He lost $700 million in 4 months -- and it gets worse - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
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He lost $700 million in 4 months -- and it gets worse

Posted Oct 21 2008, 11:28 AM by Charley Blaine
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Being a billionaire isn't as much fun as it used to be.  Just ask investor Kirk Kerkorian, the investor and casino magnate.

Kerkorian plunked down $1 billion in Ford Motor in the spring, ending with a 6.4% stake in the automaker. In a bit more than four months, he's seen more than two thirds of the value of that investment vanish as Ford and all the automakers have struggled with high gas prices and the crummy economy.

Monday, he said "no mas." In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, he said he sold 7.3 million shares of Ford at $2.43 a share. And he may sell the rest.

Here's how the math works.

Kerkorian's Tracinda Corp. bought 100 million shares of Ford in April at $6.91 a share. He bought another 20 million shares at $8.50 and added 22 million shares on top of that at $6.54. Total investment: $1.007 billion.

He realized $17.7 million on this week's sale. Ford was selling for $2.22 a share Tuesday morning, which means Kerkorian's remaining stake is worth $317.4 million. So, combining what he did sell with the market value of what's left, his loss is now $689.4 million -- 68.4%.

In fact, 2008 has been very very bad to the 91-year-old financier. His net worth was estimated at $11.2 billion by Forbes magazine in September; it's now much less than that. 

Shares in his best-known holding, MGM Mirage, have fallen 85% in the last year, cutting the value of Kerkorian's shares from almost $15 billion to $2.2 billion -- a loss of $12.7 billion. MGM Mirage is Las Vegas' largest casino company, ranked by hotel rooms. The problem: a weak economy that has slammed business in Vegas.

Plus, his stake in Delta Petroleum has fallen 68.3% since December 2006, leaving Kerkorian with a loss on paper approaching $752.9 million. Worse, as the New York Post noted, he had to put all those shares up as collateral five months ago to get a $600 million credit line from Bank of America. The problem: falling oil prices.

But at least he could get a credit line.

Related reading:

Auto sales crash and burn

Car dealerships the new endangered species?

Americans own too many cars

The death of the minivan (and Chrysler?)

Comments

 

Are we suppose to care that a BILLIONaire has lost SOME of his money??!!?? Are you serious???!!!  Most average American families are worried about keeping their jobs and their homes!

He deserves it! Anyone who plays big can lose big,maybe he could have reaped godly rewards by giving money to the poor or some other charitibal organization. Greed my friends!

Who really gives a good clean thought to what the over paid butt wipes have lost.

hey kirk? just throw the dart at the board and invest in where it lands ,you'll do just the same,maybe even better using that system?

If I was 91 with billions in my pocket I would blow some of it too.

hope he loses it all suffer like the rest of us!

he doesn't care,at 90,he knows he has only months to live anyway!

Oh no, now his fortune is only 10 billion dollars. How will he ever survive such a big loss. I'm sure he'll be eating Ramen noodles for the rest of the week.

Hey he's going out swinging. More power to the dude,..he's got some huge,... uhh guts.

So far the only actural loss is the shares of Ford that he sold. I   doubt if he is very worried.

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