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Fake Moon Over Chengdu Shows Why China Is Billionaire Powerhouse

Chinese rocket scientists are planning to suspend a man-made moon bright enough to reduce the need for streetlamps.

Fake Moon Over Chengdu Shows Why China Is Billionaire Powerhouse
The West Pearl Tower stands among residential and commercial buildings illuminated at night in Chengdu, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- In the Sichuan city of Chengdu, Chinese rocket scientists are planning to suspend a man-made moon bright enough to reduce the need for streetlamps.

It’s exactly that kind of ingenuity that has helped the world’s most populous nation churn out new billionaires at a prodigious clip, according to John Mathews, head of ultra-high net worth in the Americas for UBS Group AG.

The combined wealth of China’s billionaires surged 39 percent to $1.12 trillion last year, as the nation’s buoyant markets generated two billionaires a week on average, according to Friday’s Billionaires Report from UBS and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. That’s more than double the gains reaped by their peers in the U.S. and Europe, whose collective fortunes increased 12 percent and 19 percent, respectively.

“Really, the story revolves around China, where we’re seeing unbelievable and unprecedented wealth,” Mathews said. “We’re in a new gilded age.”

Fake Moon Over Chengdu Shows Why China Is Billionaire Powerhouse

The report tracks 2,158 individual billionaires across 43 countries and shows that their combined wealth increased 19 percent to a record $8.9 trillion.

A burgeoning tech industry and startup culture that’s poised to challenge Silicon Valley has been the engine for much of China’s wealth creation, according to the report, which noted that China produced almost three times as many self-made billionaires as the U.S. last year.

Yet some of the wealth gains may be illusory. Roughly half of China’s new billionaires saw their wealth dip below 10 digits by the end of the year, the report showed. And the sudden swings between wealth accumulation and destruction continued into 2018. Fortunes, many tied to public markets, have been buffeted by more volatile equity markets. Among the 16 billionaires minted in China earlier this year, about a quarter of them lost that status by the end of trading Thursday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

China’s 36-richest people have lost 19 percent of their wealth, or $83.8 billion, so far this year, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, more than any other country represented on the ranking of the world’s 500 biggest individual fortunes.

--With assistance from Venus Feng and Pei Yi Mak.

To contact the reporters on this story: Reade Pickert in New York at epickert@bloomberg.net;Devon Pendleton in New York at dpendleton@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Pierre Paulden at ppaulden@bloomberg.net, Peter Eichenbaum, Steven Crabill

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.