However, it is also important to realize that if this man doesn't sell these stocks and instead holds onto them at some point they all or most might recover at some point and he might make 3.6 or even 10 billion dollars or more sometime in the future as a long term investor. If he lost 3.6 billion dollars it is only on paper because if he holds these stocks nothing really has changed as long as they one day recover or increase beyond what he paid for them in the first place.
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Stock rout costs China's richest man $3.6 bn in one day
China's richest man lost $3.6 billion in a single day after
global stock markets tanked and Chinese markets erased all their gains
for the year.
Wang Jianlin, chairman and founder of property and entertainment company Dalian Wanda, lost more than 10 percent of his total wealth on Monday, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which tracks the world's richest people.
Shanghai shares Monday collapsed by 8.49 percent, the biggest daily loss since 2007, sparking a vast sell-off in global financial markets as concerns mounted that a slowdown in the world's second-largest economy could hurt global growth.
Shanghai fell an additional 7.63 percent on Tuesday.
The close was the lowest since December 15 last year -- and below the symbolically significant 3,000 point mark -- while Bloomberg News said it marked the steepest four-day rout since 1996.
Wang was the biggest loser at the end of trading on Monday, according to the index, which updates at the end of each day. Figures for Tuesday were not immediately available.
Despite the loss, his wealth has increased by $6 billion this year. China's second richest person Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, lost only $545 million on Monday, according to the index.
Beijing launched a huge rescue package after shares collapsed in June, which has included funding the China Securities Finance Corp. to buy stocks on behalf of the government and barring major shareholders from selling their stakes.
In the latest move, Beijing said on Sunday it would allow the state pension fund -- which had 3.5 trillion yuan ($548 billion) of assets at the end of 2014 -- to buy stocks.
Wang Jianlin, chairman and founder of property and entertainment company Dalian Wanda, lost more than 10 percent of his total wealth on Monday, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which tracks the world's richest people.
Shanghai shares Monday collapsed by 8.49 percent, the biggest daily loss since 2007, sparking a vast sell-off in global financial markets as concerns mounted that a slowdown in the world's second-largest economy could hurt global growth.
Shanghai fell an additional 7.63 percent on Tuesday.
The close was the lowest since December 15 last year -- and below the symbolically significant 3,000 point mark -- while Bloomberg News said it marked the steepest four-day rout since 1996.
Wang was the biggest loser at the end of trading on Monday, according to the index, which updates at the end of each day. Figures for Tuesday were not immediately available.
Despite the loss, his wealth has increased by $6 billion this year. China's second richest person Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, lost only $545 million on Monday, according to the index.
Beijing launched a huge rescue package after shares collapsed in June, which has included funding the China Securities Finance Corp. to buy stocks on behalf of the government and barring major shareholders from selling their stakes.
In the latest move, Beijing said on Sunday it would allow the state pension fund -- which had 3.5 trillion yuan ($548 billion) of assets at the end of 2014 -- to buy stocks.
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