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Property portfolio propels Sir Robert Jones to billionaire status

Monday, 12 August 2019

Sir Robert Jones: Now worth $1b, according to the NBR.
Sir Robert Jones: Now worth $1b, according to the NBR.

Sir Robert Jones is New Zealand's newest billionaire, according to the latest NBR Rich List.

The property tycoon, who turns 80 this year, has been estimated to have net worth around $1 billion.

That's up from $860 million the year before.

It was reported last week that he had paid $10.11 million for Civic Assurance House on Lambton Quay, his 18th office building in Wellington's central business district.

**READ MORE:

* Sir Bob Jones pays $10.11m for Lambton Quay building

* Wellington millionaire developer buys distinctive former Telecom HQ tower

* Sir Bob Jones purchases his 18th prime office building in Wellington's CBD**

Graeme Hart remains the richest person in New Zealand.
Graeme Hart remains the richest person in New Zealand.

O​ther well-known Wellington CBD buildings owned by Robt. Jones Holdings (RJH) include David Jones, Midland Chambers, Lambton Centre, Lambton House, Harbour Tower, Featherston House and The Bayleys Building.

He also owns the Crombie Lockwood Tower and SAP Tower in Queen St as well as the AIA building in Takapuna among others.

RJH was formed in 1961 and says it is New Zealand's largest private CBD office building owner with about 900 tenancies in Wellington, Auckland, Sydney and Glasgow and assets of more than $2 billion.

Gareth Kiernan, chief forecaster of Infometrics said a range of factors had combined to boost Jones to $1 billion. 'Borrowing to purchase - i.e. leverage, which is most easily achievable with property, the lack of a capital gains tax, and some combination of talent and luck for picking the right properties to buy and getting the timing right.'

There are nine billionaires and five billionaire families on this year's Rich List. 

Graeme Hart remains top of the list. He has become the first New Zealander to reach wealth of $10b, according to the NBR.

Twenty newcomers join the Rich List this year. Only four of them are involved in businesses that are not based directly or indirectly on property ownership. 

Mark Lister, of Craigs Investment Partners, said it was likely that the Rich List would continue to be dominated by those who were heavily exposed to property.

'As interest rates remain low, and the economy manages to eke out a bit of growth, the path for asset prices is generally an upward one,' he said.

'I suspect the love affair New Zealanders have with property means that it is the investment vehicle of choice for many, so property investors will always be well represented because of that.

'It might also be a bit more difficult to ascertain the exact value of many businesses, particularly unlisted ones, so maybe the Rich List doesn't have full information on those that have their wealth spread over non-property assets.'

The Mowbray siblings, who run toy company Zuru, were some of the biggest movers on the list, now worth about $3b.