In 1963, he founded Confecciones Goa to sell quilted bathrobes. In 1975, he opened his first
Zara store with his wife Rosalía Mera. In 2009, Zara was part of the
Inditex group (Industrias de Diseño Textil Sociedad Anónima), of which Ortega owned 59.29%, and aside from over 6,000 stores included the brands
Zara,
Massimo Dutti, Oysho,
Zara Home, Kiddy's Class, Tempe, Stradivarius,
Pull and Bear,
Bershka and has more than 92,000 employees. His public appearance in 2000, as part of the warm-up prior to his company's
initial public offering on the stock market in 2001, made headlines in the Spanish financial press. However, he has only ever granted interviews to three journalists. In 2011, Ortega announced his imminent retirement from
Inditex, parent company of the Zara chain, stating that he would ask Inditex vice-president and CEO
Pablo Isla to take his place as head. In 2012 Ortega donated about €20 million to
Caritas Internationalis, a
Roman Catholic relief organisation. He purchased the
Torre Picasso skyscraper in
Madrid. He also purchased the
Epic Residences and Hotel in
Miami, Florida. He also donated 300 million euros to fight cancer across Spain, which were invested in the purchase of 440 machines to detect the disease. As a result of this, the number of Spanish public hospitals equipped with stereotactic radiotherapy machines has risen from 20 to 70. However, these decisions were not unanimously welcomed and were criticized by some political parties like
Podemos. Recently, news indicate that he has bought the Troy Block complex, known to the public as one of the buildings where Amazon Seattle has its headquarters. It was revealed in July 2020 that Ortega's property holdings, through his investment company Pontegadea, were worth $17.2 billion. Ortega is the executive chairman of Pontegadea, and real estate assets in his portfolio include
Manhattan’s
Haughwout Building and
Southeast Financial Center. In 2019, the company completed a $72.5 million deal for a downtown
Chicago hotel, which followed purchases of a building in
Washington’s
central business district and two
Seattle office buildings. Ortega was reported to have lost $10 billion as a result of the
coronavirus pandemic.
Net worth Amancio Ortega's fortune in 2021 was estimated to be around 73.1 billion euros. In 2012 he was the largest shareholder of Inditex, with almost 60-65%. Through the Pontegadea company, he brings together all his assets based on real estate investment and financial investments. Regarding real estate assets, this is concentrated in Madrid and Barcelona, located on the axis of the main business streets of both cities, where it has more than twenty properties distributed along Paseo de la Castellana, Serrano, Recoletos, Ortega y Gasset (Madrid) and on Paseo de Gracia or via Laietana (Barcelona). Internationally, he also owns properties in five other major European capitals (Paris, Berlin, Rome, Lisbon and London). In December 2019, Pontegadea acquired 5% of the energy company
Enagás for 281.64 million euros. In July 2021, it acquired the same percentage of the also energy company Red Eléctrica and 12% of
Redes Energéticas Nacionais, operators of the Spanish and Portuguese electricity grids respectively. In 2024, Forbes listed Ortega's net worth at $103 billion. == Philanthropy ==