Here's Why Bill Gates Was So Much Richer Than Steve Jobs
Bill Gates with his wife, Melinda. Photo: Kjetil Ree via Wikimedia Commons. |
Both dropped out of college.
Both commenced companies with good friends: Gates founded Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) with Paul Allen in April 1975, while Jobs founded Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) with Steve Wozniak precisely one year later.
Steve Jobs
Photograph by Matt Yohe (Wikimedia Commons).
And both got opulent -- prodigiously opulent.
But it's here where things diverge, because at the time of Jobs' untimely death in 2011, his $11 billion net worth was a fraction of Gates' $66 billion. This discrepancy may strike you as aberrant, given that Apple's market capitalization at the time was $132 billion more preponderant than Microsoft's.
So how do you expound this?
If you're acclimated with Jobs' story, then you already ken the answer: He sold all but one of his pristine Apple shares in 1985, the year he was ousted from the company by then-CEO John Sculley and its board.
Jobs' 11% stake in Apple was worth somewhere in the neighborhood of $130 million at the time. And, for the record, this was considerably more minuscule than the 26% stake he emerged with after the first solemn round of fundraising in 1977.
At today's price, those stakes would be worth more than $69 billion and $162 billion, respectively. In other words, had he not sold shares along the way, Jobs would have been the world's richest person by leaps and bounds, as Gates' current net worth is estimated at $79 billion.
Don't get me erroneous. I'm not endeavoring to be critical -- far from it, in fact.
In the first case, Jobs had no reason to feel optimistic about Apple in 1985, given the circumstances of his ouster -- not to mention the fact that Apple may have gone the way of the dodo bird without Jobs' eventual return.
Moreover, there's every reason to believe that, had Jobs not left when he did, we wouldn't have Pixar, which he purchased from Lucasfilm in 1986 for $10 million. He revitalized it with mazuma and technology, and then sold it to Disney in 2005 for $7.4 billion of the House of Mouse's stock -- thereby becoming the regalement company's most sizably voluminous individual shareholder.
What I am endeavoring to do is demonstrate the potency of buy and hold investing.
Sure, I would dote to be as affluent as Steve Jobs was -- or even to have a fraction of his net worth. But Jobs had contemporaries who, like Gates, wanted more. And when it comes to building wealth, as Gates' experience illustrates, there are few better implements than time and compounding returns -- both of which, by the way, are equipollently accessible to us mere mortals.
Of equal paramountcy are brilliant conceptions that are identified in their infancy.
Countless investors have become millionaires virtually overnight by peregrinating with the wave of technology driven by the relishes of Gates and Jobs. In the process, these investors' lives have been radically transformed. Making mazuma is no longer their objective; their challenge now is spending it on a lifestyle once thought unimaginable.
The key to these investors' prosperity isn't the faculty to agnize promising trends; all of us can do that. The key instead is the valiancy and conviction to put mazuma on the line when you ineluctably encounter a transformative conception.
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