Eight of the nine Russians to join the list of the world’s richest made their money in food production

Russia has added nine new dollar billionaires in the past year, eight of whom made their fortunes in agriculture and food production, according to the 2026 Forbes World’s Billionaires List.

The annual ranking, published on Tuesday, shows a record 155 Russian nationals on the list despite sweeping Western sanctions imposed since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. Their combined wealth stands at $696.5 billion, another all-time high.

But the composition of Russia’s ultra-rich is shifting. Traditional fortunes in energy and metals, long the backbone of Russian wealth, now share space with a rising class of ‘agro-billionaires’ who have capitalized on Russia’s growing self-sufficiency in food and expanded exports to markets in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.

Fifteen Russian billionaires on the 2026 list derive their wealth from agriculture, according to Forbes. Eight of them are newcomers.

Among them is Aleksandr Tkachev, worth $1.8 billion, co-founder and controlling shareholder of Agrocomplex, one of Russia’s largest food and agriculture producers. Tkachev served as Russia’s agriculture minister from 2015 to 2018. Another newcomer is Vadim Vikulov, worth $1.5 billion, who controls Aston, a Russian agricultural exporter and major player in grain and vegetable oil.




Vadim Moshkovich, worth $2.9 billion, is the wealthiest among them and a consistent presence on the list. He controls Rusagro, one of Russia’s largest pork and sugar producers. Moshkovich resigned from the company’s board in 2022 after being hit with personal sanctions by the EU.

The ninth newcomer to the 2026 list comes from a different sector. Mikhail Fedyaev, a former mechanic in a car factory, now holds controlling interests in Russian fertilizer and coal businesses. Forbes estimates his fortune at $1.1 billion.

The list’s top ranks remain dominated by traditional industrialists. Alexey Mordashov, the steel and gold magnate, leads Russian billionaires for the first time with $37 billion, followed by Vladimir Potanin of Norilsk Nickel with $29.7 billion and Vagit Alekperov, the former Lukoil chief, with $29.5 billion.

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