The wealth of billionaires hit a new record high of $10.2 trillion as pandemic raged

istock_100720_globalwealth

ipopba/iStockBy CATHERINE THORBECKE, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — The wealth of the world’s billionaires soared to a record new high of $10.2 trillion at the end of July as the coronavirus pandemic raged, according to a new report published Wednesday from Swiss bank UBS and the global firm PwC.

This level of billionaire wealth surpassed the previous record of $8.9 trillion hit at the end of 2017. The number of global billionaires also hit a new high of 2,189, up from 2,158 in 2017.

The billionaires’ wealth gains amid the COVID-19 crisis were bolstered in part by a stock market rally between April and July, researchers noted.

In total, global billionaire wealth climbed by more than a quarter (27.5%) from April to the end of July, the report said.

Billionaires in the tech and industrial sectors saw their wealth increase by 41.3% and 44.4% respectively, also largely bolstered by rallying equity markets. The report noted that industrials benefited especially from financial markets, while tech billionaires saw new gains as a result of pandemic-induced demand for their goods and services. Meanwhile, the worst-off billionaires amid the pandemic were those in real estate.

The unfathomably high wealth gains at the top come as the rest of the economy has been largely pained by the pandemic.

In that same time period between April and July, the unemployment rate in the U.S. jumped to its highest levels since the Great Depression. While some jobs came back as the economy tentatively reopened, as of September the unemployment rate was still at an elevated 7.9%, more than double the rate before the pandemic hit.

As of last week, the U.S. Department of Labor said more than 26.5 million people are still claiming some form of unemployment benefits.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

news_karolineleavitt_77258619

Dow closes down 420 points as Trump unveils new tariffs

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images (WASHINGTON) — Stocks closed down significantly on Monday after President Donald Trump announced steep tariffs on seven countries and threatened to impose new levies on others. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 422 points, or

getty_tariffs-gty-er-250707_1751903594103_hpembed_3x2369193

What to know about Trump's shifting tariff deadline

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images (WASHINGTON) — President Donald Trump on Monday will sign an executive order delaying steep levies on dozens of countries that were set to take effect on Wednesday, the White House said. Trump’s so-called reciprocal

gettyrf_5323_resume2028129265263

Hiring surged in June, defying concern about Trump's tariffs

Narisara Nami/Getty Images (NEW YORK) — Hiring surged in June as businesses navigated uncertainty surrounding President Donald Trump’s tariffs, federal government data on Thursday showed. The reading exceeded economists’ expectations. The U.S. added 147,000 jobs in June,