The Roller Coaster Of Wealth: Tech CEOs And Their Billion-Dollar Losses
You know what's cooler than a million dollars? A billion dollars… said these five tech CEOs right before they no longer had a billion dollars. Launching a hot internet startup, taking it public, and making billions of dollars for yourself and your investors is one of the most exciting ways of the last 20 years to make a bloody fortune. Unfortunately, being the CEO of a hot dotcom company can have a few more ups and downs than, for example, being the CEO of Coca-Cola. Actually, it can be more like a roller coaster ride, and with each peak and valley, your net worth increases or decreases exponentially. The last year has been rough for many companies and the economy in general, but the tech industry has been battered especially hard. Along the way, these five tech CEOs in particular have lost a fortune…
***Update*** On Thursday, February 8th, 2013, Groupon officially fired Andrew Mason as CEO.
Andrew Mason and Eric Lefkofsky – Groupon
Before Groupon went public, the company raised over $950 million in venture capital, of which $810 million was paid out to early investors and insiders. CEO Andrew Mason paid himself $30 million, and early backer Eric Lefkofsky took out $320 million. This move raised a lot of eyebrows, but their venture capitalists quickly focused on the company's November 2011 IPO, which is where the real gold would be found.
Groupon's public offering has been a disaster. Mason and Lefkofsky, who own 46 million and 110 million shares respectively, became instant billionaires when GRPN debuted on the NASDAQ at $26 a share. Mason's net worth grew to $1.4 billion when the stock peaked at $31.1, and Lefkofsky's net worth hit an all-time high of $3.4 billion. Unfortunately, due to several accounting irregularities and slower sales growth, Groupon has lost 85% of its value over the last 9 months, shrinking Andrew Mason's net worth by more than $1.17 billion to $230 million.
Eric Lefkofsky's net worth has shrunk by $2.9 billion to $800 million (his shares are worth $506 million, but remember he took out over $300 million from the VCs). Most analysts agree that Groupon's immediate future does not look very bright. Consumers and businesses have grown tired of the daily deals concept, and the stock continues to slide each day. On February 28, 2013, Groupon fired Andrew Mason as CEO after shares slid to a new all-time low, off nearly 95% from their peak.
Mark Pincus – Zynga
Zynga was once the hottest tech company in the world, with a highly anticipated IPO that many expected would value the social game maker at $15 – $20 billion. Zynga went public in December of 2011, at a respectable $9 price per share. Over the next four months, the stock slowly climbed to a peak of $16, which made the company worth $7.4 billion. CEO Mark Pincus owns 67 million shares of Zynga, which were worth nearly $1.1 billion at the stock's peak.
Prior to creating Zynga, Pincus spent $400,000 to buy an early 0.5% stake in Facebook, which, at one time, added an additional $425 million to his net worth. Unfortunately, this summer has been rough for Mark Pincus, Zynga, and Facebook because after peaking at $16, Zynga started a slow slide and by June was in a full free fall, losing over 80% of its value.
Zynga today trades in the $3.4 range (and has gone as low as $2.6), which gives the company a market cap of $2.7 billion. The value of Pincus' shares has dropped from $1.1 billion to $200 million, a loss of $900 million. To add insult to injury, Facebook has lost around half of its peak value since going public, which has cut Pincus' $425 million stake down to $212 million. Mark Pincus' net worth today stands at $425 million, a total loss of $1.113 billion.
Reed Hastings – Netflix
As we reported back in October, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has experienced one of the most incredible falls from grace in CEO history. Almost exactly one year ago, Netflix was a Wall Street darling, with the stock hitting an all-time high of $300. The company had a market cap of $16.5 billion and Reed Hastings' net worth was $900 million. Fast forward 12 months, and Netflix's stock has lost 78% of its value thanks to their very public, very disastrous Qwikster debacle, which raised fees and sent subscribers fleeing by the tens of thousands.
It also didn’t help that the company lost several key licensing deals, which left their streaming library very thin. Since we first published this article, Netflix has experienced a bit of a comeback. As of February 2013, Netflix shares are trading at around $190, up from a low of $60 but still not near its peak of nearly $300. Reed Hastings' shares have increased from $280 million to $840 million.
Mark Zuckerberg – Facebook
Facebook's bad luck didn’t end with their disastrous IPO back in May. The IPO was a complete debacle, leaving investors reeling with unfilled orders and bad information. Facebook's share price peaked briefly at $45 on its actual IPO day, giving the company an $85 billion market cap and CEO Mark Zuckerberg a net worth of $20 billion. June, July, and August were brutal for the young social network. The stock lost half its value, and Zuckerberg's net worth dropped to $10 billion.
Shockingly, several analysts and reporters have actually called for the mighty Zuck to step down from his own company! Since we first published this article in July 2013, Facebook shares have had a bit of a recovery. The stock has risen from a low of roughly $17 to around $28 per share today. Zuckerberg's net worth has increased from $10 billion to $14 billion.
Kevin Systrom – Instagram
Back in April my dad asked me to explain what Instagram was and why Facebook was buying them for $1 billion. It’s not as easy to explain as you’d think. It’s a free app that distorts your photos to make them look older and lower quality…kind of like a Polaroid. Regardless of what you thought of Instagram, you had to give props to 28-year-old CEO Kevin Systrom after he scored a billion dollars for a company that had no revenue or monetization plans whatsoever.
Systrom's 40% stake was worth $400 million, another $100 million went to co-founder Mike Krieger, and the remaining half billion was divvied up by various venture capitalists. The terms of the deal would pay Instagram $300 million cash and 23 million shares of Facebook stock, which at the time (prior to their IPO) were valued at $23 a share or $690 million. Good deal, right? Ehhh… Turns out not so much.
It would have been a great deal if Facebook's stock exploded after their IPO like everyone hoped/expected, but Facebook went on to lose half its value. Instagram lost $300 million, and Kevin Systrom's take was reduced by $120 million to $280 million. Instagram teaches a very good lesson in negotiation. Usually when a company accepts stock in a buyout, the sellers lower their risk by requiring a floating share price.
Jim Balsillie and Michael Lazaridis – Blackberry (Research in Motion)
Apple's iPhone and Google's Android operating system have pretty much rendered BlackBerrys useless and antiquated. Over the last three years, the once-dominant smartphone's market share plunged to less than 1%. Four years ago, RIMM's share price was soaring at an all-time high of $144; today it sits at $13.3. That's a 91% drop. Along the way, co-founders and former co-CEOs Jim Balsillie and Michael Lazaridis have experienced a heartbreaking drop in their net worths.
Balsillie and Lazaridis own 26 million and 30 million shares, which at the peak were worth $3.7 billion and $4.3 billion, respectively. Four years later, at $7 a share, Jim Balsillie's net worth has dropped $3.52 billion to $182 million. Michael Lazaridis' net worth has dropped $4.09 billion to $210 million. That’s a combined loss of $7.6 billion! On the bright side, the iPhone 5 is expected to come out in less than a month… oh wait, never mind. On the bright side, I hope you guys put away a ton of savings…
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