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Elon Musk is now officially richer than Warren Buffett after Tesla's stock hits an all-time high (TSLA, BRKA)

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Elon Musk's wealth officially surpassed that of Warren Buffett on Friday, according to Bloomberg's Billionaire's Index, fueled by Tesla's skyrocketing stock price and a hefty donation by the Oracle of Omaha.

Musk, CEO of Tesla and the electric carmaker's biggest shareholder, saw his riches surge by more than $6 billion on Friday alone, to hit $70.5 billion, as the company's market value capped off a week of fresh highs. The stock is up 259% in 2020 compared to the benchmark S&P 500 index's 1% gain.

Musk is now No. 7 on the list, up from No. 12.

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Buffett, easily the world's most famous investor and still a multi-billionaire in his own right, saw his fortune decline this week after giving away $2.9 billion of Berkshire Hathaway to charity . Since 2006, Bloomberg reports, he's gifted more than $37 billion worth of shares.

Musk takes zero salary from Tesla, while Buffett has famously taken $100,000 annually for decades. For both men, their riches are largely tacked to the daily ups and downs of equities markets.

Musk, in particular, has garnered headlines for his massive and massively complicated pay structure that allows him to buy $1.8 billion tranches of highly discounted Tesla stock as the company hits specific performance targets, like profitability goals and market capitalization benchmarks. He hit the first of those goals earlier in 2020 .

He's also said Tesla stock is likely overvalued, but that hasn't stopped investors from pushing the price high enough to make it the most valuable car company in the world, despite producing only a small fraction of what traditional automakers churn out.

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Then there's the question of what to do with such wealth.

"It doesn't make a lot of sense in most cases if you've basically organized a company," Musk told Joe Rogan on his podcast in May. "How does this wealth arise? If you organize people in a better way to produce products and services that are better than existed before, and you have some ownership in that company, then that essentially gives you the right to allocate more capital."

That's where Buffett comes into his theory.

"There's a conflation of consumption and capital allocation," he continued. "So when you take Warren Buffett, for example and to be totally frank I'm not his biggest fan he does a lot of capital allocation. He reads a lot of annual reports of companies, all the account, and it's pretty boring honestly. What he's trying to figure out is, 'Does Coke or Pepsi deserve more capital?'"

The two billionaire's couldn't be more different in communication, either.

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"He's a remarkable guy," Buffett, who has only tweeted nine times, said of Musk in 2019 as the Tesla CEO sparred with US securities regulators. "I just don't see the necessity to communicate."

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