BUSINESS

The 40 richest Indians

By Naazneen Karmali, Forbes
November 17, 2006

India's rising fortunes are underscored by the increasing prosperity of its wealthiest citizens. Members of our third annual ranking of India's 40 richest businesspeople are worth a collective $170 billion, up from $106 billion last year. India's top ten, worth $112 billion, account for two-thirds of that wealth.

The rankings include 36 billionaires, nine more than last year. India's hot stock market, up 39 per cent this year, and its robust real estate market helped swell most fortunes. The minimum net worth needed to make the cut rose to $790 million, up from $590 million.

Slideshows:
India's 40 richest
The Forbes 40 India

Lakshmi Mittal, who lives in London and in June forged a landmark deal to acquire Luxembourg rival Arcelor, remains No. 1, worth $25 billion. Azim Premji, for years India's richest resident, was unseated by Mukesh and Anil Ambani.

 

THE 10 RICHEST INDIANS

#

Name

Worth
($ billion)

Age

Industry

1

Lakshmi Mittal

25.00

56

Steel

2

Mukesh Ambani

18.50

49

Diversified

3

Anil Ambani

14.80

47

Diversified

4

Azim Premji

14.00

61

Software

5

Kushal Pal Singh

10.00

75

Real estate

6

Sunil Mittal

6.90

49

Telecom

7

Kumar Birla

6.80

39

Commodities

8

Tulsi Tanti

5.90

48

Wind energy

9

Ramesh Chandra

5.30

67

Real estate

10

Pallonji Mistry

4.90

77

Construction

The two brothers, who split their business empire last year after a much-publicized feud, have found life alone much richer: Mukesh's fortune rose by $11.5 billion, Anil's $9.3 billion. Still the spat continues, with one of Anil's companies recently taking Mukesh's Reliance Industries to court over a gas supply agreement.

Many tycoons have been in the news lately for negotiating big deals. Venugopal Dhoot is set to acquire Daewoo Electronics for $700 million. Commodities magnate Kumarmangalam Birla paid $1 billion to buy the Tata Group's stake in their telecom joint venture, Idea. Banker Uday Kotak bought out Goldman Sach's stake in his bank's investment banking and brokerage arms.

Slideshows:
The world's billionaires
Asia's fab 50 companies - India and Hong Kong

There are five newcomers, including politically connected Kalanithi Maran, who runs regional broadcaster Sun TV; Ramesh Chandra, who made a fortune building middle-class housing; and Jignesh Shah, who set up India's largest commodities exchange. Two others, tractor tycoon Keshub Mahindra and Infosys Technologies co-founder K. Dinesh, return to the list after having previously slipped off.

This year's seven dropouts include India's richest self-made woman, Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw. The stock of her biopharmaceutical firm Biocon dropped 26 per cent in the past 12 months. The list's biggest loser was Anurag Dikshit, No. 29, who saw the stock of his Internet gaming outfit, PartyGaming, tank over regulatory issues.

Methodology: Unlike Forbes' World Billionaires list, this ranking has been broadened to include family fortunes. For instance, Tulsi Tanti's $5.9 billion fortune represents his family's entire 70 per cent stake in Suzlon Energy, not just his personal 30 per cent stake.

For people with fortunes in publicly traded companies, net worths were calculated using Nov. 6 market prices and exchange rates. Privately held companies are valued by coupling estimates of revenues or profits (or, in some cases, company-provided numbers) to prevailing ratios for similar publicly traded companies.

Slideshow:
The world's 2000 largest companies

Additional reporting by C N Krishnakumar with Chaniga Vorasarun

Naazneen Karmali, Forbes

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