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Did an impostor create an extensive Facebook profile of Brazilian commodities magnate Eike Batista?
FORBES
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Billionaire Eike Batista has embraced Rio as his home and is one of its greatest ambassadors.
FORBES: How Brazil Can Get The Best ROI On The World Cup And Olympics
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Eike Batista, the wealthiest man in Brazil, is trying to promote bullish business people, rather than beautiful soccer stars.
WSJ: Riding Brazil's River of Doubt
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People like Eike Batista, the richest man in Brazil, seem to think so.
BBC: Brazil: No reverso
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That tale is, of course, about Brazilian fallen star billionaire Eike Batista, whose companies operate in several areas, including oil, energy, mining, real estate and entertainment.
FORBES: Was Eike Batista's Dream Of Becoming The World's Richest Man Just That, A Dream?
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Brazilian billionaire Eike Batista is taking some of his private commodity and logistics companies off the market and making them private after mega losses this year.
FORBES: Brazil's B In BRICs Stands For Boring
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Eike Batista is the classic example of how billionaires are not really billionaires when you consider all the leverage and how all their wealth is tied up into non-liquid assets.
FORBES: Oil Shares Crashing, Eike Batista Fast Becoming Brazil's Poorest Rich Man
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Brazilian investor and owner of a number of oil and mining companies, Eike Batista, will probably forever be known as the man who helped bring the 2016 Summer Olympics to Rio de Janeiro.
FORBES: BRICs: Where the Billionaires Are
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The climate change conference, hosted by the European Institute for Climate and Energy (known by its German acronym EIKE) and cosponsored by the Heartland Institute, attracted nearly 200 attendees and marks ongoing global momentum in favor of sound science and against factually unsupported alarmism.
FORBES: Anti-Science Climate Deniers On The Retreat In Germany
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Addressing a conference that also featured the likes of Eike Batista, Bill Ackman, David Einhorn and Philip Falcone, Langone stressed that the ultra-wealthy should be judged not by the size of their wallet, but by how much they contribute, and not just financially, to charity.
FORBES: Connect