2012年(464)
分类: Delphi
2012-05-19 15:10:50
As we all know, Facebook develops so rapid and now it plays the main
leadership on internet. Recently, the world’s richest people lost a combined
$32.8 billion this week as concerns over a possible Greek exit from the euro
area pushed the Standard & Poor’s 500 index to its biggest weekly loss since
November 2011.However, on the other hand, and
machinery are also soaring and benefit from the online business.
Mexican
Carlos Slim, 72, lost the most during the week, as shares of his Mexico
City-based telecommunications company America Movil SAB fell 4.38 percent. Slim,
who lost $4.1 billion, remains the world’s richest person with a $65.5 billion
fortune, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Facebook Inc. (FB)
co-founder Mark Zuckerberg, 28, became the 26th richest person on Earth after
the world’s most popular social network raised $16 billion in an initial public
offering May 17. The company’s shares stalled in their public debut May 18,
rising 23 cents above the IPO price of $38. Zuckerberg is worth $19.4
billion.
“Given the hype and excitement, people expected it to be a lot
higher,” Herman Leung, an analyst at Susquehanna Financial Group, said in a
telephone interview from his San Francisco office May 18. “This is similar to
Google. The company will not get the benefit until they start proving themselves
as a public company.”
The S&P 500 fell 4.3 percent to 1295.22 during the
week as Greece failed to form a government and Moody’s Investors Service
downgraded 16 Spanish banks, citing a recession and mounting loan losses. The
S&P 500 is down almost 9 percent since April 2.
Most of the fortunes of
Zuckerberg’s Facebook co-founders remained unchanged Friday in New York trading.
Dustin Moskovitz, 27, who started Facebook with Zuckerberg from their dorm room
at Harvard University, owns 133.7 million shares of the company’s Class B stock
worth $5.1 billion.
Eduardo Saverin, 30, has a $2 billion stake. According to
a regulatory filing dated May 17, he owns 53.1 million shares of the
company.
Co-founder Christopher Hughes, 28, fell short of becoming a
billionaire. He owns about 22 million shares of Facebook, according to a person
familiar with his holdings who asked not to be named because the matter is
private. His stake is worth $840 million.
Hughes, who bought the Washington,
D.C.-based magazine the New Republic in March 2012 for less than $5 million, has
more than $100 million in cash and real estate after selling some of his
Facebook hoard, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.