Itâs report card time for the worldâs billionaires and one contender is balking about his grades. But as journalism about the worldâs wealthy grows, this billionaire now can take his complaints to a competitor.
Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal of Saudi Arabia who appeared in the Forbes annual billionaireâs list published this week said that he will no longer cooperate with Forbes on its lists and asked that he no longer be included in the rankings. As a dig to Forbes, he has promised to continue to cooperate with Bloomberg on its far newer billionaire rankings.
After the Forbes rankings were posted online on Monday, the prince announced in a news release that his team has worked with Forbes for the last six years and uncovered what they called âintentional biases and inconsistencies in the Forbes valuation process.â The prince added that âhe coud no longer participate in a process which resulted in the use of incorrect data and seemed intended to disadvantage Middle Eastern investors and institutions.â
A spokeswoman for Forbes Media noted that the prince has plenty to be pleased about: his ranking rose to 26 for a $20 billion net worth from a ranking of 29 the year before for a net worth of $18 billion. The spokeswoman said itâs just $9.6 billion less than the prince claims he is worth.
On Tuesday morning, Forbes released an article that showed just how long this battle has been simmering between Forbes and its editors. Kerry A. Dolan, who reports on the wealthy and the Forbes billionaireâs list, wrote that Forbes has engaged with the prince over âa quarter cent! ury of lobbying, cajoling and threatening when it comes to his net worth listing.â Ms. Dolan added that âof the 1,426 billionaires on our list, not one â" not even the vainglorious Donald Trump â" goes to greater measure to try to affect his or her ranking.â In one case, the prince grew so upset about a prior ranking that âhe called me at home the day after the list was released, sounding nearly in tears. âWhat do you wantâ he pleaded.â
Ms. Dolan said that Forbes had started to further investigate the princeâs net worth based on the guidance of former employees who noted that, based on fluctuations in his companyâs stock price, that he was using the public company to inflate his net worth. In fact, the magazine tracked how the princeâs companyâs stock price seems to rise in the ten weeks before Forbes locks in its values for the billionaireâs list.
A Forbes spokeswoman said that it would continue to feature the prince on future lists. Mike Perlis, president and chief xecutive officer of Forbes, added that the prince had an amicable interview with Steve Forbes before a crowd of several hundred tycoons during the Forbes Global CEO conference in Dubai in October.
But moving forward, the prince announced he would cooperate with Bloomberg on its billionaires list. Bloomberg just started publishing a billionairesâ list last March after Matthew G. Miller, former global wealth editor at Forbes Media, moved there and started tapping into Bloombergâs 2,400 journalists to contribute. The prince said in a statement that he would continue to work with Bloomberg because they use âa more accurate method of calculating financial holdings.â