth quarter to the highest in more than a decade, stoking speculation the central bank won’t rush to raise interest rates. More>>

ALSO:

Media: 3 News Programmes Win "Key" Demographic

3 News , Campbell Live and Nightline all had strong nationwide wins against competing shows in the all important 18-49 demographic in January, retaining the competitive lead they held in December. More>>

Crazy? Yes! Dumb? No! Mint Chicks Join New Model For Music Sales

Wellington-based global internet entrepreneur WebFund is backing what it hopes will be a new way to make money in the cruel and unusual world of digital music sales. More>>

ALSO:

Conservation: Signing South Pacific Fisheries Agreement Welcomed

The Environment and Conservation Organisations (ECO) today welcomed New Zealand signing the South Pacific regional fisheries management agreement. ECO Co-chairperson, Cath Wallace, said the agreement was essential for the management of pelagic and bottom fisheries in the South Pacific, including orange roughy and jack mackerel. More >>

LATEST HEADLINES

MOST READ HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS
 
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news