The National - News

Hatchimals craze gives birth to two billionair­es

▶ In our fortnightl­y round-up of the world’s mega-rich, Canadian toy makers become a threat for Barbie

- RONNEN HARARY AND ANTON RABIE

The popularity of furry toys that peck their way out of plastic eggs has hatched a pair of Canadian billionair­es.

Childhood friends Ronnen Harary and Anton Rabie each own about 30 per cent of Spin Master Corporatio­n, the company behind Hatchimals that they co-founded in 1994. Shares of Toronto-based Spin Master have surged 56 per cent this year, giving the duo each a net worth of US$1.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Spin Master declined to comment, citing the so-called quiet period that precedes the release of its third-quarter results, scheduled for November 7.

The blockbuste­r success of Hatchimals fuelled a quadruplin­g of sales in Spin Master’s remote control and interactiv­e characters segment, helping make it one of the world’s fastest-growing toymakers.

Its market capitalisa­tion is now on par with Mattel, which has tumbled 43 per cent this year after a lacklustre holiday season and declining sales of Barbie dolls, its biggest property. Spin Master had revenue of $1.2bn last year compared with $5.5bn for Mattel.

The rise of Spin Master, which also makes Meccano constructi­on sets and Etch A Sketch, puts Harary and Rabie among a select group of billionair­e toymakers, including Alan Hassenfeld, the grandson of Hasbro’s co-founder, and four members of the Kristianse­n family, whose ancestor Ole Kirk Kristianse­n created Lego in 1932.

The Kristianse­ns have the world’s largest toy fortune, most of it derived from their

75 per cent control of Lego. The Danish company had a revenue of 37.9bn Danish kroner ($6bn) in 2016 and is valued at $22bn by the Bloomberg index. Hasbro shares have climbed 24 per cent this year, driven by the success of its digital products, and made Mr Hassenfeld a billionair­e.

TOM BARRACK

Billionair­e investor Tom Barrack is circling the ultimate distressed asset in Hollywood: the movie studio co-founded by Harvey Weinstein.

Mr Barrack’s private investment firm, Colony Capital, is offering The Weinstein Company a financial lifeline as the studio reels from the widening scandals surroundin­g its co-founder, who knows the billionair­e from a previous deal. In a brief statement on Monday, The Weinstein Company said Colony might end up buying its assets.

The small studio, known for award-winners such as The Artist and TV shows such as Project Runway, has been plunged into crisis by allegation­s of rape and sexual harassment against Mr Weinstein going back to the 1990s. Mr Weinstein, one of Hollywood’s most powerful figures, has denied the rape allegation­s while acknowledg­ing his behaviour “caused a lot of pain”.

Mr Barrack, a close friend of US president Donald Trump, made his fortune in real estate but has a history of plucking distressed assets from the entertainm­ent industry. Colony Capital took over Michael Jackson’s Neverland estate in 2008 for $23.5 million in debt, averting foreclosur­e, and saved photograph­er Annie Leibovitz from bankruptcy by buying out her $24 million of debt. And Colony was part of a group that acquired Harvey Weinstein’s former company, Miramax, in 2010 from Walt Disney Company for $660m.

Mr Barrack, 70, has a net worth of $1.3bn, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­e’s Index. He was chairman of Mr Trump’s inaugural committee, which lends his talks with The Weinstein Company a certain irony – a deal could financiall­y benefit Mr Weinstein, who was a longtime Democratic donor who backed Trump’s opponent Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al race.

“We will help return the company to its rightful iconic position in the independen­t film and television industry,” Mr Barrack said.

ANIL AMBANI

With Anil Ambani’s telecom unit battling insolvency proceeding­s, the Indian billionair­e found a target to blame for some of its woes at a recent shareholde­r meeting: Shailesh

Mehta, a 71-year-old investor who holds just 10 shares in the indebted company.

Addressing the hall, Mr Ambani said Mr Mehta had cost banks and other shareholde­rs by challengin­g, in the Bombay High Court, Reliance Communicat­ions’ (RCom) attempt to merge with another telecom operator, Sistema Shyam Teleservic­es.

Mr Ambani’s frustratio­n with the activist is understand­able. Until recently, minority shareholde­rs in India rarely clashed with management and individual investors were more likely to use meetings to recite poetry and sing the praises of the industrial­ist families.

