|
|
|
|
|
by Retric
4182 days ago
|
|
Exxon's value has little to do with the actions of nation states. Rockefeller was relatively speaking wealthier than Bill Gates ($336 billion in 2007 dollars) before nation states got involved in the oil business. The world's proven oil reserves are ~1.5 Trillion barrels. At 50$/barrel that's 75 Trillion $ before refining. You don't need a large slice of 75 Trillion $ to be ridiculously wealthy. Large commodity markets require efficiency which might not be sexy, but it can directly translate into profits. Look at the world’s richest people and you see several people from the Walton family because efficiency really can be worth far more than all the social websites combined. PS: Not to mention 12 out of less than 200 countires are in OPEC and they controwl ~81% of the worlds proven reserves. It's fairly common for a small number of countries to supply the majoirity of a given comodity. EX: 81% of the worlds rice is produces by just 9 countries, and just 6 countries controwl 81% of the worlds coal. |
|
He was worth between $1 and $2 billion in his day, per the best biographies and historical information on the man.
That's a lot closer to $25 to $50 billion today.
The false hundreds of billions number is usually reached one of two ways: 1) by pretending Rockefeller still owned his former share of Standard Oil, represented in the form of the children oil companies today (Exxon et al.); 2) by taking Rockefeller's wealth as a share of GDP, and then claiming based on 2007's GDP he'd be worth X amount.
Both are absurd.