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Jack Dorsey CEO of Square
These 5 have never tied the knot
1. Xavier Niel
Age: 45 $6.6 billion Iliad
2. Eduardo Saverin
Age: 30 $2.2 billion Facebook
3. Nicolas Berggruen
Age: 51 $2 billion
Berggruen Holdings
4. Albert von Thurn und Taxis
Age: 29 $1.5 billion Inheritance
5. Jack Dorsey
Age: 36 $1.1 billion
Twitter, Square
UP-AND-COMERS
Burger Baroness Lynsi Torres | US | age: 30 | Net Worth: $500 millionTorres’ path to billionaire status is simple: Wait five years. The heiress to In-N-Out Burger is the beneficiary of two trusts that collectively own 75% of the chain. The trusts, made public thanks to legal tussles between Torres and two trustees, show that she received a third of the In-N-Out fortune when she was 25 and got nudged up to 50% when she turned 30. At 35, she’ll control the trusts fully. She also has an outright claim to 25% of the company. Torres has a passion for drag racing; her third husband is driver Val Torres Jr.
Flash SellerJacques-antoine Granjon | France | age: 50 | Net Worth: $600 millionBefore Gilt Groupe, there was Vente-Privee.com, the original flash-sales site founded in 2001 by Granjon, whose taste for glittering accessories has earned him the nickname “Louis XIV” in Paris’ social circles. Born to affleunt parents, Granjon failed his entrance exam to the prestigious Sciences Polytechniques, so he started his career by buying unsellable stock in Sentier, Paris’ garment district, and reselling the items to discount outlets. His big idea: Cut out the middleman. Now Vente-Privee’s annual sales top $1.5 billion.
Freedom FighterCyril Ramaphosa | South Africa | age: 60 | Net Worth: $700 millionRamaphosa, a former anti-apartheid activist, took a breather from party politics in the late 1990s to pursue a business career. Now he’s the chairman of Africa’s largest mobile phone company, MTN Group; owns the McDonald’s South Africa franchise; and serves as executive chairman of Shanduka Group. He also has a partnership with Coca-Cola. In December, the African National Congress party overwhelmingly voted to make Ramaphosa its deputy leader—and, in turn, South Africa’s vice president.
Jealousy WatchYoungestDustin Moskovitz is the youngest at 28, beating fellow Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg by about a week.
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(This story appears in the 05 April, 2013 issue
of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)