Kiwi ultra-wealth a blip but growing
Singapore-based Richard Chandler was among New Zealand’s earliest billionaires.
Finding Graeme Hart, pictured with his wife Robyn, on the 2025 Forbes Real-Time Billionaires List involves a good deal of scrolling. Photo / Norrie Montgomery
Jaimee Lupton and Nick Mowbray are building two new multi-million-dollar homes. Photo / Instagram, @Jaimee
Matchbox co-founders Mark Francis and Zlatko Filipchich at their Auckland luxury car storage facility Matchbox. Photo / Alyse Wright
Economist Shamubeel Eaqub says Kiwis don’t need to pay $10,000 to get access to New Zealand’s Prime Minister.
Economist Dr Eric Crampton says getting ahead by having an unfair advantage over, or harming, competitors is repugnant.
Wealthy property mogul Steve Owen with his daughter Kimberly at Ayrburn last year for Owen’s son Matt’s wedding to professional golfer Laura Hoskin. Photo / Instagram, @kimberlyowen
‘The weren’t crazy, crazy rich’
Businessman Barry Colman in front of his yacht, Liberte IV, at Westhaven Marina. Photo / Paul Estcourt
Gareme Hart’s 103m Feadship giga-yacht Ulysses is the length of a rugby field.
Owning a superyacht is a terrible asset
Jeff Bezos’ schooner Koru is 125m in length and has masts as tall as London’s Big Ben.
The new Gilded Age
Katy Perry was blasted into space aboard the Blue Origin rocket. Photo / Blue Origin
Wealth words
Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol was paid $168.7m in 2024 at a time when the average barista earned $25,136. Photo / Benjamin Rasussen, The New York Times
Ecomist Cameron Bagrie says New Zealand has an income problem as a result of a lack of productivity growth. Photo / Alex Burton
#EatTheRich
Ultra-wealthy families pay stars like Snoop Dogg hundreds of thousands of dollars to perform at private functions and birthday parties. Photo / Christopher Polk, Getty Images
Billionaire Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez during their lavish three-day wedding celebrations in Venice last year. Photo / Getty Images
Buying safety for the worried wealthy
Evan Osnos, New Yorker columnist and observer of the wealthy, has written a book: The Haves and the Have-Yachts, Dispatches of the Ultrarich.
The super-rich are flying into New Zealand to check out property but some wealthy Kiwis have their own private jets. Photo / Getty Images
This five-bedroom architect-designed “golf bach”, with an asking price of $18m, was the first property to be publicly marketed this year at Te Arai Links.
The top 10% of New Zealanders own nearly 50% of all wealth. The bottom 50% share 6.7% ( $138b) The top 1% share 14% ($291b) The top 5% hold 34% ($707b) The top 10% hold 48% ($1t)The top 50% hold 93% ($1.93t) European/Pākehā New Zealanders hold substantially more wealth than Māori, Pacific and Asian groups