ARTnews Top 200 collectors Jeff Bezos, Bernard Arnault, and Alice Walton lost billions on March 7 and March 10 after stock market sell-offs motivated by investor concerns about the new Trump tariffs and a potential global recession.
By the end of the trading day Friday, the major US indices had fallen by more than 2 percent for the week and the S&P 500 fell 3.1 percent, the largest drop since September, according to NPR. On March 10, the Wall Street Journal reported the Nasdaq Composite fell 4 percent.
As of end of day Monday, 24 of the 30 Top 200 collectors that are also currently on Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index, saw major losses, according to data analysis by ARTnews. For 11 of those 24 billionaire art collectors, the two days of losses from the stock market lowered their total net worth by 3 percent or more.
Alice Walton—the founder of the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, chairman of the Art Bridges Foundation, and heiress to the Walmart fortune—had the largest 2-day loss at more than $6.5 billion, and the largest reduction in her net worth, 7 percent, down to $107 billion.
During the same two-day period, there were also ten-figure declines in the net worths of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos (-$5.83 billion), LVMH owner Bernard Arnault (-$5.3 billion) and SAP co-founder Hasso Plattner (-$1 billion).
The stock market declines also resulted in losses exceeding $500 million for Chanel chairperson Alain Wertheimer, HCL Enterprise chairperson Shiv Nadar, KKR co-founder Henry Kravis, and Zodiac Maritime chairperson Eyal Ofer.
The seven billionaire Top 200 collectors whose year-to-date losses exceeded $1 billion when the markets closed on March 10 were Bezos (-$22.5 billion), Nadar (-$7.5 billion), Uniqlo CEO Tadashi Yanai (-$3.75 billion), former KKR CEO George Roberts (-$3.3 billion), Kravis (-$3 billion), Walton (-$2 billion), and former Apollo Global Management CEO Leon Black (-$1.54 billion).
While all 30 billionaires on the 2024 Top 200 list still have total net worths exceeding $7 billion, the stock market losses could add to concerns of an already challenging art market due to this year’s fires in Los Angeles, ongoing geopolitical conflicts, as well as the impact of the new tariffs the Trump administration has implemented against imports from China, Hong Kong, Canada and Mexico.
While photographs and artworks from those countries are currently exempt from new import tariffs (as of March 11), the exemption is still subject to interpretation by US Customs and Border Patrol officials. Canada has also instituted counter-tariffs of 25 percent on photographs, prints, as well as “Paintings, drawings and pastels, executed entirely by hand” except for “architectural, engineering, industrial, commercial topographical or other purposes.” Art institutions, auction houses and galleries in New York will also see higher energy prices due to a 25 percent on electricity exports from the province of Ontario.
Art professionals are also still scrambling to deal with increased costs due to tariffs on imports of lumber, crude oil, vehicle parts, electronics, office supplies, produce, hospitality supplies, as well as arts-related merchandise (including tote bags, toys, t-shirts and magnets).
On March 11, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that he would retaliate against Ontario’s counter-tariffs on electricity by increasing the tariff on steel and aluminum imported from Canada from 25 percent to 50 percent and it would go into effort Wednesday. President Trump also said that if Canada did not drop “other egregious, long time Tariffs [sic]”, he would substantially increase tariffs on cars coming into the US.
President Trump also reiterated that Canada should become the 51st state, an idea that has been rejected by 85 percent of Canadians in a recent poll, and is ridiculous for a long list of reasons this Canadian reporter does not want to get into.