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Young guns fight back

While those entrepreneurs on the list of Australia’s richest investors aged 40 and under have taken a battering during the crisis of the past 12 months, there are signs that their fortunes may be turning.   The 10 entrepreneurs on the list – including SEEK boss Paul Bassatt, iiNet chief Michael Malone, and PIPE Networks […]
James Thomson
James Thomson

banggun250While those entrepreneurs on the list of Australia’s richest investors aged 40 and under have taken a battering during the crisis of the past 12 months, there are signs that their fortunes may be turning.

 

The 10 entrepreneurs on the list – including SEEK boss Paul Bassatt, iiNet chief Michael Malone, and PIPE Networks founders Stephen Baxter and Bevan Slattery – have seen their total sharemarket wealth increase 9% since the start of the year, compared with a 1% rise in the All Ordinaries over that period.

 

Name
   Company
Current
value
Value at
Jan 1
Value 12
months ago
Paul Bassat
   SEEK
46.51
44.02
79.97
Matthew Rockman
   SEEK
36.05
34.12
61.98
Michael Malone
   iiNet
34.13
25.81
38.82
Bevan Slattery
   PIPE Networks
30.44
24.56
36.16
Stephen Baxter
   PIPE Networks
30.25
24.41
35.94
Richard Bell
   Reverse Corp
13.51
20.09
39.08
Mick McMullen
   Northern Iron
5.62
4.51
16.95
David McMahon
   Vita Group
4.80
7.53
30.13
Andrew McKenzie
   Euroz
3.83
2.84
8.19
Jeremy Reid
   Everest Financial   
   Group
3.01
3.28
31.49

TOTAL

208.15

191.17

378.70

 

 

Of course, the 9% improvement in the value of these 10 entrepreneurs’ wealth since the start of 2009 is likely to be cold comfort to most on the list. In the past 12 months, the group’s total wealth has fallen from $378 million to $208 million – a drop of 45%.

 

For many of these entrepreneurs, this has been their first experience of a real, economy-wide downturn – much worse than the dot-com bust, which a few of these guys suffered through.

 

The biggest loser over the past 12 months is Jeremy Reid, the chief of hedge fund manager Everest Financial Group, formerly known as Everest Babcock & Brown.

 

At the height of the bull market three years ago, Reid’s stake was worth $225 million. But the crash has not been kind to financial stocks, and the value of Reid’s shares have dropped from $31 million last year to just $3 million.

 

Best performed is Michael Malone, the founder and chief executive of iiNet. The Perth-based company has performed very well in the past year, thanks in no small part to its well-timed acquisition of fellow Perth ISP Wesnet in 2007.

 

While many mid-cap technology stocks have been hammered in the past 12 months, iiNet’s share price has fallen just 12%, and Malone’s stake has only dropped by $4 million to $34 million. Since the start of the year, iiNet’s share price has jumped 32%.

 

Can these young entrepreneurs continue to rebuild their shrunken fortunes? It’s a fair bet there is plenty of sharemarket volatility ahead, but here are three reasons to think that these young investors can bounce back faster than some of their older rivals.

 

They understand how technology is changing business

 

The slump in employment might be hurting SEEK co-founders Paul Bassatt and Matthew Rockman right now, but the market will turn and their firm remains the dominant player in the job ads market.

 

I would much rather be in their shoes than those of Fairfax directors and wealthy investors John B Fairfax and Ron Walker, who face the increasingly likely prospect that revenue from their classifieds operations may never recover.

 

They have invested for the future

 

Last year, internet infrastructure company PIPE Networks raised $200 million to build an international undersea cable to Guam. It’s a crucial piece of infrastructure that will only become more valuable as Australia prepares to build the national broadband network. iiNet’s takeover of Wesnet has also positioned the company to grow through the downturn.

 

They are in the right sectors

 

The entrepreneurs come from four sectors – internet, telecommunications, resources, and financial services. All have been hurt by the downturn, but all have strong fundamentals. The national broadband network will change the face of the internet and telco sectors, China’s long-term growth will underpin the resources sector, and Australia’s superannuation system should eventually help the financial services sector out of the mire.