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The richest 10 families in the world



Apart from the wealthy families associated with dynasties such as the ruling family in Brunei, Thailand, and Saudi Arabia, the US website Uniclubeida monitored a list of the ten richest families based on their wealth through their business practices, and their wealth was assessed on a margin because their money is subject to the ups and downs of the financial markets.

The Walton Family ($ 151-174 billion)

It is the richest family in the United States and the world, and one of the most famous family names: Jim Wallis Walton, each with $46.4 billion, respectively, ranked 14th and 16th in Forbes annual list of the world’s richest billionaires.
The family is owned by Wal-Mart, founded by Sam Walton in Arkansas in 1962. It is now the world’s largest revenue company with nearly half a trillion dollars, employing 2.3 million people, and has 12,000 stores around the world, including 5328 stores in the United States.

The Kush family ($ 120 billion)

The two American rich Charles and David Koch condemn their huge wealth of an oil company founded by their father and owned the company of Koch Industries, which is active in the fields of manufacturing industries, oil refining, distribution of petroleum and chemical materials, energy and fiber materials, and employing 150 thousand people in sixty countries.

But the Kush brothers are more known today to the general public about their relation with the world of politics. They fund election campaigns, fund liberal-minded centers, and also provide funding to universities and pressure companies to influence US decision-makers.

Mars family ($ 71-89 billion)

The American company of March (a multigenerational family) is known for making sweets and chocolate pieces that carry its name, and the wealth of the two sister brothers, Jacqueline and John March, is estimated at 23.6 billion dollars. They are grandchildren of the founder Frank March.
March 2017 bought VOC Pet Care in a $7.7 billion deal.
The Ikhwan, Jacqueline, and John are ranked 34th in the Forbes list of billionaire women, and the company currently runs some of Jacqueline and John’s sons, the fourth generation of the March family.

Arnault family ($ 72.2 billion)

French billionaire Bernard Arnault is CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors of LVMH, a giant company with 70 luxury brands of Cristian Dior, the hour (Tag Heuer), cosmetics (Sivora), wines and more.
Arno joined as a young man to a lucrative construction company for his father. Later, he used family money to carry out his own projects, and in the 1980s LVH was founded and bought the French textile company Bosak.
Arnault wealth has increased steadily in recent decades, but in 2017 it increased by $30.5 billion thanks to his company’s record results, as well as its acquisition of Christian Dior.

The Carlos Slim family ($ 67 billion)

Mexico’s richest man and family control America Mauville, Latin America’s largest telecommunications company, as well as Telmex, Mexico’s only telephone company.
Carlos is the son of a store owner and a real estate investor, and he founded much of his wealth in 1982 when the Mexican economy was exposed to a crisis. His company, the Carlos Group, bought many companies at low prices.

Carlos Group is investing in education, health care, manufacturing, transportation, real estate, information, energy, tourism, entertainment, microtechnology, retail, sports, and financial services.
The campaign for the US presidential election in 2016 was announced. Candidate Donald Trump attacked Salim by accusing him of being responsible for the negative coverage of Trump’s campaign by the New York Times because Salim has a share in the newspaper.

Recently, Salim was the biggest investor in the construction of a new controversial $13 billion airport project in the capital, Mexico City. According to Forbes, the Mexican billionaire is the richest in his country and the seventh in the world.

The Aldi family ($ 38.8-55.5 billion)

After the Second World War, the German brothers Carl and Theo El-Burecht transformed their small parent’s shop into a store offering discounted prices throughout Germany, and the series is now available at more than 10,000 stores.

In 1961, the Brothers divided their company according to a geographical division, so that Karl the German south and the trademark rights in the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia took over, while Theo took over the company’s business in the German North and Europe. He later bought the US retail company Trader Joe.

When Karl died in 2014, he was Germany’s richest person, inheriting his estimated $27.5 billion worth of wealth, built by Pitt Hester and Karl-Brecht, and making Karl-Marx 48 on Forbes list. On the other hand, Theo’s wealth is estimated at 27.5 billion to be 48 on the same list.
The Dhi family’s business is expanding rapidly now in America with a plan to open 800 stores by 2022 to become the third biggest store chain in the United States behind Wal-Mart and Kruger.

The Dumas family ($ 36.7-49.2 billion)

The French luxury fashion company Domas was linked to the making of necks, scarves, perfumes and suitcases, and the family dates back to the 19th century when Terry was designing aristocratic clothes.
The family is currently investing in education, modern technology, jewelry, perfumes and household furniture. It has a luxury Hermes timeline of $1,300 to $1,500, and Excel Domas President and Pierre Alexis Douma, Technical Director.

The Kamprad family ($ 49 billion)

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Born in a poor Swedish rural family and died in 2018, founder of the late well-known Swedish company Ikea, Ingvar Kamprad, one of the richest in the world, opened Sweden’s first household furniture store in the 1950s. Over the next half-century, the company has expanded worldwide.
Kamprad started his career by selling the hours at the age of five and then expanding to start selling fish, decorate Christmas celebrations and office tools. In 1948, household furniture was added to it.
In 2013, Kamprad resigned as president of Ikea at the age of 87years old, replacing him with his son Matthew.

Wertheimer family ($ 45.6 billion)

a French family who owns the luxury fashion house “Chanel” and is famous for one of the world-famous perfumes and international fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld, and the brothers Allen and Gerhard Wertheimer are now jointly owned by the company founded by their grandfather Gabriel Coco Chanel.

The Quandt Family ($ 42-46 billion)

The Kwandet family owns a majority stake in BMW Automotive Industry, which also makes luxury Rolls Royce cars, mini-cars, and motorcycles.
The late Kwandet’s daughter, Susanne Klatten, and his son, Stefan, have a 45% stake in BMW, a majority stake in Germany’s auto giant.
Fourni par Blogger.