What will P. Allen do with his cash?
Now what's he up to? Allen sells off 35 million of his Microsoft shares
What the secretive multibillionaire will do with the proceeds fuels conjecture
Friday, November 3, 2000
By DAN RICHMAN SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen last month sold 35 million shares in that company -- nearly 20 percent of his stake -- according to federal documents released this week.
The $2.1 billion sell-off, which is much larger than those Allen frequently makes, has some onlookers wondering what the secretive multibillionaire is up to.
Allen, a venture capitalist distinguished by the massive size and scope of his investments, regularly sells Microsoft shares, each time explaining through spokeswoman Susan Pierson Brown that he is only "diversifying his portfolio."
But past sell-offs have been smaller. In September, he sold 2.9 million shares; in August, 13 million.
For most people, it's hard to grasp what Allen's newly realized $2.1 billion in cash would buy: 79 radio stations, four Safeco fields or everything Washington exported to China last year.
It's also hard to get a grasp on what Allen will use his money for.
In a prepared statement, his spokeswoman said, "Given the current volatility in the equity markets, and Microsoft's recent stock rebound, we felt it prudent to sell a larger-than-usual stake this quarter and increase our cash position."
But, as usual, Allen and his staff declined to say how the cash would be spent.
There is conjecture aplenty, though.
"There's been huge speculation about what he'll do with his money," said a Seattle investment banker who is familiar with Allen and his investment arm, Vulcan Ventures. "They're kind of weird. They make everyone stay totally quiet when it seems unnecessary to keep things quiet."
Among the possibilities:
Allen could be just be bailing out of Microsoft. After increasingly distancing himself from the company over the last 25 years, Allen in late September said he will leave its board of directors. The sell-off may reflect a further withdrawal.
He could be planning to repay a major loan he took against shares of Charter Communications, a St. Louis-based cable company that Allen owns.
He may be planning a major investment. Rumors have been circulating for months that Allen is considering building a new natural history or science museum in Seattle.
The investment banker also suggested Allen could be planning an experiment in charter schools, following his founding of online-education company Apex Learning in 1997. Or, the banker said, Allen might be planning to take over Metricom Inc., a Los Gatos, Calif., wireless data company in which he now holds a minor investment.
Last time Allen left Microsoft, in 1983, it was because he had been diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease, which later went into remission. In September, when he announced he would leave the board, he denied he was sick. Brown denied it again yesterday.
But obviously, the correct answer to Allen's current investment plan may be none of the above.
"When you've got that much money, you can have fun and not worry that much" about what you're spending money on, the banker said. "Who cares?"
Just how much money he even has is difficult to pin down. The value of technology stocks, like Microsoft, has fluctuated greatly this year.
What's more, much of Allen's investment is in startups and privately held companies, which don't have to disclose their assets, sales or worth.
But Forbes Magazine's listing of the world's richest people this year said the Mercer Island resident, at 47, is worth about $28 billion, ranking him at the time of publication the third-richest person in the world, behind Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Oracle Chief Executive Larry Ellison.
Allen owns the Seattle Seahawks, the Portland Trailblazers, the Experience Music Project, and the Cinerama Theatre, and he holds a stake in scores of technology companies related to his broad but amorphous concept of a "Wired World."
Allen's October stock sales came to light when the Securities and Exchange Commission this week made public three "Form 144s" filings, which taken together disclosed Allen intended to sell 35 million shares. Federal law requires company officers and board members to file such documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission before selling shares and again after the sale is executed.
The dates by which Allen said he planned to sell the shares had already passed. A source familiar with Allen's SEC filings said he consistently sells all the shares he registers to sell. But Allen's office couldn't confirm the sales, and SEC filings that do so won't be out until later this month.
As of Sept. 28, Allen held 184.2 million Microsoft shares, or 3.4 percent of the company, Brown said. If that number has held steady, Allen just sold 19 percent of his stake in Microsoft.
To give some context to Allen's new cash stash, Westinghouse, the parent company of CBS Radio, bought 98 stations from American Radio Systems in Sept. 1997 for $2.6 billion. Safeco Field cost $517 million. Our state exported $1.8 billion in transportation equipment, $70 million in paper products, and $37 million in metals to China last year, among other things. |