New York
Times Owner Slim’s 1960’s Money-Making
According
to Chrystia Freeland’s Plutocrats: The Rise of the New Global
Super-Rich and the Fall of Everyone Else book, New York
Times Owner Slim “started to make serious money straight out of
college, when he was one of the Los Casabolseros or Stock Market Boys, a group
of aggressive young men who traded shares on the Mexican stock market.” Then,
“by the end of 1965” Slim “had established a brokerage house, acquired a
bottling company, and incorporated a real-estate business, Inmobiliaria Carso”
and in 1966, “upon receiving a million pesos from his mother…built a
twelve-story condominium in Mexico City,” “occupied the ninth floor and rented
out the other apartments,” according to Lawrence Wright’s June 1, 2009 article
in The New Yorker. So by the age of 26, according to the
2009 American Journalism Review article, “Slim had
already accumulated $400,000 in wealth from his business ventures and from his
mother.”
(end of part 7)
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