billionaire u- why harvard mints mega-rich alums

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  • 7/29/2019 Billionaire U- Why Harvard Mints Mega-Rich Alums

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    Billionaire U: Why Harvard Mints Mega-Rich Alums

    By Paul O'Donnell | CNBC Wed, Feb 20, 2013 3:03 PM EST

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has its hedge-fund quants, the University of Southern California has its

    movie moguls. But if you really want your child to be a billionaire, you might want to send them to Harvard.

    Harvard has graduated some 52 billionaires, with a collective fortune of $205 billion, to lead Wealth-X's global list of

    universities ranked by alumni worth $1 billion or more. That's nearly twice as many as the No. 2 school, the

    University of Pennsylvania, which has 28 billionaire alumni worth a collective $112 billion.

    And these numbers don't include either Microsoft (MSFT)'s Bill Gates or Facebook (FB)'s Mark Zuckerberg, both of

    whom attended Harvard but didn't stay to get their degree. Together they are worth some $45 billion

    (Read more:20 Stocks with the Potential to Pop)

    Before dismissing Harvard is a domain of rich kids who mostly inherit their wealth, consider that the school also

    claimed the highest percentage of self-made billionaires in the study. Seventy-four percent of the school's billionaire

    alumni "built that," Wealth-X found.

    "It shows the power of networks," said David Friedman, president of Wealth-X. "Harvard has this entrenched

    powerful network that extends across so many sectors and is incredibly pro-active about connecting its alumni. You

    get a great education, but you also get access."

    Harvard's success, said Friedman, "validates what we all whisper and now we know: It's not just what you know, it's

    who you know."

    (Read More:Cities That Mint Millionaires the Fastest)Other schools can boast about their networks, too, particularly those with lines into technology and other leadingfields for growing wealth.

    As the chart below shows, Stanford University, in the heart of Silicon Valley, has 27 billionaires to its credit, ranking

    third. M.I.T., sixth on the list with 15 billionaires, has sprinkled its number-crunching analysts throughout Wall

    Street and hedge funds. The University of Cambridge, the only school outside the United States to make the top 10,

    is a high-tech leader in the U.K.

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    And in the broader category of ultra-high-net

    worth individuals, which Wealth-X defines as those worth $30 million or more, "there are smaller clusters of

    successful graduates who have drawn in other alumni," Friedman noted. The University of Virginia, for instance, has

    many fewer billionaires, but outdid Harvard for the highest percentage of self-made wealthy, at 79 percent.

    Monash University, in Melbourne, Australia, is a launching pad for women. Seventeen percent of their ultra-high-

    net-worth graduates are women. Among top American universities, Northwestern and Brown are conducive to

    female wealth with 15 percent and 14 percent.

    But Harvard led in every other category in the Wealth-X rankings. Its ultra-high-net-worth graduates' sheer

    numbers - totaling close to 3,000 - and their outsized total net worth of $622 billion is enough to make parents

    whose children won't be going feel left out.

    (Read More:Millionaires Say They Are Better Off Than in 2007)

    Some quick math, Friedman pointed out, provides a little balm for those suffering from elite education envy. In all,

    the universities mentioned in Wealth-X's report have helped create 14,355 ultra-high-net-worth individuals out of a

    total global population of more than 186,000, or about 7 percent. "That leaves 93 percent of the world's super-rich,"Friedman said, "who did just fine without attending a top ranked school."

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