Zhong Shanshan delivering a speech at a press conference in Beijing in 2013.
Meet China's new richest man.
Zhong Shanshan, the founder of the popular Chinese bottled water brand Nongfu Spring, has overtaken Alibaba (
BABA) founder Jack Ma to become the country's wealthiest person, according to the
Bloomberg Billionaires index.
Zhong
was already China's third richest person after his company went public earlier this month with a blockbuster listing in Hong Kong. As of Wednesday, his estimated net worth had reached $58.7 billion, surpassing Ma's $56.7 billion, according to Bloomberg calculations.
Zhong's new status also puts him ahead of
Pony Ma, who founded Tencent (
TCEHY). Unlike Jack Ma and Pony Ma, Zhong is not a tech entrepreneur. Outside of his stake in Nongfu Spring, he is the head of a vaccine maker, Beijing Wantai Biological Pharmacy. That company went public in Shanghai this year, which also helped boost Zhong's wealth.
"You would have typically expected the number one in China to come from [technology]," said Rupert Hoogewerf, chairman of wealth research firm Hurun Report.Zhong is also known for being more low-profile and reclusive compared to other top business leaders, which has earned him the nickname "lone wolf."
"He's not known to have many entrepreneur friends," said Hoogewerf, a longtime China watcher who is based in Shanghai. "He just kind of gets on with his own business."
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But even prior to his latest success, Zhong's track record was impressive.
"Zhong Shanshan is one of the few people in China to not just build one $10 billion business, but two $10 billion businesses," said Hoogewerf. "It's pretty remarkable."
New breed of billionaires
Zhong's ascent underscores the rapid pace of wealth creation in China.
Earlier this year, China was already home to most of the world's billionaires, with more than the United States and India combined, according to a global rich list compiled by the
Hurun Report.
According to
Bloomberg calculations, Zhong's estimated net worth was $20 billion last month — suggesting he has tripled his fortune in just a matter of weeks.
The boom is expected to continue.
In recent months, a
parade of initial public offerings has unfolded around the world, especially in China. Hong Kong is the world's second most popular venue for stock market listings so far this year, behind only the tech-heavy Nasdaq in New York, according to data provider Refinitiv.
Shanghai's
Star Market, a Nasdaq-style tech board launched last year, has also seen a huge swell in activity lately. IPOs and secondary listings have raised a combined $21.6 billion so far this year, according to Refinitiv.
And that's even before the widely anticipated mega-IPO of Ant Group, Alibaba's financial services arm, which is expected to be
one of the biggest listings in history. Ant is preparing to hit the markets in both Shanghai and Hong Kong this year, which could raise
as much as $30 billion.
The event could easily let Jack Ma reclaim his title as the country's richest man.
That will likely spawn even more billionaires in China, Hoogewerf predicts.
He estimates that about 100 new billionaires will be created in China this year because of the IPO boom. That's "one every four days. Two a week," he said.
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