Houston Community News >> China 26 Year Old Woman is the Richest in the Country
10/8/2007 BEIJING (Reuters) -
The twenty-six year-old daughter of a rags-to-riches property developer is
China's wealthiest person, with a $16 billion fortune, Forbes magazine said on
Monday.
Yang Huiyan shot to the top of the China Rich List after the firm her father
founded floated on the Hong Kong stock exchange in April, creating five
billionaires at once.
Her low-profile father, Yeung Kwok Keung -- who worked as a farmer and on
construction sites before making his fortune, according to Chinese media -- had
transferred his stake in Country Garden Holdings Co. to his daughter in 2005.
Also Asia's richest woman, the Ohio State University graduate this year married
the son of a top Chinese official she met on a blind date, the China Daily
reported.
She is one of the few on the list to have inherited her wealth, in a country
where booming economic growth has created fortunes virtually overnight.
The economy has expanded so fast that the country's 40 wealthiest people are now
all dollar billionaires, compared with just 15 last year, Forbes said in a press
release.
Their combined net worth more than tripled to $120 billion, from last year's $38
billion, Forbes said.
But as the number of the super-rich grows, officials in Beijing are stepping up
efforts to tackle the gulf between rich and poor because they fear it threatens
social stability.
Real estate was among the most lucrative sectors. Eight of the top ten have big
property development interests.
"Household incomes are rising rapidly, and a growing number of people are moving
into cities from rural areas. Those trends are creating great business
opportunities for property developers," said Russell Flannery, Forbes senior
editor and compiler of the China Rich List.
Country Garden, based in the southern city of Guangdong focuses on building
villas, townhouses and large apartments.
Yang's father is still chairman and chief executive while she sits on the board
as an executive director.
Last year's number one on the Forbes list, Wong Kwong Yu, slipped nine places to
squeeze into the top ten, even though his fortune rose by nearly 50 percent.
Forbes compiles its list by looking at stakes in listed and private companies
and other assets. It excludes Hong Kong residents like tycoon Li Ka-shing --
estimated by Forbes to have a $22 billion fortune in January.
(Contributed by Reuters)