Top 10 World’s Billionaires in 2013. Carlos Slim topped the 2013 billionaire list, marking his fourth consecutive year at the top. Gates remained in second, while Amancio Ortega moved up to third. Ortega’s gain of $19.5 billion was the largest of anyone on the list. Warren Buffett failed to make the top three for the first time since 2000, placing fourth. Diesel founder Renzo Rosso was among the top newcomers, debuting with an estimate net worth of $3 billion.
A global rise in asset prices led Forbes editor Randall Lane to declare “It [was] a very good year to be a billionaire”. However, it was not a good year to be Eike Batista, who fell from seventh to 100th, suffering the largest net loss of anyone on the list. Overall, net gainers outnumbered net losers by 4:1.
A record total of 1,426 people made the 2013 list, representing $5.4 trillion of assets. Of those, 442 billionaires hailed from the United States. The Asian-Pacific region had 386 billionaires and Europe 366. The list also featured a record number of newcomers, 210, representing 42 countries. 60 people from the 2012 list fell below a billion dollars of assets in 2013, and eight others from the 2012 list died. The Asia-Pacific region had the most drop-offs, with 29, followed by the United States with 16. The 2013 list featured 138 women, of which 50 came from the United States. A majority of the list (961 individuals, 67 percent) were entirely self-made; 184 (13 percent) inherited their wealth, and 281 (20 percent) achieved their fortune through a combination of inheritance and business acumen. Vietnam‘s Phạm Nhật Vượng was the first person from that country to be included in this list.
Here is a List of Top 10 World’s Billionaires in 2013
- Carlos Slim & family – $73.0 billion
- Bill Gates – $67.0 billion
- Amancio Ortega – $57.0 billion
- Warren Buffett – $53.5 billion
- Larry Ellison – $43.0 billion
- Charles Koch – $34.0 billion
- David Koch – $34.0 billion
- Li Ka-shing – $31.0 billion
- Liliane Bettencourt & family – $30.0 billion
- Bernard Arnault – $29.0 billion

