Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Next step unclear for Allen’s big investment­s

Companies, foundation­s of billionair­e show no succession plan

- Sally Ho and Frank Bajak

SEATTLE – Before his death Monday, billionair­e Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen invested large sums in technology ventures, research projects and philanthro­py, some of it eclectic and highly speculativ­e. What happens to those commitment­s now?

Outside of bland assurances from his investment company, no one seems quite sure.

Allen died in Seattle from complicati­ons of nonHodgkin’s lymphoma, according to his company Vulcan Inc. He was 65. He never married and had no children, and details of his estate aren’t known.

Forbes recently estimated Allen’s net worth at $20.3 billion. He used much of the money he made from Microsoft – whose Windows operating system is found on most of the world’s desktop computers – for a “second act” as a sports-team owner, prolific investor and philanthro­pist after leaving the tech giant in 1983, when he resigned after being diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease.

Allen’s technology interests ran a wide gamut, from space travel and new energy sources to more convention­al ventures such as Uber, Spotify and smaller companies focused on financial technology and artificial intelligen­ce. Allen previously invested more than $20 million in SpaceShipO­ne, the first privately financed and manned rocket to reach the edge of space (though not Earth orbit). It accomplish­ed that feat in 2004.

One of Allen’s more esoteric ventures is Stratolaun­ch, which is building an enormous twin-fuselage jet aircraft designed to launch satellites from high altitudes. The vehicle has yet to make its first flight, although the company hosted Vice President Mike Pence at its Mojave, California, hangar during a 2017 visit.

But Stratolaun­ch isn’t commenting on its post-Allen future. A representa­tive for the company declined comment, saying “now is the time to focus on Paul’s life and allow his family and friends to grieve.”

Vulcan likewise declined comment beyond this reassuranc­e offered in a statement: “Paul thoughtful­ly addressed how the many institutio­ns he founded and supported would continue after he was no longer able to lead them.” Company representa­tives declined to discuss specifics given his recent passing but said there are no imminent changes planned for the number of institutio­ns and programs that Allen led and funded.

In the world of big-ticket philanthro­py, meanwhile, it’s rare for a foundation to have no obvious next-generation heirs, said Amir Pasic, dean of the Lilly Family School of Philanthro­py at Indiana University.

“Clearly, there wasn’t a preprogram­med plan to institute on day one after his passing,” Pasic said.

Allen was tied to many high-profile endeavors, including commercial real estate work redevelopi­ng Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborho­od for Amazon.com’s urban campus, ownership of the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks and the NBA’s Portland Trail Blazers, and even funding underwater expedition­s that made important shipwreck discoverie­s.

Around town, his legacy is etched on a portfolio of research institutes, museums, school buildings, endowments and programs. Allen over his lifetime had given more than $2 billion to efforts aimed at improving education, science, technology, conservati­on and

“Paul Allen had some very creative philanthro­py that’s somewhat nontraditi­onal. His personal stamp was more in his philanthro­py than is true for many wealthy individual­s.” Jacob Harold, president of Guidestar, an organizati­on that evaluates nonprofits.

communitie­s. He tackled climate change, advanced brain research and supported his native Seattle through funding for homelessne­ss services and cultural institutio­ns.

Allen was a strong backer of Bill Gates and Warren Buffett’s “Giving Pledge” to donate the majority of their wealth to charity, said Jon Lazarus, a friend of Allen’s for more than three decades who collaborat­ed with him on a number of technology projects.

Allen’s “tactical” investment­s in brain science and artificial intelligen­ce research, where he provided guidance as well as money, were particular­ly notable, Lazarus said. Allen specified that the results of the brain research, for example, should remain publicly available.

Allen’s sister, Jody Allen, co-founded their 30year-old Paul G. Allen Family Foundation. She’s listed as its director and president on the private nonprofit foundation’s latest IRS tax filing from the 2016 fiscal year, which indicates it held net assets worth $756 million, much of it from investment­s.

The next step is for the board to vote on a new chairman and any changes to the endowment or structure are likely to appear in the next month or so, which could be very significan­t in terms of direction and approach, said Jacob Harold, president of Guidestar, an organizati­on that evaluates nonprofits.

“Paul Allen had some very creative philanthro­py that’s somewhat nontraditi­onal,” Harold said. “His personal stamp was more in his philanthro­py than is true for many wealthy individual­s.”

It’s unclear if Allen intended his wealth to be vigorously spent down in order to accelerate the programs he believed in – like his Microsoft counterpar­t Bill Gates has pledged to do. The alternativ­e would be for his money to perpetuate through investment­s so his foundation could live on indefinite­ly, as steel tycoon Andrew Carnegie ordered more than a century ago.

 ?? FROSCHAUER/AP FILE JOHN ?? Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen invested large sums in technology ventures, research projects and philanthro­pies, but after his death Monday, no one seems quite sure what happens now.
FROSCHAUER/AP FILE JOHN Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen invested large sums in technology ventures, research projects and philanthro­pies, but after his death Monday, no one seems quite sure what happens now.

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