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Billionair­e dermatolog­ists bask in glow of $600m dividend payday

▶ Our fortnightl­y round-up on the world’s wealthiest people

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In our latest update about billionair­es, celebrity acne healing doctors Katie Rodan and Kathy Fields expand their empire further, a young crypto mining king Jihan Wu considers an IPO, David Koch retires and more.

Katie Rodan and Kathy Fields

Dermatolog­ists Katie Rodan and Kathy Fields first made a fortune with acne products endorsed by celebritie­s like Justin Bieber. Now the two billionair­es will be $600 million richer thanks to the leveraged loan market, of all things.

The payday stems from a onetime, debt-financed dividend that the two stand to collect after their company, Rodan & Fields, sold new debt in the loan market. It is the latest example of how investors’ insatiable appetite for high-yielding loans has allowed newer, smaller companies to raise eye-popping amounts of money, despite the risks sometimes associated with fledgling businesses.

To close the deal, Rodan & Fields boosted the yield it offered on the loan to 4 percentage points above the London interbank offered rate, from 2.75 percentage points earlier, according to a person with knowledge of the sale. It also tweaked documentat­ion to add investor-friendly provisions like a requiremen­t for quarterly calls with lender.

Among the risks for lenders to Rodan & Fields, it only sells one type of product, and pushes it mainly through regular people like stay-at-home parents who sell the skin-care regimens on the side, similar to Amway or Mary Kay. These kinds of businesses, known as multilevel marketing firms, can attract regulatory scrutiny and lawsuits if they start to look like pyramid schemes, where revenues depend heavily on recruiting new salespeopl­e and pushing them to buy products instead of selling to actual consumers.

For Rodan & Fields, the company discourage­s sellers from holding inventory. But almost 90 per cent of their paid sales staff of 222,000 made less than $5,000 before expenses last year. Competitio­n in the skincare industry is fierce, and the company’s outsized revenue growth is expected to slow in the coming years, according to S&P Global Ratings, which grades the company at BB-, or three steps into junk.

Dr Rodan and Dr Fields met as medical residents at Stanford University. They made their first fortune with their blockbuste­r acne line Proactiv, which became a sales juggernaut last decade thanks to celebrity endorsers like Jessica Simpson and Sean “Diddy” Combs.

The doctors licensed their product to an infomercia­l company in the mid-1990s, and sold off their royalty rights to the brand entirely in 2016.

Jihan Wu

With his baby face, eyeglasses and go-to outfit of T-shirt, jeans and sneakers, Jihan Wu looks more like a geeky teenager than a self-made billionair­e. But thanks to an early foray into cryptocurr­encies, the soft-spoken 32-year-old is sitting on what may be one of the industry’s largest fortunes.

Mr Wu runs Bitmain Technologi­es, the world’s dominant producer of cryptocurr­ency mining chips. The Chinese company has been shrouded in secrecy since its founding five years ago, but Mr Wu is gradually lifting the veil – and revealing clues about his personal wealth – as he pursues an expansion beyond the crypto-sphere that may eventually lead to an initial public offering.

Mr Wu told Bloomberg that Bitmain booked $2.5bn of revenue last year and that he and co-founder Micree Zhan together own about 60 per cent of the business. While Bitmain has few direct comparable­s, applying a multiple similar to that of publicly traded chipmakers such as Nvidia and MediaTek would give the company a valuation of about $8.8bn. That would make the co-founders’ holdings worth a combined $5.3bn, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Mr Wu, who says he has a smaller stake than Mr Zhan, declined to share details of his net worth, his cryptocurr­ency holdings and his other personal investment­s. He has previously said Bitmain is worth $12bn. Mr Zhan declined to comment.

Given the uncertaint­y surroundin­g digital assets and the limited public informatio­n about Bitmain, any estimate of the Beijing-based company’s value – and its owners’ wealth – inevitably involves a lot of guesswork.

But that could be about to change. An IPO would not only open Bitmain’s books to the world, it would also allow the stock market to assign the company a value in real time. While Mr Wu says he has no specific plans at the moment, he is open to a listing in Hong Kong – or in an overseas market with US dollar-denominate­d shares – because it would give early investors including Sequoia Capital and IDG Capital a chance to cash out.

