According to AFP, a preview of the respected BRW Rich 200 list,
published Wednesday, put the mining tycoon’s personal fortune at
Aus$29.17 billion (US$28.48 billion), a figure that sees her outstrip
Walton for the first time.
In March, Forbes placed Walton and her family’s net worth at US$25.3 billion, while Rinehart’s fortune stood at US$18 billion.
BRW
rich list editor Andrew Heathcote said mining magnate Rinehart had
almost tripled her wealth in 12 months as commodity prices rose and she
pulled off two deals in iron ore and coal.
“The Aus$18.87 billion
increase in her wealth is unparalleled. It is a product of foreign
investment in new projects, increased production and a recovery in the
iron ore price over the past six months,” said Heathcote.
Rinehart,
58, heiress to an iron ore prospecting empire built in Australia’s
resources-rich west, is a controversial figure who stridently campaigned
against new mining taxes and recently bought up big in the media
sector.
She is also locked in a series of lawsuits, including an
acrimonious row with her own children over a family trust where she has
been accused of threatening to financially ruin them.
Heathcote
said Rinehart was on track to overtake Mexican telecommunications tycoon
Carlos Slim — worth US$69 billion — as the world’s richest person as
demand ramps up for Australia’s natural resources.
“A $100 billion fortune is not out of the question for Rinehart if the resources boom continues unabated,” said Heathcote.
“There
is a real possibility that Rinehart will become not just the richest
woman in the world but the richest person in the world.”
The full
BRW list of Australia’s richest people, the upper rungs of which are
usually dominated by mining tycoons, will be unveiled on Thursday.
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