Forbes

Perfect Streaks: These 11 Billionaires Have Never Missed The Forbes 400 List

C.Thompson40 min ago
Making, and staying on, Forbes' ranking of the richest people in America is no easy feat. Only 11 out of 1,739 have made it every single year since inception. By Sarah Young , Contributor

ver the 43 years Forbes has published The Forbes 400 , a total of 1,739 moguls, heirs and celebrities have made the ranking of America's richest people. Economic booms, busts, good old fashioned competition—and, of course, father time—have ensured that the list has never featured the exact same 400 people two years in a row. A few flashes in the pan only make the grade for a year. Many others spend a decade or two in the ranks before dropping off or passing away. But a lucky few—the legendary 11—have had staying power, managing to earn a spot on The Forbes 400 every year since its 1982 inception.

In all, they are worth an estimated $342.3 billion today, up from $3.8 billion all the way back in 1982 when they first appeared on Forbes' ranking (equivalent to $12.2 billion in today's dollars), meaning they have grown their wealth by some 8,900%, more than double the 4,200% growth of the S&P 500. Their average age is 88.

When Forbes first published The Forbes 400, Warren Buffett was the 52-year-old chairman of a $1.5 billion (assets) Berkshire Hathaway. "Lives modestly," we wrote. "Estimated net worth: $250 million." Four decades later, Berkshire's assets have surpassed $1 trillion and Buffett is the fifth-richest person in America, and the wealthiest "billionaire streaker" never to miss The Forbes 400. His $150 billion net worth is 187 times his 1982 stash, even after adjusting for inflation. ( He'd be even richer but for the fact that he's also America's most generous philanthropist.)

Only 4 of the 11 are self-made. In addition to Buffett, two retail and fashion tycoons earned their way onto the lists thanks to their world-renowned brands: Nike's Phil Knight and Les Wexner, the disgraced L Brands founder behind Victoria's Secret and Bath & Body Works. The fourth self-made icon is Donald Bren, the richest real estate developer in the nation, whose Irvine Co. owns 129 million square feet of real estate, mostly in Southern California.

The remaining seven all got started with substantial help from their families though all but one were able to turn millions into billions. Among them: the 17th-richest person in America Charles Koch; Leonard and Ron Lauder, sons of Estée Lauder; and media giant Donald Newhouse, whose family has investments in Conde Nast, Warner Bros. Discovery and social news site Reddit.

Four other members of the inaugural 1982 ranking made the list in 2024 but fell off at least once along the way. Star Wars billionaire George Lucas dropped off in 1983 due to a divorce settlement, but rejoined in 1996 during the planning stage of the franchise's prequel trilogy. Former president Donald Trump disappeared from the ranks amid his 1990s bankruptcies, and again in 2021 and 2023 , but is back among the top 400 this year thanks, largely, to his Truth Social platform . Oil heir Sid Bass didn't make the cut in 2021, while FedEx founder Fred Smith spent a total of 6 years off the list.

Many of the original 1982 Forbes 400 listees have since died. That includes comedian Bob Hope (d. 2003), who only made the list once; mobster Meyer Lansky (d. 1983); Steve Jobs (d. 2011); and shipping tycoon Daniel Ludwig (d. 1992), the richest person in America in 1982, worth $2 billion ($6.4 billion in today's dollars). Others who made the original minimum net worth of $100 million (equivalent to $320 million today)—including musician Yoko Ono and heir Timothy Mellon —have either transferred their fortunes to heirs or were simply overtaken in worth by the likes of tech moguls, social media stars and crypto bulls.

With 43-year Forbes 400 streaks to their names, here are the eleven very lucky billionaires who have made the list every year since 1982:Warren Buffett Origin of Wealth: Berkshire Hathaway Age: $250 million (2024 equivalent: $800 million)$150 billionCharles Koch Origin of Wealth: Koch, Inc. Age: $265 million (2024 equivalent: $850 million)$67.5 billionPhil Knight Origin of Wealth: Age: $275 million (2024 equivalent: $880 million)$36.8 billionDonald Bren Origin of Wealth: Real estate Age: $350 million (2024 equivalent: $1.1 billion)$18.9 billionPhilip Anschutz Origin of Wealth: Energy, sports, entertainment Age: $1 billion (2024 equivalent: $3.3 billion) $16.9 BillionDonald Newhouse Origin of Wealth: Age: $600 million (2024 equivalent: $1.9 billion)$12.2 billionLeonard Lauder Origin of Wealth: Estée Lauder Age: $125 million (2024 equivalent: $400 million)$11.5 billionLeonard Stern Origin of Wealth: Real estate Age: $500 million (2024 equivalent: $1.6 billion)$9 billionLes Wexner Origin of Wealth: Age: $100 million (2024 equivalent: $326 million)$7.9 billionRay Lee Hunt Origin of Wealth: Oil, real Estate Age: $200 million (2024 equivalent: $640 million)$6.9 billionRonald Lauder Origin of Wealth: Estée Lauder Age: $125 million (2024 equivalent: $400 million) $4.7 billionMORE FROM FORBES This Ex-Shoe Salesman Built A $5.5 Billion Fortune In Aging Apartment Buildings Where America's Richest People Live: Forbes 400 2024 How Donald Trump Climbed Back Onto The Forbes 400 How This Immigrant Billionaire Outmaneuvered Boeing To Build America's Next "Doomsday" Nuclear Planes
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