The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Magic Johnson reaches billionair­e status, joins Jordan, Woods, James at that level

- By Chuck Schilken

Magic Johnson became a superstar through basketball, winning a national championsh­ip with Michigan State in 1979 and five NBA titles with the Showtime-era Lakers.

But he became a billionair­e mainly through his business deals.

According to an article published by Forbes on Monday, Johnson’s net worth is estimated at $1.2 billion, making him the fourth athlete recognized by the magazine to have reached billionair­e status. He follows fellow retired NBA legend Michael Jordan (who reached billionair­e status in 2014), golfer Tiger Woods (2022) and current Lakers star Lebron James (2022).

“When you have a high basketball IQ, you can take that same basketball IQ, or high IQ, and translate that into business, reinvent yourself,” Johnson told the Los Angeles Times’ Broderick Turner in July. “The same discipline it took you to be a great athlete is the same discipline it’s going to take you to be a great businessma­n. The same focus and drive, and last but not least, competitiv­e spirit. So, just take all those things that made you a great athlete and you can transfer that to the business world. That’s what I did.”

Johnson, 64, differs from the other three billionair­e athletes in that he amassed relatively little of his fortune during his playing days.

Although he was the face of the Lakers and one of the NBA’S best known players in the 1980s and into the 1990s, Johnson made around $40 million in career earnings and only another $2-4 million a year in endorsemen­ts, according to Forbes.

Jordan, who won six NBA titles with the Chicago Bulls during the 1990s, earned $94 million in salary and signing bonuses and an estimated $2.4 billion in endorsemen­ts during a 15-season career that spanned from 1984-2003. Woods and James are still active athletes.

According to Forbes, Johnson has entered the 10-figure club mainly because of his joint business ventures and partnershi­ps, including early deals with Loews and Starbucks that became quite lucrative as the basketball star helped the companies expand into predominan­tly Black neighborho­ods. “We got a tremendous amount of leverage in those partnershi­ps,” Ken Lombard, president of Johnson Developmen­t Corporatio­n from 1992 until 2004, told Forbes. Johnson also became a minority owner of the Lakers in 1994. He later sold his shares, but Johnson has since become a high-profile minority owner of several teams, including the Dodgers, the Sparks, LAFC and, most recently, the Washington Commanders.

His investment­s are wide and varied, but the biggest asset in Johnson’s portfolio is his 60% share in Equitrust Life Insurance, Forbes states.

 ?? LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Magic Johnson (celebratin­g the 1987 NBA championsh­ip with the Lakers) has a net worth estimated at $1.2 billion, making him the fourth athlete recognized by Forbes to have reached billionair­e status.
LOS ANGELES TIMES Magic Johnson (celebratin­g the 1987 NBA championsh­ip with the Lakers) has a net worth estimated at $1.2 billion, making him the fourth athlete recognized by Forbes to have reached billionair­e status.

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