Bear Market Billionaires
Duncan Greenberg and Marie Thibault, 05.28.09, 07:30 PM EDT 

 

 

Several billionaires have rehabbed their fortunes during the recent bear market 
rally. 


 
In Pictures: Bear Market Billionaires 
 

Eight months ago, as panic gripped Wall Street, billionaire investor Ronald 
Burkle waited patiently. Then, on Nov. 24, he pounced, buying up hefty stakes 
in bookseller Barnes & Noble ( BKS - news - people ) and grocery chain Whole 
Foods ( WFMI - news - people ), two brand names the market had severely 
punished.

The cases were compelling. Whole Foods shares were down 90% from their 2006 
high, yet the company had managed to grow its revenue by 40% since then. Still, 
with consumers humbled by the ailing economy, many believed high-end grocery 
stores would be left for dead.

In Pictures: Bear Market Billionaires 

Barnes & Noble shares were trading at a mere two times 2007 EBITDA (earnings 
before non-cash expenses like depreciation and amortization) despite signs that 
the recession was driving many of its competitors out of business. The 
recession, of course, was also driving book lovers to the library and to 
second-hand stores at the expense of Barnes & Noble's bookshops.

Nonetheless, Burkle's bet--that the companies' underlying financials outweighed 
common-sense notions about how cash-strapped consumers would behave in the 
short term--paid off. Since late last year, Whole Foods shares are up 85% while 
Barnes & Noble stock is up 80%. The value of Burkle's $165 million investment 
(made via his investment outfit, Yucaipa Cos.) has ballooned to $305 million. 
Burkle declined to comment for this story.

Many billionaires have significantly salvaged their fortunes since the Forbes 
List of the World's Billionaires was published in March, making vast sums amid 
the stock market's sudden (and, many argue, temporary) turnaround. 

Forbes compiled a list of the 10 billionaires who have profited the most from 
this upswing, looking only at entrepreneurs who own significant stakes in 
publicly traded companies (privately held fortunes were excluded). The 
plutocrats were ranked by the percentage return on their stakes between March 
9, when the S&P 500 hit bottom, and May 15. The group returned an average of 
117% in that period, besting the S&P 500, which returned 31%. They generated a 
combined paper profit of $12.1 billion.

Leading the charge among these bear market rally billionaires is casino mogul 
Sheldon Adelson, who has made more than $3 billion on paper since early March. 

As shares of his Las Vegas Sands ( LVS - news - people ) gambling company, 
which controls casinos in Las Vegas, Pennsylvania and Macau, cratered in 2008 
and early 2009, Adelson's net worth fell by more than $25 billion, making him 
the largest individual casualty of the economic meltdown.



Last fall, in a bid to stave off bankruptcy, Adelson plowed $1 billion of his 
own cash into LVS. In exchange, he received a bevy of warrants and notes giving 
him the right to acquire roughly 170 million shares, on top of the nearly 250 
million shares he already owned.
Eventually analysts became convinced the company could handle its massive debt 
burden--and its shares soared. Between March 9 and May 15, LVS stock rose 550%. 
Adelson's gain: $3.3 billion. 

Two other casino moguls are among the top five bear market rally beneficiaries. 
Steve Wynn has seen his shares of Wynn Resorts rise 140%, while Kirk Kerkorian, 
who risks losing MGM Mirage ( MGM - news - people ) to partners and bondholders 
as it tries to complete its $8.5 billion CityCenter resort and casino, has seen 
his shares surge 230%. 

Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman made $1.4 billion in two months as shares in 
his publicly traded investment firm rose more than 100% after declining 70% in 
2008.

Oklahoma wildcatter Harold Hamm recouped $1.2 billion as renewed demand for oil 
lifted the stocks of the world's energy tycoons.

One former energy billionaire unable to enjoy the run-up: Chesapeake Energy ( 
CHK - news - people ) Chief Executive Aubrey McClendon, who was forced to sell 
$570 million worth of shares in the natural gas outfit in early October to meet 
margin calls. McClendon liquidated his stake at an average price of $18 a 
share. Today, Chesapeake Energy is trading at $22

_________________________________________________________________
cricket and news. Logon to MSN Video for the latest clips
http://www.exploremyway.com
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
""GLOBAL SPECULATORS"" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/globalspeculators?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to