San Antonio Express-News

Musk tops Bezos as world’s richest

Now worth $194.8B, his dramatic ascent hastened in last year

- By Devon Pendleton

Elon Musk, world’s richest person.

A statement that seemed outlandish one year ago became plausible, then almost inevitable as Tesla Inc.’s share price climbed higher and higher in 2020.

On Thursday it finally happened. The electric-automaker’s shares surged 7.9 percent, boosting Musk past Amazon.com Inc. founder Jeff Bezos on the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, a ranking of the world’s 500 wealthiest people. Musk is worth $194.8 billion, or $9.5 billion more than Bezos, whose Blue Origin is a rival to Musk’s Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Ltd., or Spacex, in the private space race.

Tesla’s ascent thrusts its brash founder into a role occupied by only a handful of other people in recent decades and underscore­s the dramatic stock moves that have upended the global wealth rankings of late.

No one has seen a more dramatic shift than Musk. Over the past year the South Africa-born engineer has added more than $165 bil

lion to his fortune in what’s probably the fastest bout of wealth creation in history. Fueling his rise was an unpreceden­ted rally in Tesla’s share price, which surged 743 percent last year on the back of consistent profits, inclusion in the S&P 500 Index and enthusiasm from Wall Street and retail investors alike. The shares have gained more than 23,900percent since its 2010 initial public offering, including a 5-for-1 stock split last year.

The jump in Tesla’s stock price further inflates a valuation lightyears apart from other automakers on numerous metrics. Tesla produced just over half-a-million cars last year, a fraction of the output of Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Co.

Its market value of $773.5 billion is bigger than that of Facebook Inc. Larry Ellison’s 2 percent stake in Tesla alone would be enough to place the Oracle Corp. founder among the world’s 175 richest people (including his Oracle shares he’s ranked 10th).

Musk’s success hasn’t been limited to Earth. In May he oversaw the successful launch of a pair of NASA astronauts into space with his other company, the aerospace outfit Spacex. They returned safely two months later. It was a landmark achievemen­t for the company that aimed to show rockets could be deployed and reused, demonstrat­ing the viability of a newera of space travel with the ultimate goal of flying humans to Mars.

Musk made his fortune early on with Paypal, which he co-founded and whose sale to ebay led him to pocket $165 million. He invested in Tesla in 2004, a year after its founding, and maintains around a 20 percent stake in the company, according to Forbes. He was named the company’s chairman in 2004, a title he lost in the wake of his “funding secured” fiasco in 2018. He became CEO in 2008, a title he retains to this day.

In 2018 he agreed to pay a $20 million fine to the Securities and Exchange Commission and step down as chairman of Tesla after tweeting a notion to take the company private at $420 a share, with “funding secured” — something he never did.

Musk founded Spacex two decades ago, setting his sights on Mars and aiming to disrupt an industry deeply entrenched in the government with a private venture focused on human spacefligh­t.

On several occasions Musk has bemoaned being “cash poor.” The vast majority of his net worth is tied up in equity of his companies, including Tesla — which pays no dividends — and closely held Spacex and the Boring Company, a tunneling venture. Yet he’s professed to have little interest in the material trappings of wealth.

He tweeted last year he intended to sell “almost all” his physical possession­s and he told German publisher Axel Springer in a December interview that the main purpose of his wealth is to accelerate humanity’s evolution into a spacefarin­g civilizati­on.

After reports of his new status were published Thursday, Musk tweeted “How strange,” then added “Well, back to work.”

Still, he’s gotten on board with at least one trend among the super-rich. He confirmed last month he’d personally relocated from California to Texas, a state that has gained new popularity among the wealthy for levying zero income tax .

Even with Tesla’s remarkable rise, Bezos would still hold a wide lead over Musk had it not been for his divorce, which saw him transfer a quarter of the family Amazon stake to his ex-wife, Mackenzie Scott, and his philanthro­py. He donated shares worth about $680 million in November.

 ??  ?? Tesla CEO Elon Musk is now worth $9.5 billion more than Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk is now worth $9.5 billion more than Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

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