TikTok founder becomes China's richest man
According to a rich list produced by the Hurun Research Institute, Zhang Yiming is now worth $49.3bn (£38bn) - 43% more than in 2023

According to a rich list produced by the Hurun Research Institute,
Zhang Yiming is now worth $49.3bn (£38bn) - 43%
more than in 2023
The surging global popularity of TikTok has seen the co-founder of its parent company, ByteDance, become
China's richest person.
According to a rich list produced by the Hurun Research Institute, Zhang Yiming is now worth $49.3bn
(£38bn) - 43% more than in 2023.
The 41-year-old stepped down from his role in charge of the company in 2021, but is understood to own around
20% of the firm.
TikTok has become one of the most popular social media apps in the world, despite deep concerns in some
countries about its ties to the Chinese state.
While both companies insist they are independent of the Chinese government, the US intends to ban TikTok
in January 2025 unless ByteDance sells it.
Despite facing that intense pressure in the US, ByteDance's global profit increased by 60% last year, driving
up Zhang Yiming's personal fortune.
“Zhang Yiming is the 18th new Number One we have had in China in just 26 years," said head of
Hurun Rupert Hoogewerf.
"The
US, by comparison, has only four Number Ones: Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, Jeff
Bezos and Elon Musk.
"This gives an indication of some of the dynamism
in the Chinese economy."
Tech fortunes
Mr Zhang is
not the only representative of China's huge tech sector on the list.
Pony Ma, boss of the tech conglomerate, Tencent, is third on the list with an estimated personal wealth
amounting to £44.4bn.
But their fortunes are not just explained by their companies successes - their rivals have made less
in a year in which China's economy has sputtered.
In fact,
only approximately 30% of the people on the list had an increase in their net
worth - the rest saw a decline.
“The Hurun China Rich List has shrunk for an unprecedented third year running, as China’s economy and
stock markets had a difficult year," said Mr Hoogewerf.
"The number of individuals on the list was down by 12% in the past year to just under 1100 individuals and
25% from the high point of 2021."
He said the data showed it had been a good year for smartphone manufacturers such as Xiaomi, while the
green energy market had stumbled.
“Solar panel, lithium battery and EV makers have had a challenging year, as competition intensified, leading to
a glut, and the threat of tariffs added to
uncertainties," he said.
"Solar panel makers saw their wealth down as much as 80% from the 2021 peak, whilst battery and EV makers
were down by half and a
quarter respectively."
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