The 50 names who just missed the Richest 250 list
The cut-off to make The List is now a record $635m, so plenty of big names and quiet achievers with business empires just missed qualifying this year. See who nearly made it.
The cut-off to make The List is now a record $635m, so plenty of big names and quiet achievers with business empires just missed qualifying this year. See who nearly made it.
Meet the women in control of $127bn across the country from fashion to tech and two new sisters who have rocketed into this year’s Richest 250.
Australia’s wealthiest new billionaire is a little-known Wall Street success story who loves his NRL Cronulla Sharks. Meet the 19 debutantes on The List 2025.
Welcome to The List for 2025. The biggest annual study of Australia’s 250 wealthiest people across the country.
Laurence Escalante could have stayed a Christian computer game maker and treasurer of his local church chapter. Failure led him instead to a $4bn online casino fortune and notoriety, but he swears he’s no sinner | WATCH
It was a classic exit. Build a company from scratch, get spectacular growth and sell out for billions all before turning 40. But Sam Kroonenburg’s story comes with a twist.
Australia’s 10 wealthiest people are worth a cool $250bn combined, with the first appearance of a controversy-plagued magnate on this year’s The List – Richest 250.
From mixing oils on a kitchen stove and doing deliveries by wheelbarrow, getting their hands dirty for nearly 100 years has finally paid off for the Dymond family who make their Richest 250 debut.
With their sights set on social good, these second generation family company executives discuss succession plans and using prosperity to drive sustainability, innovation and philanthropy.
From a background as a Polish immigrant to owning a $1.3bn toy empire, Manny Stul and stepson Paul Solomon say they have bigger plans on the horizon as they knock back offers to sell.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/john-stensholt/page/4