The British royal family has an estimated net worth of $88 billion, according to business consultancy firm Brand Finance. Still, that monarchy is far from being the richest royal family in the world.
See full version: This royal family’s wealth could be more than $1 trillion
The British royal family has an estimated net worth of $88 billion, according to business consultancy firm Brand Finance. Still, that monarchy is far from being the richest royal family in the world.
One of the most influential members of the royal family is King Salman of Saudi Arabia, who succeeded his late brother Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud in 2015. Reportedly worth $17 billion, the 82-year-old has handed over much of the country's leadership to his son and heir to the throne Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, 32. more
In an interview with CBS News, the Crown Prince said that his finances were a private matter and that he did not need to apologize for an opulent lifestyle. "I'm a rich person and not a poor person. I'm not Gandhi or [Nelson] Mandela," he said. "I'm a member of the ruling family that existed for hundreds of years before the founding of Saudi Arabia."
Mohammed bin Salman Family Details [links]
Mohammed bin Salman Facts
Mohammed bin Salman was born August 31, 1985 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. He is the son of Salman of Saudi Arabia and Fahda Bint Falah Bin Sultan. He has twelve siblings. Mohammed bin Salman is married to Sara bint Mashoor bin Abdulaziz Al Saud on 2008 and he has four children. Mohammed bin Salman went to King Saud University.
Mohammed bin Salman has a height of 6 feet and his weight 77 Kg. His other body measurements like his chest, waist and biceps sizes are not known. His wearing shoe size to be 12 US. His hair is black color and eye is black color.
Mohammed bin Salman Personal Details more
Due in part to the intervention by the Gulf states, Yemen is on the brink of starvation and faces a cholera crisis. here
The Prince has paid over $300 million for the Chateau Louis XIV, located in France, called “the world’s most expensive home” by Fortune magazine.
Prince Sultan bin Turki, Prince Turki bin Bandar, Prince Saud bin Saif were abducted by Saudi royal family due to their criticisms of the Riyadh rule. [links]
Despite overwhelming airpower, after five years of conflict the alliance has failed to capture much of the country from the Houthis, with the rebels still in control of the capital Sanaa. here
The painting "Salvator Mundi" by School of Leonardo da Vinci is pictured during a press visit of the "Leonardo da Vinci" exhibition to commemorate the 500-year anniversary of his death, at the Louvre Museum in Paris, France, October 20, 2019. (Reuters)
Suffice it to say, this “spending” is not limited to superyachts, sprawling real estate or even priceless paintings, in fact, investigative reporters looking into an obscure Limpopo game farm in South Africa uncovered a shadowy international network of proxies, offshore firms and shelf companies concealing the Saudi royal family’s wealth.
Through sovereign wealth funds like Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the Crown Prince is also a proxy shareholder for some of Silicon Valley’s most valuable tech companies including Google, Apple and Uber. The full extent of his investment holdings are not known. Suffice it to say, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman might not just be the world’s richest and most powerful Monarch-in-waiting, but with his growing holdings in technology firms, he could soon be the world’s most influential.
The 12,000ha Limpopo game farm is being turned into an exclusive hunting resort for Saudi royals with its own private landing strip for jets
Recent high profile purchases certainly mirror one of a multi-billionaire and suspected trillionaire family. King Salman himself is estimated to have a net worth of over a billion dollars, a fact that we are reminded by not only his interview with CBS’s 60 Minutes but also his purchases.
The Ritz Carlton in Riyadh was closed for bookings when it became a “prison” for royals under investigation during anti-corruption campaign more
The anti-corruption committee eventually ended its mission in January 2019, concluding that 381 individuals were detained, some of them to hear their testimony, and $107 billion were recovered to the treasury and while campaign had all its legal trappings, one of its side effects was that potential opponents of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman were neatly sidelined while consolidating the presumptive heir’s of control of all three branches of the security forces, making him the most powerful man in Egypt since his grandfather, the late first King Ibn Saud. here