Money Experts Who Went From Rags to Riches

Debby Wong / Shutterstock.com
Debby Wong / Shutterstock.com

Everyone loves an underdog story, especially of the rags-to-riches type. It’s pure inspiration to hear about famous millionaires and billionaires who started with nothing and climbed their way up to the ranks of the rich and famous. After all, that’s what the American dream is all about, isn’t it? Starting with nothing, working hard and “making it”?

Read: Just How Rich Are Oprah, Bill Gates and Other Big Names?

If you’re looking for your dose of daily motivation, take a look at these stories of well-known finance experts and investors who came from little to nothing but managed to find their place among the wealthiest Americans.

Last updated: April 21, 2021

Suze Orman.
Suze Orman.

Suze Orman

Suze Orman is one of the most well-known names in popular finance today. In addition to countless appearances on financial news networks and mainstream media, including Oprah Winfrey’s OWN Network and ABC’s Good Morning America, Orman currently hosts her own television show and podcast.

The author of 10 consecutive New York Times bestselling books has a net worth of approximately $75 million, but she wasn’t born into multimillionaire status. After growing up on the South Side of Chicago in a working-class family, Orman took some financial missteps early on and soon ended up with $250,000 in credit card debt and a $50,000 loan. Orman’s financial career began when she got a job as a broker at Merrill Lynch. After climbing the ladder and ultimately becoming a vice president of investments at Prudential Bache Securities, Orman went on to found her own firm, the Suze Orman Financial Group. The rest, as they say, is history.

See: Suze Orman’s Top 26 Tips That Will Save You From Financial Disaster

LOS ANGELES - SEP 23: Mark Cuban at the
LOS ANGELES - SEP 23: Mark Cuban at the

Mark Cuban

Mark Cuban is the outspoken billionaire that everyone seems to know, thanks to his ownership of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks and his prominent role on TV’s “Shark Tank.” Cuban is famous for dispensing financial advice, but he’s equally candid about his own rags-to-riches success. After years of sharing an apartment with six buddies, running up credit card debt and not being able to pay his bills, Cuban put in the effort to teach himself how to program.

After years of working around computers — and continually learning — Cuban eventually founded his own computer systems company, MicroSolutions. Cuban ultimately sold that company for $6 million, but he was far from done. Five years later, Cuban and his friend Todd Wagner founded Broadcast.com, a company that was purchased by Yahoo in 1999 for a whopping $5.7 billion. Now with a net worth of approximately $4.4 billion, Cuban attributes his success to his willingness to continue to learn. As the billionaire told Men’s Health, “The reality is, most people don’t put in the time to keep up and learn. That’s always given me a competitive advantage.”

Discover: 20 Genius Things Mark Cuban Says To Do With Your Money

10915, George Soros, billionaires, celebrity, rich
10915, George Soros, billionaires, celebrity, rich

George Soros

George Soros is a famed hedge fund manager who currently boasts an astonishing net worth of $8.8 billion. His most famous investment call was when he shorted the British pound in 1992, netting an incredible $1 billion profit for his efforts. But Soros’ modest upbringing gave no indication that he would become one of the wealthiest people in the world.

Soros was born in Hungary in 1930 to a Jewish family during the rise of Nazi Germany. After surviving the war thanks to false identity papers, he emigrated from Hungary at age 17, taking jobs in London as a railway porter and night club waiter. After nine years of struggling to pay for his education at the London School of Economics, Soros moved to the United States in 1956. By 1973, he had worked to the position where he was able to open his own hedge fund, Soros Fund Management, and began to build his empire from there.

More: Weird Things Top Billionaires Have in Common

2014, CA, Chairman/CEO of Berkshire Hathaway speaks during the 2014 Most P, Laguna Niguel, October 8th, USA, Warren Buffett
2014, CA, Chairman/CEO of Berkshire Hathaway speaks during the 2014 Most P, Laguna Niguel, October 8th, USA, Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett

There is perhaps no investor more famous than Warren Buffett, the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway known as the “Oracle of Omaha.” But Buffett has come a long way from his birth in Omaha during the Great Depression to his rank as the sixth-wealthiest person in the world.

Like Mark Cuban, Buffett has drawn a lesson from everything he has done in his life, like when he bought his first stock at $38 per share — at age 11 — and sold it at $40. The lesson wasn’t that he made $2 per share, but that by watching the stock too closely, he bailed out and could do nothing but watch as the stock later hit $200 per share. But Buffett also learned a lot by selling chewing gum at age 6, and by delivering newspapers at age 13.

After attending business school and mentoring under famous investor Benjamin Graham, Buffett founded his own investment firm at age 26. Within six years, Buffett had earned his first $1 million, and by 1985, Forbes estimated his net worth at $1 billion. Thirty-six years later, Buffett’s net worth now sits at $101.6 billion.

Read: 11 Ways Warren Buffett Lives Frugally

Ray Dalio speaks at TED2017 - The Future You, April 24-28, 2017, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Ray Dalio speaks at TED2017 - The Future You, April 24-28, 2017, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

Ray Dalio

Ray Dalio may not be known by the average American, but he’s one of the wealthiest people in the world, ranking No. 88 on the Forbes Billionaires List with a net worth of $20.3 billion.

Dalio is the founder of the world’s biggest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, with $150 billion under management. He made his first stock investment at age 12, buying $300 of Northeast Airlines, a position that tripled for him. Dalio had a keen eye — and ear — for investments even at this young age, as he got the tip on Northeast Airlines from his job as a golf caddy.

From there, the Queens native worked his way through Long Island University and Harvard Business School before getting his first job on Wall Street. He founded Bridgewater Associates shortly thereafter, and now he’s one of the most influential investors on Wall Street, with Wired Magazine even dubbing Dalio the “Steve Jobs of investing.”

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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: Money Experts Who Went From Rags to Riches

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