Michael Dell is absolutely crushing it this year

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Michael Dell

Michael Dell has become the world's fifth-richest person. SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty Images

Dell computers might not be flashy, but there's nothing dull about Michael Dell right now.

The founder and CEO of Dell Technologies is proving that tech fortunes don't have to be fleeting. Thirty years after he first became a billionaire, Dell is now the fifth-wealthiest person on the planet, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

The personal-computing pioneer has leapfrogged Warren Buffett, Jensen Huang, Steve Ballmer, Mark Zuckerberg, and Larry Ellison on the rich list this year.

His net worth has surged by around $77 billion since the start of January; only Elon Musk has gained more in that timeframe.

Dell's $216 billion net worth as of Thursday's close makes him one of six people with a $200 billion-plus fortune, along with Musk, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Jeff Bezos, and Ellison.

His wealth surge has been fueled by a 225% jump in his company's stock price this year, which has raised its market value to $281 billion — more than Wells Fargo, Palantir, or IBM are worth.

Dell owns about 41% of the eponymous PC maker, which has tapped into the AI boom by selling a "full stack" of computing infrastructure to run AI models, including workstations, servers, storage, networking, and services.

Strong customer demand was evident in Dell's first-quarter earnings. Net revenue soared 88% from the same quarter last year to a record $44 billion, as net sales of AI-optimized servers rocketed 757% to over $16 billion. Operating income more than tripled to $3.7 billion.

Dell isn't the only tech titan to see his fortune balloon in 2026. Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, has added more than $300 billion to his net worth and even briefly became a trillionaire after SpaceX went public earlier this month.

Page and Brin, the cofounders of Google-parent Alphabet and the world's second- and third-richest people, are up more than $23 billion each thanks to their company's climbing stock price.

Other centibillionaires have fared much worse. Ellison, Zuckerberg, Ballmer, and Arnault have seen roughly $40 billion wiped off each of their fortunes as investors have soured on some tech and luxury names.

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Theron Mohamed is a London-based correspondent on the Trending team at Business Insider. His coverage spans finance, investing, wealth, markets, and the economy.Theron joined BI in 2019 as a reporter at Markets Insider and rose to the rank of correspondent before moving to the Trending team in 2024. He previously covered tech, media, and telecom stocks for Investors Chronicle magazine and had a brief stint on the Financial Times' Data team. He interned at the Wall Street Journal in New York where he primarily wrote for Heard on the Street.Theron has freelanced for The Independent, The Telegraph, WIRED, and several smaller publications. He holds an undergraduate degree in geography from the London School of Economics, and a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University.Theron often covers Warren Buffett, Michael Burry, Jeremy Grantham and other top-flight investors. He also writes about the world's wealthiest people and shares financial advice from all manner of rich and successful people.Email Theron at [email protected] and follow him on X @theron_mohamed.Expertise

  • Corporate finance
  • Stocks and investing
  • Wealth and philanthropy
  • Business history
  • US economy
  • Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway

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