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Bloomberg "As 20 famílias mais ricas da Ásia em 2026": a família Cai de Taiwan ocupa o sexto lugar, Lee Jae-yong do Samsung sobe para vice-campeão com chips HBM, e a família Ambani da Índia mantém a liderança
Bloomberg’s latest “2026 Asia’s Richest 20 Families” list shows that overall wealth increased by 16% annually to $647 billion, setting a record since the index’s inception, driven by supply chains of “AI infrastructure” such as chips, aluminum, and data centers.
(Previous summary: Bloomberg: DeepSeek’s rapid rise, China poses a “huge threat” to U.S. AI dominance)
(Additional background: Bloomberg: Trump to announce $70 billion AI and energy investment plan, BlackRock joins with $25 billion)
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Bloomberg released the “Asia’s Top 20 Richest Families” annual list yesterday (13th), with total wealth reaching $647 billion, a 16% increase from last year, the highest total wealth record since Bloomberg Billionaires Index was established in 2019, and the largest single-year growth.
The list shows that the main drivers of this wealth explosion are twofold:
First, explosive growth in demand for AI infrastructure, benefiting chips, memory, aluminum, and data center power systems.
Second, the real estate market in Hong Kong has shown a clear rebound after years of downturn.
Notably, Asian billionaires generally did not get rich from developing AI technology itself, but from positioning themselves in the “upstream supply chain” and “infrastructure” of AI to harvest wealth. In terms of regional distribution of the top 10, India leads with 3 families, followed by Thailand, Hong Kong, South Korea, China, Taiwan, and Indonesia, each with 1–2 families.
#1 Ambani Family (India)|$89.7 billion, ranked first for two consecutive years
Led by Mukesh Ambani, Reliance Industries is India’s largest private enterprise, with businesses spanning oil refining, telecommunications (Jio platform), and retail. The family’s wealth of $89.7 billion keeps them firmly at the top of Asia’s richest list for two consecutive years.
Jio Telecom has hundreds of millions of users in India, and its subsidiary Jio Financial Services is gradually entering the fintech sector, building a vast digital ecosystem. Bloomberg points out that Reliance’s diversified layout demonstrates strong resilience in volatile markets.
#2 Kuok Family (Hong Kong)|$50.2 billion, biggest beneficiary of real estate rebound
Sun Hung Kai Properties is Hong Kong’s largest real estate developer. The Kuok family directly benefited from the Hong Kong property market rebound in 2026, with wealth soaring to $50.2 billion. Besides residential development, Sun Hung Kai also holds telecom, hotel, and large shopping mall businesses, diversifying risks associated with a single market cycle.
Bloomberg’s list shows that with capital flowing back to Hong Kong and policy incentives, the real estate sector experienced a significant recovery between 2025 and 2026, making the Kuok family one of the biggest winners of this revival.
#3 Lee Family (South Korea)|$45.5 billion, jumped 7 places with HBM chips
Led by Samsung’s Lee Jae-yong, the Lee family has leapt from 10th place last year to 3rd, one of the most dramatic ranking changes on this list. The key behind this: Samsung’s breakthrough in AI memory battlefield.
As AI computing power demand skyrockets, HBM memory has become one of the most sought-after semiconductor components globally.
Last year, Lee Jae-yong also visited a small restaurant in Gangnam, Seoul, for fried chicken dinner with Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia; and personally met with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, actively consolidating Samsung’s position in the global AI supply chain.
#4 Cheah Family (Thailand)|$53 billion, betting on Southeast Asian AI data centers
Founded in 1921, Charoen Pokphand Group was built from scratch by the Cheah brothers, evolving over four generations into a business empire spanning agriculture, retail (7-Eleven), telecommunications (True Corporation), and finance (holding China Ping An Insurance shares).
In the AI wave, the Cheah family is positioning itself at the forefront through its True IDC data center division. The list shows that True IDC has partnered with global asset manager BlackRock, planning to invest $1 billion over five years to build AI supercomputing data centers in Thailand, aiming to make Thailand a Southeast Asian digital hub.
The 4th-generation successor, Korawad Chearavanont, only 31 years old, is raising $100 million pre-IPO for his AI startup Amity, planning to go public by 2027, with succession and tech transformation happening simultaneously.
#5 Zhang Family (Shandong, China)|Aluminum demand explosion causes stock prices to soar
China Hongqiao, under Weiqiao Group, is one of the world’s largest aluminum producers, traditionally seen as a representative of heavy industry. However, with the advent of the AI era, this Shandong company unexpectedly became a beneficiary of technological wealth.
Bloomberg cites analysts: “Investors embrace aluminum for its scalability, light weight, and corrosion resistance, making it indispensable for server racks, data center cooling systems, and electric vehicles.”
China Hongqiao’s stock surged nearly 200% last year, making it one of the most remarkable gainers on this list, and the Zhang family’s wealth also rose accordingly.
#6 Tsai Family (Taiwan)|$34.3 billion, only Taiwanese family
The Tsai family is the only Taiwanese family on this list, with wealth of $34.3 billion, ranking 6th in Asia. This family, a prominent figure in Taiwan’s financial industry, traces its wealth back to Cathay Life Insurance, founded in 1962.
After the family split in 1979, two parallel branches formed: Tsai Wan-lin’s branch developed into today’s Cathay Financial Holdings, covering life insurance, commercial banking, and investment; Tsai Wan-tsai’s branch built Fubon Financial Holdings, extending into insurance, telecommunications (Taiwan Mobile), and real estate. Currently, brothers Tsai Ming-hsing and Tsai Ming-chung play core roles on the Fubon board.
Bloomberg’s list shows that the family’s steady wealth growth is due to diversified financial holdings, with valuations continuing to rise amid interest rate cycles and a housing market rebound.
#7–10: Energy drinks, tobacco banks, Indian conglomerates gather
The 7th to 10th places also have notable families.
7th place: Thai TCP Group’s Xu Shubiao family, founders of Red Bull energy drinks, with brands in over 170 countries worldwide.
8th place: The Huang family behind Indonesian Djarum Group and Central Asia Bank (BCA), with businesses spanning tobacco and finance.
9th place: Indian Mistry family controlling Shapoorji Pallonji, an engineering and construction group with assets including Ireland’s Sisk.
10th place: Indian Jindal family, with OP Jindal Group prominent in steel and energy sectors, also benefiting from the demand driven by AI infrastructure.
Stable wealth often comes from those selling shovels
This Bloomberg list reveals an interesting wealth logic: in this wave of AI gold rush, those who are truly stable and wealthy are often not the miners, but the ones selling shovels.
From Samsung’s HBM memory chips, China’s Hongqiao aluminum, to the Southeast Asian data centers of the Cheah family, top Asian families demonstrate a pragmatic wealth philosophy: positioning in the “electricity, materials, and computing” infrastructure needed for AI turns every capital expenditure of tech giants into a source of their own wealth growth.