INTERNET RICH LIST
1 May 2009
4 PartyGaming chiefs top Sunday Times top
earners
Online gambling websites lay major claim to the top
spots in The Sunday Times Rich List for 2009, with
almost half of the top 10 positions occupied by
individuals with online gambling interests.
Although the top dog on the list was Peter Cruddas,
founder and owner of Internet securities dealer CMC on
GBP 1 billion, industry observers will not be surprised
to learn that Party Gaming founders Ruth Parasol and
husband Russ De Leon are in second place with a reported
fortune of GBP 700 million even in these tough times in
terms of international economies.
Party Gaming
also fields Anurag Dikshit and former marketing director
Vikrant Bhargava, both primary shareholders who ranked
3rd on GBP 559 million and 9th on GBP 230 million
respectively, despite Dikshit's seriously expensive (at
$300 million) "settlement" earlier this year with the
American Justice Department.
Bet365 founders
Peter and Denise Coates, placed 6th on the list, with a
reputed personal worth of GBP 400 million invested in
their their Stoke, UK-based operation.
Betfair
placed three execs in the top 20, including founders Ed
Wray at 11th (GBP 190 million) and Andrew Black at 12th
(GBP 185 million). Equity investment manager Richard
Koch placed 17th on the list with a Betfair stake worth
(GBP 129 million).
Other prominent fortunes
listed include those of Web hosting services firm Planet
Online founder Peter Sykes at 4th (GBP 550 million) and
investor Peter Wilkinson at 7th (GBP 301 million).
The online top 10 was rounded out by Google's
Michael Moritz in 5th (GBP 470 million), Bebo's Michael
and Xochi Berch at 8th (GBP 250 million) and Miniclip
founder Tihan Presbie at 10th (GBP 196 million).
On the general list, the horrendous impact of the
recession on the fortunes of wealthy personalities was
well illustrated.
Steel industry magnate Lakshmi
Mittal remained on the top of the list this year,
despite being 2009's biggest loser, having watching over
GBP 16.9 billion evaporate from his empire. Mittal,
still worth over GBP 10 billion, was followed by Russian
entrepreneur Roman Abramovich, who lost GBP 4.7 billion
of his wealth this year but still managed to hang in
there with GBP 7 billion.
They were not alone -
the crippling decline in the global economy wiped GBP
155 billion off last year's list, the biggest fall since
it was first compiled 21 years ago.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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