Just stumbled on something interesting about how certain real estate moguls have absolutely dominated their markets. It's wild how much wealth you can build in property if you actually know what you're doing.



Kushal Pal Singh is sitting on around $18.7 billion through DLF, which is basically India's biggest listed property company. Not many people outside the industry know his name, but this guy is legitimately one of the richest real estate moguls globally.

Then there's Harry Triguboff in Australia with $19.7 billion. He built Meriton into something massive—we're talking over 79,000 apartments. What's crazy is he was one of the first developers to see that apartments could be more profitable than single-family homes. People actually call him the GOAT of Australian real estate.

In the U.S., Donald Bren controls Irvine Company and owns over 120 million square feet of commercial and residential space across California. He's also got the MetLife Building in New York. That's the kind of real estate mogul portfolio that's hard to wrap your head around.

Stephen Ross started from nothing and became CEO of Related Companies. He owns the Miami Dolphins too, but his real money is in real estate—office spaces, hotels, urban developments. Especially dominant in Florida.

And Peter Woo, with $13.2 billion, used to run Wheelock & Co. and Wharf Holdings. Beyond just property development, these companies touch retail and telecom as well.

What strikes me is how these real estate moguls didn't just get rich quick—they built empires over decades by understanding markets and scaling strategically. If you're thinking about real estate as an investment, these examples show there's serious wealth-building potential if you commit to it long-term.
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