By Agustino Fontevecchia| Apr 6, 2015
Confectionery multibillionaire Michele Ferrero died at age 89-on Valentine's Day
The man responsible for coating the globe in rich nutella passed away on February 14. Michele Ferrero inherited the Ferrero confectionery from his father, who invented the hazelnut spread in a lab to develop goodies for his wife’s pastry shop, taking advantage of Italy’s postwar cocoa shortage by supplying it with a delectable substitute. Michele—whose $23.4 billion fortune made him the world’s 30th-richest person at his death—took over with his mother and uncle in 1950. He pushed for international expansion (Nutella is sold in 160 countries) and new product development (Kinder eggs, Ferrero Rocher chocolates, even Tic-Tacs). A devout Catholic, he insisted that every Ferrero office display a statue of the Virgin Mary. Today 25 percent of hazelnuts harvested globally become Nutella; Ferrero sales hit $10 billion last year. Ferrero’s passing occasioned some takeover chatter, but the company remains firmly in the family’s hands—son Giovanni has been chief executive since 2011. His other son, Pietro, died while bicycling in 2011.
Also Deceased
Karl Albrecht, 94
Germany $25 bln
Isidoro Alvarez, 79
Spain $1.45 bln
David Azrieli, 92
Canada $3.1 bln
Len Buckeridge, 77
Australia $1.2 bln
Struett Cathy, 93
US $6.3 bln
Heinz-Horst Deichmann, 88
Germany $4.9 bln
William Clay Ford, 88
US $1.35 bln
Malcolm Glazer, 85
US $4.4 bln
Patrick Mcgovern, 76
US $5.7 bln
Antonio Ermirio de Moraes, 86
Brazil $3.1 bln
Reinfried Pohl, 86
Germany $2.1 bln
Paul Ramsay, 78
Australia $3 bln
Moise Safra, 79
Brazil $2.2 bln
Richard Mellon Scaife, 82
US $1.5 bln
Jacques Servier, 92
France $7.6 bln
Jacob Stolt-Nielsen, 83
Norway $1.15 bln
Tsai Wan-Tsai, 85
Taiwan $7.6 bln
Wang yung-tsaI, 93
Taiwan $3.1 bln