Nvidia Corp. co-founder Jensen Huang's wealth has surged as a blistering rally in AI-related stocks pushed the chipmaker's market value above Amazon.com Inc.'s for the first time. The same rally has minted another billionaire in Huang's own family: his distant cousin Lisa Su, chief executive officer of Nvidia competitor Advanced Micro Devices Inc., who's worth $1.2 billion after the stock doubled over the past year.
Two chipmaker billionaires in one family illustrates the scope of the artificial intelligence craze, which has come to dominate the stock market and accounts for most of the wealth gained by the world's richest people this year.
Among the 500 wealthiest individuals, 30 attribute at least some of their fortune to companies that are tracked by the Bloomberg Global Artificial Intelligence Index. Those holdings have boosted their net worth by a combined $124 billion so far this year, accounting for 96% of the total wealth gained on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
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The biggest winners include Huang and Mark Zuckerberg, whose Meta Platforms Inc. is the second-best performer on the S&P 500 Index after Nvidia for the second year in a row. Steve Ballmer has ridden the wave of optimism that accompanied Microsoft Corp.'s partnership with OpenAI, while Michael Dell has seen his fortune surge thanks in part to AI initiatives at Dell Technologies Inc. and Broadcom Inc.
Su isn't the only new billionaire to emerge from the surge: Charles Liang, co-founder of Super Micro Computer Inc., has seen his fortune triple to $6.2 billion this year as his company's stock has easily eclipsed the returns of other AI-related shares. And Palantir Technologies Inc. co-founder Alex Karp's net worth is $2.8 billion after the maker of AI-powered software's shares jumped 31% in a single day last week following strong quarterly earnings.
Other billionaires have indirectly benefited. SoftBank Group Corp. founder Masayoshi Son's net worth has risen
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