What's new

Saudi prince feels humiliated by Forbes ranking

It's not fair to mock this guy without knowing the tangible effects of such rankings/evaluations.

These ultra rich people live in a whole different universe and there may well be business consequences to these evaluations.
 
I think it may have to do with some business considerations - I mean why would he feel like 20 Billion is some sort of put down, unless it may effect some buiness?
 
It's not fair to mock this guy without knowing the tangible effects of such rankings/evaluations.

These ultra rich people live in a whole different universe and there may well be business consequences to these evaluations.

Exactly... For its own investments.
 
If I had 30 billion I will be humiliated if others think I only have 28 billion, damn it that put my reputation at steak. My Sympathies are with you prince and you must teach forbes a lesson so they dont dare to play this dirty game with another prince in the future, show them who has biggest oil fields
 
If I had 30 billion I will be humiliated if others think I only have 28 billion, damn it that put my reputation at steak. My Sympathies are with you prince and you must teach forbes a lesson so they dont dare to play this dirty game with another prince in the future, show them who has biggest oil fields

:butcher:

Patience, patience... ^^
 
True business shouldnt involve emotion or religious or cultural considerations. National interest and security - yes. But nothin else. It's all about making the mothafckin money niggas
 
What do you mean all the wealth belongs to arab. The guy has worked his ar$$ off so hard reached where he is today, so please take your hands off his pocket. You don't know him you don't know his history you don't know even what your talking about so you better shut it. Also don't assign yourself as a lawyer on behalf of ''arab'' and find something else poke your nose in.

Dude, we all know how hard he worked his *** off.....lets not open can of worms!
 
The hardest part of starting any venture is Capital. If people had unlimited suply with no repurcussions if it was lost in a few bad investments, most of the failed startups would still be around today.
 
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal insulted at only being No 26 on Forbes rich list

For most people, even featuring in the Forbes list of the world's billionaires would be cause for celebration, but for Prince Alwaleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia, appearing at number 26 with $20bn (£15bn) was an insult.

The prince, one of the most influential businessmen in the Middle East, insists the list undervalues him by $9.6bn. He has vowed to sever all ties with the group's reporters and accused them of damaging US-Saudi relations.

In response, the editor of the influential list has written a stinging rebuke saying the prince considers a top-10 ranking one of his priorities, systematically exaggerates his wealth and spends more time and effort than any other businessman on attempts to boost his ranking – even more time and effort than Donald Trump.

Forbes's estimate of Alwaleed's wealth at $20bn puts him behind Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin. But Alwaleed, a nephew of the Saudi king whose investments are run by his Kingdom Holding Company, estimates his own wealth at $29.6bn (£19.5bn), which would catapult him into the top 10 of the magazine's richest people on the planet, just behind 90-year-old French cosmetics heiress Liliane Bettencourt.

Forbes said the prince's camp wrote four letters in the build-up to the list's publication in an effort to secure a favourable valuation. In one letter his chief financial officer, Shadi Sanbar, said an undervaluation "strikes in the face of improving Saudi-American bilateral relations and co-operation. Forbes is putting down the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and that is a slap in the face of modernity and progress."

But Forbes hit back, with billionaire list editor Kerry Dolan explaining it no longer considers the share price of Alwaleed's Saudi-listed Kingdom Holdings an accurate reflection of its value.

She points out that the share price would soar by up to 136% in the weeks before Forbes locked in the valuation to calculate its rankings in the past three years.

Dolan wrote: "The value that the prince puts on his holdings at times feels like an alternate reality, including his publicly trading Kingdom Holdings, which rises and falls based on factors that, coincidentally, seem more tied to the Forbes billionaires list than fundamentals."

In a scathing character assassination, the writer describes the prince as a vainglorious businessman in the "absurdly opulent" surroundings of his marble-clad palaces filled with portraits of himself. "If he needs to go on a business trip, he has his own 747, à la Air Force One, except unlike the president, his plane has a throne."

During a trip to Riyadh in 2008, the article said, he showed off his wealth, including what he claimed was a $700m haul of jewels, and sent the magazine's US offices mocked up copies of Vanity Fair, Time 100 and Forbes magazine itself with his face adorning the front covers, according to Dolan.

"Of the 1,426 billionaires on our list, not one – not even the vainglorious Donald Trump – goes to greater measure to try to affect his or her ranking.

