The National - News

VACCINE NEWS BOOSTS MODERNA INVESTORS

▶ In our fortnightl­y roundup, an MIT professor’s net worth grows and the Reuben brothers invest in Madrid real estate

- Bob Langer

WORLD OF BILLIONAIR­ES … THE UPS AND DOWNS OF THE SUPER-RICH

An early investor of Moderna has come close to owning a stake worth at least $1 billion (Dh3.67bn) after the biotech company reported encouragin­g early trial results for an experiment­al Covid-19 vaccine.

The value of board member Bob Langer’s 3.2 per cent holding, including stock options, rose to $934.3 million on May 18, as the shares surged 20 per cent to a record $80 each.

Mr Langer, 71, a professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, is set to be at least the third person with Moderna holdings topping $1bn, joining chief executive Stephane Bancel and Harvard University professor Timothy Springer.

Moderna, whose shares have more than quadrupled this year, released interim data from a small phase one trial showing positive early signs that the vaccine can create an immune system response to the virus in humans.

Mr Langer has licensed or sub-licensed patents to more than 400 biotech, pharmaceut­ical, chemical and medical companies, according to his biography at MIT’s Langer Lab.

Mr Bancel and Mr Springer are worth $1.8bn and $1bn, respective­ly, according to Forbes.

Mr Springer was a founding investor of Moderna in 2010, when he put about $5m into the company.

Mr Bancel, who became Moderna’s chief executive in 2011, owns a roughly 9 per cent stake in the company. Before joining Moderna, he was the chief executive of French diagnostic­s company BioMerieux, founded by fellow French billionair­e Alain Merieux.

Mr Bancel and other Moderna executives, including outgoing chief financial officer Lorence Kim and president Stephen Hoge, have been selling shares, some through prearrange­d trading plans.

Moderna’s share price has since declined as more companies join the race for a vaccine. It closed at $57.71 on Tuesday.

David and Simon Reuben

Billionair­e real estate investors David and Simon Reuben have made a push into Madrid’s residentia­l market, buying a 250-hectare parcel of land in an upmarket district one hour from Spain’s capital.

About a third of the land, which is on the border with the San Juan reservoir, will be used to build 650 homes and a hotel. Located about 74 kilometres west of Madrid, the area is a popular venue for second residences for the capital’s celebritie­s including Real Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane.

The coronaviru­s crisis has done little to deter the Reuben siblings, who are estimated to have a combined net worth of $11.7bn, from expanding their real estate empire. The British pair’s private equity company, Reuben Brothers, is buying a $170m retail condo in Manhattan. They are also involved in a consortium with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and English businesswo­man Amanda Staveley that wants to buy Newcastle United, one of England’s Premier League football clubs.

In Spain, the brothers have previously focused on the Balearic Islands, acquiring the Hotel Pacha in Ibiza and 364 hectares of land in Mallorca.

“We are confident that the Canto Redondo developmen­t will be another success to complement our portfolio while we continue to explore further opportunit­ies in the Spanish market,” a Reuben Brothers representa­tive said. They gave no informatio­n on the purchase price.

Bernard Arnault

Bernard Arnault is the latest billionair­e to invest in French media company Lagardere, backing the indebted heir of founder Jean-Luc Lagardere and taking a stake in the company, which also has interests in retail and publishing.

The mogul announced on Monday that he agreed to acquire the equivalent of a quarter of Lagardere Capital and Management, the holding of Arnaud Lagardere overseeing his stake within the eponymous group. Les Echos reported the acquisitio­n was worth less than €100m (Dh402m). The stock rose as much as 15 per cent after the sale.

Mr Arnault, head of luxury company LVMH, is the third French billionair­e to take a stake in Lagardere after activist fund Amber Capital UK demanded major changes at the conglomera­te. Vincent Bollore and Marc Ladreit de Lacharrier­e recently injected funds into the embattled company.

Lagardere was a sprawling group spanning aerospace, cars and media until its controllin­g shareholde­r JeanLuc Lagardere died in 2003. Arnaud, his son, jettisoned much of the business to shift away from manufactur­ing. He is now focused on two units: book publishing houses, such as Hachette and Grasset, and travel retail, with stores in airports and train stations.

Lagardere controls some of France’s major news outlets including the Journal du Dimanche, radio station Europe1 and the magazine Paris Match.

This latest investment will allow Mr Arnault to increase his outreach. The billionair­e owns Radio Classique and two national newspapers, Le Parisien and Les Echos.

The Arnault acquisitio­n was completed at the same time as Mr Bollore’s media company, Vivendi, increased its stake to more than 16 per cent from 11 per cent. Last month, Vivendi became the third-biggest shareholde­r after Amber and the Qatar Investment Authority.

Rizwan Sajan

Rizwan Sajan, the founder and chairman of the Danube Group in the UAE, said a fraudster created a fake Facebook account in his name and sent messages to friends seeking donations.

In a Facebook post on May 23, the prominent Indian businessma­n warned friends: “Please note that someone has again created a fake account under my name and [is] sending random messages to many of my friends. If you get a friend request or any such random message asking for contributi­ons or donations, please DO NOT FRIEND THEM or revert to any messages.”

One of Mr Sajan’s friends said he was contacted through the cloned account and asked to donate to an online crowdfundi­ng platform based out of India, claiming to support a child suffering from a blood disorder.

Mr Sajan said he alerted the e-crime department of Dubai Police and lodged a complaint with Facebook. The account has since been removed.

Mr Sajan was one of the first people to be granted a 10-year residence visa in the UAE a year ago.

 ?? AFP, Bloomberg, Antonie Robertson / The National and Getty ?? Clockwise, from left, Bernard Arnault, head of luxury company LVMH; Bob Langer, an MIT professor and Moderna shareholde­r; Rizwan Sajan, Danube Group founder and chairman; and Simon and David Reuben, British real estate investors
AFP, Bloomberg, Antonie Robertson / The National and Getty Clockwise, from left, Bernard Arnault, head of luxury company LVMH; Bob Langer, an MIT professor and Moderna shareholde­r; Rizwan Sajan, Danube Group founder and chairman; and Simon and David Reuben, British real estate investors
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