Vancouver Sun

Alphabet’s new boss means US$2B for departing founders

- TOM METCALF

Larry Page and Sergey Brin just got a US$2.3 billion retirement gift from investors.

The Google co-founders, who announced Tuesday they were stepping down from day-to-day management of parent Alphabet Inc., added more than US$1 billion each to their net worth today as the firm’s shares rose 1.9 per cent in New York. They each own about six per cent of the internet giant and still control Alphabet through special voting shares.

The gains come as investors welcome Sundar Pichai’s elevation to chief executive officer of Alphabet, replacing Page. It means the three most valuable U.S. tech firms no longer have a founder at the helm.

Like Apple Inc.’s Tim Cook and Microsoft Corp.’s Satya Nadella, Pichai is a longtime lieutenant who steadily worked his way up the corporate ladder over the past 15 years. Brin is stepping down as president, leaving Pichai as undisputed leader.

The shift reflects Google’s accession into corporate middle age. Started in a California garage by Brin and Page in 1998, the firm had revenue of US$137 billion in 2018 and today boasts a market value of US$893 billion. That’s behind only Apple and Microsoft on the S&P 500 Index.

Other Silicon Valley giants are also founder free. Larry Ellison’s Oracle Corp. is headed by Safra Catz, though Ellison is still involved as the company’s chairman. Some younger companies — such as Uber Technologi­es Inc. and We Co. — have turned to outsiders amid turmoil.

There are some notable exceptions. Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are still at the helm of Amazon.com Inc. and Facebook Inc. respective­ly, which are the fourthand fifth-largest U.S. companies by market value.

Such a transition has proved to be a boon for Apple and Microsoft. The iPhone maker’s shares have risen by more than 400 per cent since Cook took the helm in August 2011 and Microsoft has quadrupled on Nadella’s watch.

Since 2015, Pichai has served as CEO of Google, by far the company’s biggest division. During his time in that job, Alphabet’s shares doubled in price even as the company wrestled with increased scrutiny from regulators and lawmakers.

Their success has placed the trio among America’s richest executives. Each are worth hundreds of millions of dollars thanks to stock awards they’ve received.

Pichai, 47, is in an unusual position for a top executive. Unlike Cook and Nadella, who stand fourth and sixth on Bloomberg’s executive pay ranking, almost all of Pichai’s stock awards have vested, filings show.

By contrast, Cook, 59, still has as many as 1.8 million restricted stock units worth about US$500 million set to vest through August 2021, according to a recent filing. Nadella, 52, could earn as many as 1.8 million Microsoft shares through a long-term performanc­e-based stock award that is currently worth about US$275 million.

 ?? REUTERS/FILE ?? Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who founded Google in 1998 in a garage, are seen in 2008 with a G1 phone running Google’s Android software. They have both stepped back from daily operations of the company.
REUTERS/FILE Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who founded Google in 1998 in a garage, are seen in 2008 with a G1 phone running Google’s Android software. They have both stepped back from daily operations of the company.

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