The National - News

Ends and beginnings for some of the world’s billionair­es

▶ From a missing chain store tycoon to demise of a banking heir and the latest from Gates and Bezos, here’s what the wealthiest have been up to

- The National

KARL-ERIVAN HAUB

The younger brother of German billionair­e Karl-Erivan Haub, presumed dead after going missing on a ski trip, will take over the sole leadership of the family’s Tengelmann retail group, the company said this week.

Christian Haub and his brother, who belong to one of Germany’s wealthiest families, had been co-chief executives since 2000.

The 150-year-old group owns a number of chains, including the Kik low-cost clothing stores and OBI home improvemen­t outlets.

Karl-Erivan Haub vanished during a ski outing in the Swiss Alps on April 7, and family said last week they had given up hope of finding the 58-year-old alive.

“The loss of our brother is a tragedy for our family. But it does not endanger the continued existence of our family business,” Christian Haub, 53, said. “Our common goal was always to pass on a strong company to the next generation. I plan to stick to that goal and will do my utmost to achieve it.”

Haub’s disappeara­nce came a month after the death of his father, Erivan Karl Matthias Haub, 85, who ran the company from 1969 to 2000.

The Tengelmann Group employs around 80,000 people worldwide. It said its revenues for the financial year of 2016 reached €9 billion (Dh41bn).

Its success has lifted the family into 265th place on Forbes magazine’s global rich list, and 20th place in Germany.

MATTHEW MELLON

The billionair­e banking heir died this week at the age of 54. His cousin Peter Stephaich confirmed Mellon’s death but declined to provide any details. He had struggled with drug addiction, and reports said he died at a rehabilita­tion centre in Cancun, Mexico.

Mellon came from the Mellon and Drexel families of Bank of New York Mellon and Drexel Burnham Lambert.

According to Mellon’s LinkedIn account and documents of the Securities & Exchange Commission, he attended the Wharton School and later worked in fashion, telecommun­ications and finance, most recently as an adviser for the digital currency company Ripple Labs.

Mellon is survived by his first wife, fashion designer Tamara, his second wife, fashion designer Nicole Hanley, and three children.

Testifying at a trial where Mellon was acquitted of hiring a detective to snoop into Tamara Mellon’s finances, the co-founder of Jimmy Choo shoes said she and her husband had met at a meeting of Narcotics Anonymous.

The two married in 1999 at Blenheim Palace, one of England’s stately homes. They divorced several years later.

JEFF BEZOS

The Amazon.com chief executive said the e-commerce giant has exceeded 100 million paid Prime subscriber­s and will continue to invest to meet “ever-rising” customer expectatio­ns.

Mr Bezos noted the milestone in his annual shareholde­r letter, published on Wednesday. The letter is the founder’s opportunit­y to underline his long-term strategy for investors, seeking to bolster their confidence as he continues to plough Amazon’s money into internatio­nal expansion, building a bricks-and-mortar presence, and inventing products like Echo speakers and the Alexa voice-activated digital assistant.

Prime subscriber­s pay monthly or annual fees in exchange for quick delivery of online orders, music and video streaming and free online photo storage. The membership­s encourage consumers to shop more with Amazon to get their money’s worth, similar to warehouse clubs like Costco Wholesale. Amazon took its membership­s

a step further with additional digital perks, and sells addons like a more robust music catalogue for an additional monthly fee.

Amazon has kept its Prime subscriber number a secret, forcing analysts to estimate the figure based on shopper surveys. Mr Bezos’s comments show that Seattle-based company is selling Prime membership­s overseas, demonstrat­ing it can replicate its US success abroad, said

R J Hottovy, an analyst at Morningsta­r. Amazon is losing money with its internatio­nal expansion, but investors will be patient if the company is gaining Prime subscriber­s, he said.

“People see value in Prime membership­s in terms of shipping speed and content. It’s important to investors because membership retention rates are north of 90 per cent.”

