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http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/79694A03-C8BD-419E-9BD1-E392ED700D8D.htm



Bill Gates no longer 'richest'*

(Slim is rumoured to be worth $67.8 billion [AFP)

(Bill Gates has an estimated fortune of $59bn, the Mexican financial website
said [AFP] )

Bill Gates has been replaced as the world's richest by a Mexican telecoms
tycoon, according to a Mexican financial website.
Sentido Comun reported on Tuesday that the recent strong performance of
Carlos Slim Helu's America Movil company, Latin America's largest mobile
phone operator, has seen him surpass the Microsoft founder.

The website claimed there was a difference between the two of "nine billion
dollars in favour of Slim."

"Thanks to a 26.5-per cent rise in the shares of America Movil during the
second quarter, Slim, who controls a 33 per cent interest, is substantially
richer than Gates."

Many interests

Eduardo Garcia, a respected financial journalist who operates Sentido Comun,
said that Slim moved into the number one spot with a fortune of $67.8
billion at the end of the second quarter of 2007.

Meanwhile, Microsoft Corp. founder Gates has an estimated wealth of some $59
billion, Garcia said.

US-based Forbes magazine, renowned for its rankings of the world's
wealthiest individuals, updated its listings in April to rank Slim as the
second richest individual in the world, moving ahead of the US investor
Warren Buffett.

Aside from America Movil, Slim controls the Inbursa financial group and the
Grupo Carso industrial firm with interests including retail stores, coffee
shops and restaurants.

Gates stepped aside as Microsoft chief in 2000 to devote his energies to the
philanthropic foundation he runs with his wife, Melinda

Garcia, however, acknowledged that his second-quarter calculations do not
include possible gains in Gates' holdings outside of Microsoft, which
according to Forbes represent more than half of the software mogul's
fortune.

In the blood

He also noted that he does not take into account Slim's holdings outside of
his numerous companies.

"I say that Slim is No 1 because I have the latest figures of Forbes,"
Garcia said. "When Forbes revises their numbers, OK, then we'll have to wait
and see."

Slim, the son of Lebanese immigrants, has had business in his blood from his
early days when he helped out in his father's shop, "The Star of the
Orient."

He was already affluent enough when he graduated from university with an
engineering degree to buy stakes in a stock brokerage and a bottling firm.

During the Latin American economic crisis of the early 1980s, Slim snapped
up and reformed a number of struggling businesses, creating massive profits
for Grupo Carso.

In 1997, he bought about three per cent of Apple Computer at $17 a share
shortly before the company launched its hit iMac computer. Twelve months
later, Apple's shares were $100.

Despite his vast riches, Slim reportedly shuns a lavish lifestyle, even
wearing a plastic watch during the 1990s.

He was widowed in 1999, and, like Gates, he has developed a strong profile
on the philanthropic front.

Earlier this month he allied himself with the foundation of the former US
president Bill Clinton and with a Canadian mining magnate, Frank Giustra, to
launch an anti-poverty campaign in Latin America.


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