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Billionaire bubble: How the migratory uber-rich flock together  

Billionaires are a bit like migratory birds. They soar high above the earth, they often like to flash bright colors, and increasingly they move in large and noisy flocks.

Like a swarm of Gulfstreams, the world's super rich flit from one velvet-roped gathering and thought conference to the next, with occasional stops at the beach or ski slopes in between.

"They're like a global tribe or herd," said David Friedman, president of Wealth-X, the wealth research firm. "The herd migrates to certain places. Sometimes some of them break off and diverge, and then reconverge. But there are the usual suspects in many of these places."

According to Wealth-X, the billionaire's social calendar for next year starts in Davos, Switzerland, in January, for the annual gathering of the super rich and powerful known as the World Economic Forum.

After Davos, the billionaire migration goes to the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia, then to the Dubai World Cup horse racing extravaganza. Then it's on to the Cannes Film Festival and Monaco Grand Prix in May. As the weather warms up, they will head to Art Basel in Switzerland and the Clinton Global Initiative, before rounding out at the Frieze Art Fair in London in October.

Wealth-X doesn't highlight the leisure spots. But a look at private jet traffic and yacht dockings shows that many of the world's billionaires touch down in the Caribbean during the winter, especially St. Barth's, with a possible stop in Aspen or St. Moritz during the end of ski season.

In the summer, it's off to the Mediterranean or the Hamptons.

GUSTAVIA - MAY 13: General view of the marina of Gustavia, on the west coast of the island of St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre on May 13, 2002 in Gusta...
The marina of Gustavia, St. Bartholomew's - a migratory stopover for the uber-rich.MARCEL MOCHET / AFP/Getty Images

Friedman said that some billionaires venture off the migration path for particular "passions." The super rich who buy thoroughbreds, for instance, gather at the Keeneland yearling auction in Kentucky in September. Car collectors gather at Pebble Beach, California, in August for the Concours d'Elegance. And art buyers make sure they're in New York for the spring and fall sales and in London for the summer sale.

"Not everyone just follows the same path," he said. "You have branches of the migration based on affinities."

Still, the migratory patterns of today's billionaires show how the super rich have developed their own self-contained global loop—with many of the same people going to the same gilded events far removed from the rest of the world. It is a movable feast of the top 0.01 percent, a further sign that the very wealthy from around the world now have more in common with each other than they do with people from their own country.

Richistan, in other words, is now the world's richest, pop-up country—with its accompanying fleet of Gulfstream G550s, black Escalades, personal chefs, assistants, nannies and trainers.

"Some of them are looking for a community, and the best way to find it is people in a similar situation," Friedman said. "So you get this ebb and flow where people are coming into and out of this migration."

The billionaires' migration path is also a sign of how the values of the rich have changed. Rather than pursuing leisure as their main objective, today's workaholic wealthy are foraging the planet for self-improvement and the best ideas—whether it's at conferences or auctions, or elite sporting events and philanthropy workshops.

"There is a very important philanthropic focus to where they go," Friedman said. "It's more about philanthropic tourism than just enjoyment."