** A Moment Of Sympathy For Those Much More Fortunate

Investors have had a hard time lately, as the stock markets 
wallow at a fraction of the value they were a year ago, and the 
Nasdaq regularly hits new lows. Fortunately, there's a little 
solace for those who blew their vacation fund on a now-worthless 
IPO or who passed out after checking their 401(k) balance. An 
examination of some high-profile losers by the Reuters news 
service and Thompson Financial analyst Kevin Schwenger may give 
them company, if not sympathy.

Take, for instance, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates. His 700 
million shares in Microsoft halved in value during 2000--he lost 
around $39 billion. That's enough to buy a 13-inch television for 
every man, woman, and child in the United States. Or to buy more 
than a thousand F-18E Super Hornet fighter jets.

"It used to be that if a hundred-dollar bill dropped on the 
ground, Bill Gates made so much money that it would not be 
financially wise for him to take the time to pick it up," says 
Wit Soundview analyst Arnie Berman. "That's now changed to where 
he should pick up hundreds, but not fifties."

Microsoft CEO Steven Ballmer has been a little more fortunate, 
losing only $12 billion. You could have bought 48 million copies 
of Windows 2000 with that, Steve. But it wasn't just Microsoft 
execs who took it in the wallet. Oracle CEO Larry Ellison could 
own 1 million brand-new VW Beetles with the $16 billion he lost. 
Theodore Waitt, CEO of Gateway, would have to work 900 million 
hours at minimum wage to earn back his $4.7 billion loss. And 
Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos saw his 117 million shares in the 
online retail giant drop in value more than 84%, to a trifling 
$1.2 billion, killing his ability to buy everyone in Mexico a 
Razor scooter.

But temper your schadenfreude. Berman reminds us that 
sinking stock values mean more than just reduced personal wealth. 
He points out that when a stock becomes less valued, it can make 
it harder for a company to make acquisitions and attract strong 
employees through stock offers. - David M. Ewalt
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