"In 2006 when Forbes estimated that the prince was actually worth $7bn less than he said he was, he called me at home the day after the list was released, sounding nearly in tears."

Shares in Kingdom Holdings, his vehicle for investments in Citigroup, Newscorp and Apple, among others, would rise in the 10 weeks before the Forbes list was finalised.

In 2010 its shares rose 57%, despite shares in Citigroup falling 20% in the same period. In 2011 the same happened, with a 31% rise in Kingdom's shares, and in 2012 they jumped 136%.

A former Alwaleed executive told Forbes that market manipulation in Saudi Arabia was rife. The magazine quoted the executive as saying: "This is the national sport … There are no casinos. It's the gambling site of the Saudis."

The prince, who enjoys the nickname "the Buffett of Arabia" after shrewd investments in eBay and Apple, called the allegations "completely unsupported and biased".

A statement added: "The application of differing standards of proof for different individuals and organizations results in an arbitrary and confusing set of standards that seems demonstrably biased against the Middle East."

Sanbar, chief financial officer of Kingdom Holding, said: "We have worked very openly with the Forbes team over the years and have on multiple occasions pointed out problems with their methodology that need correction.

"However, after several years of our efforts to correct mistakes falling on deaf ears, we have decided that Forbes has no intention of improving the accuracy of their valuation of our holdings and we have made the decision to move on."

He said they would now focus on working with Bloomberg Billionaires index, a Forbes rival launched last year, which estimates the prince's wealth at $28bn, ranking him not in the top 10, but the world's 16th wealthiest person.

A princely sum

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal boasts that Forbes has referred to him twice as "one of the world's most intelligent and creative investors". On his website he claims to have met more than 250 heads of state and world leaders and says: "As a man of significant wealth and influence, Prince Alwaleed is humbled when people look to him for advice and guidance on issues such as religion, global peace and how society should adapt to meet the challenges of the 21st century."

The Saudi prince, 57, owns 95% of the Kingdom Holding Company, which trades on the Saudi stock exchange. As well as shares in companies such as News Corp and Citibank it holds stakes in a string of luxury hotels including the Savoy in London, the George V in Paris and the Fairmont Raffles.

The company started investing in Apple in 1997, the year Steve Jobs returned to the helm of the company he founded. It recently bought an estimated 3% of Twitter for $300m (£230m) and has stakes in AOL and Motorola.

Not all his investments have been a great success. In 1997 he bought a stake in TWA, which declared chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2001 and merged with American Airlines. Another notable failure was Kodak, which went bust last year, overwhelmed by the digital photography revolution.

He invested in Euro Disney in 1994, and in 1995 helped complete Canary Wharf by putting in cash when the owner was in receivership. The group holds a third of Jeddah Economic, which owns the project to build the 1,000-metre, $1.2bn Kingdom Tower in Jeddah.

The prince also holds an 80% stake in Rotana, one of the Middle East's biggest media companies.

His 200 cars include a Rolls-Royce Phantom and Lamborghinis and Ferraris. His fleet of private jets includes a Boeing 747, an Airbus 321 and a Hawker Siddeley 125.

According to Forbes he was the first individual to buy an Airbus A380 double decker plane and was supposed to take delivery of it this spring, but Kingdom Holding's chief financial officer told the magazine that the plane has been sold.

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal insulted at only being No 26 on Forbes rich list | Business | The Guardian



Must be hurtful to his ego, knowing that not everything can be bought with money.

He is a well respected business man and all princes do not have loads of money available for free.

Forbes.. is for business people, i didn't expect a folly from a so called German... mr. your hate is overflowing.
 
For the people of Pakistan, who dosn't know.. he spent almost $1billion in Pakistan since Musharraf.. todate.

He built an iron palletizing plant.. first of its kind in Pakistan... he was denied power and gas by Zardari.. but he kept paying the salaries for 5 years irrespective of operation or profit.

At last he built his own power plant, which was not forseen at the time of initial investment.

He use to eat with our local labor together in plant.. and always told that he doesn't need money.. he built this plant to help people of Pakistan... while the all good and bad people of Pakistan... keep eating this golden duck until he sold half of its shares to Koreans.. and boom every one got straitened... Zardari stop bothering.. for his percentage too.

Of course there is no discrimination.. in Talal's plant based on any sect. He is a fair and way above than a normal hater.
 

Back
Top Bottom