Alice Walton Is The Second-richest Woman In The World. Here's How The Walmart Heiress Spends Her $84 Billion Fortune.

Walmart's Alice Walton is one of the richest women in the world.
AP Photo/Danny Johnston
- Walmart heiress Alice Walton is the second-richest woman in the world, with an estimated $84 billion net worth.
- She spends some of her fortune collecting art, including opening a museum, and breeding horses.
- Here's a look at her life, career, and fortune.
Alice Walton, the only female heiress to the Walmart fortune, is one of the richest women in the world.
The three Walmart heirs — Rob Walton, Jim Walton, and Alice Walton — have a combined wealth of more than $250 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
The 74-year-old Alice Walton has an estimated fortune worth $84 billion and ranks 19th on Bloomberg's list. She's the second-richest woman in the world, behind only L'Oréal heiress Françoise Bettencourt Meyers.
Despite the Waltons' high status, their personal lives remain largely private. Here's what we know about how Alice Walton spends her fortune, from collecting expensive art to breeding horses:
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Walton and L'Oréal heiress Françoise Bettencourt Meyers regularly alternate in the #1 spot.
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Walton fell in love with the arts at a young age, according to a New Yorker profile. When she was 10, she bought her first work of art: a reproduction of a Picasso painting for $2, she told the publication.
After graduating from Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, in 1971, Walton briefly entered the family business, working for Walmart as a buyer of children's clothes, she told The New Yorker.
But her career really began in finance, which led her to founding Llama Company, an investment bank, in 1988.
She has been married and divorced twice and has no children.
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"Collecting has been such a joy, and such an important part of my life in terms of seeing art, and loving it," she told The New Yorker.
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When it opened, it had four times the endowment of the famous Whitney Museum in New York.
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It was the most expensive sale of a work of art by a female artist in history. Walton later put it on display at her museum in Arkansas.
REUTERS/Rick Wilking
In January 2016, Walton donated 3.7 million of her own Walmart shares — worth about $225 million at the time — to the family's nonprofit, the Walton Family Foundation, Fortune reported. The next year, the charity gifted $120 million to the University of Arkansas to establish a School of Art.
She used to sit on the foundation's board of directors alongside four other Waltons.
Walton also has her own charitable organization, the Alice L. Walton Foundation, which donates to causes including the arts, education, and health, according to its website.
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She has traditionally given to Republican candidates and PACs, though Walton donated $353,400 to the Hillary Victory Fund, a joint fundraising committee supporting Clinton and other Democrats, in 2016, according to Forbes.
The two women met while Clinton was serving as First Lady of Arkansas and was the only woman sitting on Walmart's board.
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"I've been stretched in too many directions and I want to get focused," Walton said, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in 2017. "I've got a house in Fort Worth, so I'm moving to town."
In 2017, she sold her Millsap, Texas ranch for an undisclosed amount. The Rocking W Ranch had an initial asking price of $19.75 million but was later reduced to $16.5 million. The working ranch boasted more than 250 acres of pasture and outbuildings for cattle and horses.
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She also cut its listing price, to $22.1 million. The property has a modest three-bedroom home overlooking nearly five miles of river frontage.
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The condo, which had been owned by late financier Christopher H. Browne, has more than 52 large windows overlooking Central Park and the city, as well as a media room and a library.
In 2015, protesters gathered outside Walton's building to demand a $15 minimum wage for Walmart employees. In 2023, the median wage for workers at Walmart, the world's largest private employer, was $27,642.
Tanza Loudenback contributed to an earlier version of this story.
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