Toronto Star

Apple CEO Cook is now a billionair­e

Very few have profited as much off the world’s most valuable company

- ANDERS MELIN AND TOM METCALF

Nine years after Steve Jobs stepped down and thrust Tim Cook to the top of Apple Inc., the company is more valuable than ever — and so is Cook.

Apple’s share price rose almost five per cent last week, leaving the company Jobs cofounded 44 years ago in his parents’ California home on the cusp of stock-market milestone: a market value of nearly $2 trillion (U.S.).

It was valued at about $350 billion when Jobs died. Cook, meantime, has joined one of the most elite clubs for CEOs who didn’t actually found the companies they run: his net worth has eclipsed $1 billion, according to calculatio­ns by the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Cook’s net worth estimate is based on an analysis of regulatory filings and applying the market performanc­e of a typical wealthy investor to his proceeds from share sales. Cook, 59, said in 2015 that he plans to give most of his fortune away and has already gifted million of dollars worth of Apple shares. His wealth could be lower if he’s made other undisclose­d charitable gifts.

Josh Rosenstock, a spokespers­on for Apple, declined to comment.

“This tech cycle has been way bigger and longer than I thought,” said Hussein Kanji, a partner at venture capital firm Hoxton Ventures who expressed caution about Apple’s long-term outlook after Jobs left the company. “Out of all these stocks, Apple has become the greatest cash generation machine in history.”

FAANG stocks Apple’s market value and Cook’s riches reflect the rise of the FAANG stocks, a phrase that didn’t even exist in the Jobs era. It also comes as Cook and his fellow Big Tech CEOs — Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com Inc., Sundar Pichai of Alphabet Inc. and Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook Inc. — face antitrust investigat­ions into what their critics characteri­ze as monopolist­ic powers.

While Bezos and Zuckerberg have huge stakes in the companies they founded, Cook’s path to the 10-figure-club was more incrementa­l. The vast majority of his estimated wealth comes from equity awards he’s received since joining Apple in 1998, where he has drawn plaudits for mastering the company’s complex supply chain.

He got a massive award of restricted shares on his first day as CEO. The equity has paid out in annual increments, with part contingent on Apple’s stock outperform­ing at least two-thirds of firms in the S&P 500. Barring a sudden drop in Apple’s stock price, Cook is poised to receive his ninth payout from the award, consisting of 560,000 shares, later this month.

Around half of those will likely be withheld for taxes, but the remainder should boost Cook’s fortune by another $100 million. He currently owns 847,969 shares directly, or about 0.02 per cent of Apple shares, worth around $375 million. Proceeds from previous share sales, dividends and other compensati­on add another $650 million to his net worth, according to calculatio­ns by Bloomberg. Apple stock rose 1.45 per cent to $450.91 at market’s close on Monday.

Mammoth positions Cook’s stake is small compared with the mammoth positions founders like Bezos, Zuckerberg and Tesla Inc.’s Elon Musk control at their respective companies. Apple shares are distribute­d widely among different investors and executives, so the world’s most valuable company has minted very few billionair­es among its employees. When Jobs stepped down in August 2011 and died soon after, Cook had already filled in as interim CEO on several occasions. But investors and analysts were concerned that Apple wouldn’t be able to innovate as much as it did in the past.

While Apple over the past decade hasn’t revealed a new product as groundbrea­king as the iPhone, the company still has thrived.

Cook has overseen the developmen­t of devices like the iPhone X and Apple Watch, new services like Apple Music, and research on new frontiers like self-driving cars and augmented-reality glasses.

Even the pandemic, which has hammered many other parts of the economy, has been a boon to Apple and other big tech companies as people have gotten even more reliant on their products and services.

Their recent success stands in contrast to the economic upheaval caused by the coronaviru­s: a growing string of bankruptci­es, tens of millions unemployed and massive public deficits.

When Apple reported results recently, Cook acknowledg­ed the hardship facing legions of families and businesses.

“We do not have a zero-sum approach to prosperity,” he said on a conference call. “Especially in times like this, we are focused on growing the pie, making sure our success isn’t just our success.”

 ?? APPLE INC. VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Tim Cook, 59, said he plans to give most of his fortune away and has already gifted millions of dollars worth of Apple shares. His wealth could be lower if he’s made other undisclose­d gifts.
APPLE INC. VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Tim Cook, 59, said he plans to give most of his fortune away and has already gifted millions of dollars worth of Apple shares. His wealth could be lower if he’s made other undisclose­d gifts.

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