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Pandora Earnings: Loss of 10 Cents a Share, $128.5 Million Revenue vs. Expectations of 10-Cent Loss, $124 Million Revenue

What Does World's Richest Woman Buy? Trouble

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Published: Tuesday, 26 Jun 2012 | 2:58 PM ET
Robert Frank By:

CNBC Reporter & Editor

Bloomberg | Getty
Gina Rinehart

Gina Rinehart should get a reality show. They could call it “Miner’s Daughter: The Billionaire Version.”

Every week could bring some new family hysterics, lawsuit, financial betrayal or personality struggle. This week's episode would be especially dramatic.

It began with her battle against Fairfax Media. Fairfax owns several newspapers in Australia, including the Sydney Morning Herald. Rinehart, who inherited a mining empire from her father, owns 19 percent of Fairfax. She bought the shares, she says, to be a “white knight” (knightess?) for the company. But she wants a board seat and some concessions on the editorial independence of the papers (including the right to hire and fire editors).

So far she has been rebuffed. She has threatened to sell the shares if she doesn’t get her way.

What makes this more than a share dispute, however, are widespread fears in Australia that Rinehart is trying to exert more editorial control over the papers. She has, for example, been critical of the media’s reporting on climate change.

Meanwhile, the climate within Rinehart’s own family has gotten chillier. She has been battling her children over the family trust for months. According to an article in the Sydney Morning Herald, her son, John Hancock, has enlisted the financial help of a mystery Chinese benefactor to help him remove his mother as a trustee.

''I've got quite a few friends in Asia and one of them offered to help me via a fundraising party in Hong Kong, so he managed to get about 30 people who all gave me a substantial sum of money,'' Hanckock told Australian television. ''He also introduced me later that night to an extremely wealthy Chinese man who is helping me.'

It all sounds like one of those Nigerian emails: “I have a fortune that I need your financial help to retrieve.” Only this time, it may be real.

Rinehart may have the best intentions when it comes to both newspapers and her family. But the ongoing dramas and power struggles have made one of the world’s richest women also among the most controversial.

-By CNBC's Robert Frank
Follow Robert Frank on Twitter:
@robtfrank

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Gina Rinehart, reputed to be the world's richest woman, is making headlines again for power struggles with her family and the Australian media.

   
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  • Frank joined CNBC in 2012 as a reporter and editor. He is a leading journalistic authority on the American wealthy.