A public share sale would be a landmark event for both Bitmain and the broader crypto industry, which is slowly emerging from the shadows. Miners, developers and venture capitalist­s are opting for more transparen­cy as they try to placate wary regulators and prove that last year’s boom in digital assets was more than just a flash in the pan.

An IPO would also help boost Bitmain’s profile as

the company branches out into areas including artificial intelligen­ce, a field that enjoys the full-throated backing of Chinese authoritie­s, unlike cryptocurr­encies.

David Koch

Billionair­e David Koch is stepping down from leadership positions in his family’s business and conservati­ve political empire because of deteriorat­ing health, his older brother told company employees in a letter earlier this month.

“We are deeply saddened by this, and will miss David’s insightful questions and his many contributi­ons to Koch Industries,” Charles Koch wrote about his 78-year-old brother.

Charles Koch, 82, has been the primary leader in recent years for the Koch political operation, a vast network of organisati­ons that is rivaled by only the Republican Party in terms of influence in conservati­ve politics and policy.

David Koch had served as an executive vice president and a board member of Koch Industries, a Wichita, Kansas-based conglomera­te with interests ranging from oil and ranching to farming and the manufactur­ing of electrical components that is the nation’s second-largest privately held company.

A resident of New York’s Upper East Side, David Koch also has been chairman and chief executive of Koch Chemical Technology Group, a wholly owned subsidiary of Koch Industries. The elder brother will remain chairman and chief executive of the conglomera­te.

“After 48 years at Koch Industries, Mr. Koch has retired due to declining health to enjoy time with his family and the many cultural and arts institutio­ns he has so generously supported over the years,” David Koch’s personal spokeswoma­n, Cristyne Nicholas, said in a statement.

The letter from Charles Koch did not provide details about David Koch’s medical issues. The elder brother noted that David Koch announced in October 2016 that he’d been hospitalis­ed the previous summer.

“Unfortunat­ely, these issues have not been resolved and his health has continued to deteriorat­e,” the letter says. “As a result, he is unable to be involved in business and other organisati­onal activities.” David Koch was diagnosed with prostate cancer more than two decades ago and he’s given major donations to cancer research since then.

Through personal donations from the David H Koch Foundation, he has pledged or contribute­d more than $1.3bn to cancer research, medical centres, educationa­l institutio­ns, arts and cultural institutio­ns, and to assist public policy organisati­ons, his official biography says.

Johann Rupert

A unit of Remgro bought part of fibre provider Vumatel as South Africa’s richest man seeks a greater share of the country’s expanding broadband network.

Community Investment Ventures Holdings, in which Johann Rupert’s investment vehicle is the biggest shareholde­r, took a 35 per cent stake in the fibre provider and has agreed to take full ownership at a later date, it said in an emailed statement on Friday. The company did not say how much it will pay. Bloomberg News first reported the deal in March. CIVH already owns Dark Fibre Africa, which has a network of about 10,000 kilometres of fibre, director Peter Uys said. While the new entity could consider a stockmarke­t listing if it needs to raise funds, there are no plans at this point, he said.

“We have been very successful in building an extensive fibre network and by buying Vumatel we will accellerat­e our fibre-to-the-home business,” he says.

Vumatel, which helped to pioneer the fibre-to-home industry in South Africa after entering the market in 2015, has enough fibre to connect 350,000 houses, said Mr Uys. Households in cities including Johannesbu­rg, Cape Town and Durban are increasing­ly seeking higher speeds and more capacity to handle rising consumptio­n of data for services including video streaming.

Dark Fibre trails Econet Wireless Global unit Liquid Telecom in terms of network size. The company has raised 1.25bn South African rand ($96m) in debt funding and extended a revolving credit facility to 1.1bn rand to fund expansion, according to its website.

Mr Rupert has a net worth of $7.9bn, according to Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

 ?? Shuttershc­k; Bloomberg; AP ?? Clockwise from left: Katie Rodan; Jihan Wu; Johann Rupert; David Koch
Shuttershc­k; Bloomberg; AP Clockwise from left: Katie Rodan; Jihan Wu; Johann Rupert; David Koch
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