Saturday, March 25, 2017

Philip Anschutz



Net Worth - $12.5 billion (2017)
Age: 77
Residence: Denver, Colorado, United States of America

Over five decades Phil Anschutz has built fortunes in oil, railroads, telecom, real estate and entertainment. He started with his dad's small oil business, which nearly collapsed. He now owns the NHL's Kings and a third of the Lakers, plus the building they play in, the Staples Center. His movie company produced the Chronicles of Narnia series. His AEG Live reps music artists and produces their concert tours. And on 300,000 acres he owns in Wyoming, Anschutz is fixing to build the world's biggest wind farm. In June 2016 he combined his two 5-star resorts, The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs, Colorado and Sea Island in Georgia into a standalone company. To ensure these jewels stay in the family, he put them into a 100-year trust. A dedicated philanthropist, he endowed his family foundation with $1 billion, and donated his collection of some 400 masterpieces to create the American Museum of Western Art in Denver.

Anschutz took over his father’s oil business in 1965 at age 25, almost lost everything on a string of dry holes. The cash of $100,000 he got from the rights of the film 1968 Hell-fighters, starring John Wayne, put him to the next gusher, and in 1982, he sold his half of the Anschutz Ranch East Field to Mobil for $500 million. 

In 1984 he bought William Jackson Palmer’s Denver & Rio Grande for $500 million. He leveraged that into control of the entire Southern Pacific network, which he sold to Union Pacific in a $5.4 billion deal in 1995. On the railroads’ rights of way Anschutz had laid copious amounts of fiber-optic cable, which became the foundation of Qwest Communications. 

Always reinvesting in oil, in 2010 he made $2.2 billion selling fields in Pennsylvania, North Dakota and Ohio. His $4 billion Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) now owns or manages more than 120 venues worldwide. The cornerstone is the Staples Center and surrounding L.A. Live complex, which AEG completed by 2010. 

It’s not enough to just own the locations; Anschutz also owns teams that play there (including the Los Angeles Kings, and a piece of the Lakers), while his AEG Live division represents artists (such as Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber and Carrie Underwood) and promotes their concert tours. To maximize his take, Anschutz created a ticketing platform to compete with Ticketmaster: AXS sells 29 million a year. He also entered the travel business with his 2008 acquisition of Xanterra, which operates lodges in national parks such as the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone.

Thomas Peterffy



Thomas Peterffy is the chairman of Interactive Brokers, an electronic broker that processes equities, futures and foreign exchange trades. The company is the largest electronic broker by daily average revenue trades. He owns his stake through the IBG Holdings partnership, which controls about 85 percent of the publicly traded company. Peterffy is now worth an estimated $13.9 billion (2017, Forbes)

Birthdate: September 30, 1944
Family: Divorced, 3 children

Born in Budapest during a World War II bombing raid in 1944, Peterffy left his native country in 1965. At the time, he was living under the yoke of the Soviets, who invaded and occupied Hungary after the 1956 uprising in the then-Eastern Bloc country. Seeing little hope, he immigrated to the U.S. 

He got a job as a draftsman at a surveying firm. When his firm bought a computer, “nobody knew how to program it, so I volunteered to try,” he says. He caught on quickly and soon had a job as a programmer for a small Wall Street consulting firm, where he built trading models.

Peterffy got his first exposure to Wall Street as a computer consultant with Aranyi Associates, a company owned by another Hungarian immigrant who worked on stock and bond valuation programming. Peterffy also worked at Mocatta Metals, a commodities trader, before deciding to strike out on his own in 1977. 

By the late 1970s, Peterffy had saved $200,000 and founded a company that pioneered electronic stock trades, executing them before the exchanges were even digitized. 

That year, he bought a seat on the American Stock Exchange to trade options. Within a year, he began working on automating the process, using valuation sheets to improve the odds of profitable bidding on contracts. He founded a market making firm named Timber Hill in 1982, using hand held computers he built to track and calculate trades. He expanded into new markets, including the early Chicago S&P 500 options pits in the late 1980s.

In subsequent years, he expanded into Europe and Asia and, in 1995, opened what is now Interactive Brokers, facilitating trades electronically for individual investors. He and his minority partners sold 10 percent of the partnership that controls Interactive Brokers in a 2007 public offering. 

A long-time resident of Greenwich, Connecticut, Peterffy now lives in Palm Beach, Florida.  

Milestones

  • 1944 Thomas Peterffy is born in Budapest, Hungary.
  • 1965 Seeing little hope under Soviet rule, emigrates to United States.
  • 1967 Begins 10-year stint as a computer programmer.
  • 1977 Buys a seat on the American Stock Exchange.
  • 1982 Forms Timber Hill to trade equity options on the Amex.
  • 2003 Company executes about 12 percent world global options volume.
  • 2007 Interactive Brokers sells shares in an initial public offering.
  • 2011 Company becomes the world's largest online broker.

The majority of Peterffy's fortune is derived from his 74.9 percent stake in Interactive Brokers Group, the largest electronic broker by daily average revenue trades, according to the company's website. He owns the shares through his 88.7 percent stake in IBG Holdings, a closely held holding company that controls 2.4 percent of the class A shares and all of the class B shares in Interactive Brokers Group, according to a July 28, 2016 filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The billionaire collected about $1 billion from Interactive Brokers's initial public offering in 2007 and almost $3 billion in dividends, salary and annual payments, according to the prospectus and annual reports and proxy statements since 2007. 

He says, “But I believed that in America I could truly reap what I sowed and that the measure of man was his ability and determination to succeed. This was the land of boundless opportunity.”