Mr Bezos said that in 2017 Amazon shipped more than five billion items with Prime worldwide and more members joined Prime than in any previous year. He said that 2017 was best year for hardware sales and that the company will continue to invest to expand its customer base, brand and infrastruc­ture.

BILL GATES

When it comes to making an impact on the future of medicine, billionair­e philanthro­pist Bill Gates is looking to vaccine technology and research on the bacteria that inhabit your gut.

Vaccines that use a mirror image of DNA to halt the growth of bacteria and viruses appear capable of speeding developmen­t of the prevention tools dramatical­ly, Mr Gates said. The vaccines, based on a genetic messenger called mRNA, are under developmen­t by companies including Moderna Therapeuti­cs and CureVac GmbH.

“Even if a new pandemic broke out of something you’d never seen before, you might be able to get a new vaccine developed in months,” as opposed to years, he said at a meeting on malaria in London. Rapid advances are also taking place in the study of the microbiome

– the bacteria and other microorgan­isms that live in the human digestive tract – helping researcher­s explore the cause of malnutriti­on, said Mr Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft. More than 100 start-ups are looking at the field, “leading to lots of insights for many different diseases”, he said.

Investors ranging from venture capitalist­s Seventure Partners and Flagship Pioneering to pharmaceut­ical companies Bristol-Myers Squibb and Johnson & Johnson have pledged at least $125 million to startups exploring the use of the microbiome to fight cancer in recent years.

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is leading an effort to battle malaria, unveiling an additional $1bn investment on Wednesday. The foundation provided $4.6bn in 2016 grant support and focuses on areas such as HIV, malaria and tuberculos­is, according to its website.

STEVE COHEN

The hedge fund manager is taking his passion for tech start-ups to Asia, along with his chequebook.

Point72 Ventures, which invests mostly the billionair­e’s money in earlystage companies, is starting to evaluate prospects on the continent after putting millions of dollars into startups in the Americas and Europe.

Asia presents a chance to “swing big” because it is unburdened by technologi­cal infrastruc­ture, particular­ly in financial services, according to Matthew Granade, who oversees investment­s at the venture-capital arm of Mr Cohen’s Point72 Asset Management.

“Here, when suddenly you have a huge population moving into the middle class that was never served before and no technologi­es that were available to support them, you could just build from scratch and leapfrog,” said Pete Casella, who leads the venture capital firm’s investment­s in financial services technologi­es.

Mr Granade manages a 10-strong team in the US, where Point72 Ventures has done most of its deals so far, along with a few in Europe and Latin America.

Acorns Grow, which offers an investing and savings app for people with limited disposable income, is one of the more than two dozen investment­s that Point72 Ventures has made over the past two years. Others include Hanetf, a London-based firm that helps launch exchangetr­aded funds, and Extend Enterprise­s, a New York startup that allows business cardholder­s to securely share their credit cards with employees.

While Mr Granade said deal sizes range from $250,000 to $10m, it is not just about the money for Mr Cohen, who is worth $12.1bn according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Mr Cohen has a “soft spot” for those entreprene­urs with a passion to excel and shares almost a kinship with them, Mr Granade said.

“These are not huge cheques we are writing,” Mr Granade said. “But Steve is involved in everyone of them. He meets with almost every company we invest in.”

Point72 Ventures is not open to investors apart from Cohen and eligible employees and a separate entity from Point72 Asset Management.

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 ?? AP; Getty; Reuters; AFP; Bloomberg ?? The deaths of Karl Erivan Haub, top, and Matthew Mellon, left, were announced. Bill Gates continues work in medicine, while Jeff Bezos expands Amazon and Steve Cohen, bottom, looks east
AP; Getty; Reuters; AFP; Bloomberg The deaths of Karl Erivan Haub, top, and Matthew Mellon, left, were announced. Bill Gates continues work in medicine, while Jeff Bezos expands Amazon and Steve Cohen, bottom, looks east
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