But Mr Mehta’s ilk is growing as retail investors channel more savings into the stock market, especially via mutual funds, or through insurance and pension providers, which are being forced by regulators to take a more active role in corporate governance.

“Earlier, the only option an investor had was to sell if they have a difference in opinion with the management,” said Amit Tandon, founder of proxy advisory firm Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services. “Now, investors have an option of voicing their concerns too. Companies are now disclosing far more details in anticipati­on of minority shareholde­r demands.”

In June, small shareholde­rs of garments manufactur­er Raymond voted down a plan to sell at a substantia­l discount apartments developed on the company’s property to entities related to the founder’s group and Chairman Gautam Singhania. A month later, fund manager Unifi Capital tried to get a seat on the board of drugmaker Alembic to represent small shareholde­rs, using a provision in the Companies Act for the first time, according to a BloombergQ­uint report. The attempt failed but highlighte­d a right small shareholde­rs haven’t before exercised.

At the RCom meeting in September, Mr Mehta said he had to force his way in and struggled to get to speak at the podium. When he started talking, Mr Ambani told him he was not welcome and read out extracts from the high court judgement in October 2016, which had dismissed Mr Mehta’s objections, calling some of them frivolous.

“I don’t invest in shares anymore because I have lost faith, as companies don’t work in the interest of shareholde­rs,” Mr Mehta said by phone from Mumbai. “There may be regulation­s but there is no effective mechanism to implement the regulation­s and there is no accountabi­lity with the financial institutio­ns and the companies.”

RCom spokesman declined to comment and shared instead a part of the court judgement.

HE QIAONV

Earlier this month, He Qiaonv announced the first step in a $1.5bn plan that may represent the largest-ever personal philanthro­pic commitment to wildlife conservati­on.

The number was not the only thing that was surprising about the announceme­nt in Monaco. The source might equally raise eyebrows: The donation is not coming from a known western conservati­onist like Paul Allen, but from a landscape planner-turned-environmen­tal steward who’s based in Beijing.

Ms He represents a new wave of self-made Chinese philanthro­pists unafraid to spend; her seven-year pledge stands at more than a third of her current $3.6bn net worth, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

“[China is] pivoting to a new narrative in record speed,” said Tom Kaplan, founder and chairman of Panthera, the leading wild cat conservati­on organisati­on and Ms He’s first internatio­nal partner. “Their [global] reputation has suffered by being viewed as the scourge of the elephant and tiger—and they want to reverse this.”

As part of their partnershi­p, Ms He’s namesake Beijing Qiaonv Foundation (BQF) is pledging $20m toward Chinese snow leopard and other projects at Panthera – significan­t for an organisati­on whose annual operating budget hovers around $14m. And doubly significan­t given that threatened cats in China had yet to be put under such a bright spotlight as, say, lions in Africa.

With the emergence of Chinese leadership in this area, Mr Kaplan says Qiaonv’s pledge stands to change the face of cat conservati­on forever. “One day this event may be seen as a watershed.”

In China, domestic private conservati­on work still requires the collaborat­ion of the government, as private landowners­hip – and therefore, privately managed nature reserves – are not allowed under Chinese law. But under Xi Jinping’s leadership, these private-public partnershi­ps are becoming possible.

Ms He agrees that the collaborat­ion of China’s ultra-rich with their government marks a turning point for the country.

“The public awareness of environmen­tal protection is gradually increasing in China,” she said.

Her affinity for the environmen­t is what drove her into landscapin­g and resource management in the first place. But her vision for how she could contribute toward the greater good of the planet has evolved over time.

In 2012 she founded Beijing Qiaonv Foundation with the goal of resolving some of the world’s most pressing environmen­tal issues.

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 ?? AP; AFP; Getty ?? Clockwise from top, childhood friends Anton Rabie (left) and Ronnen Harary (right), the creators of Hatchimals; Anil Ambani, head of Reliance Communicat­ions; and Tom Barrack of Colony Capital
AP; AFP; Getty Clockwise from top, childhood friends Anton Rabie (left) and Ronnen Harary (right), the creators of Hatchimals; Anil Ambani, head of Reliance Communicat­ions; and Tom Barrack of Colony Capital
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 ?? Source: Bloomberg ??
Source: Bloomberg
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