northwesternmutual.com Northwestern Mutual is the marketing name for The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI NM and its subsidiaries.. Northwestern Mutual is the ma
Trang 1EXCLUSIVE: A SAFER CIGARETTE? • THE $4.8 BILLION DIVORCE
JUNE 16 • 2014 EDITION
MARY BARRA
“WE STILL HAVE
WORK TO DO REBUILDING
END OF THE MEGABANK
THE BUSIEST MAN
ON THE INTERNET
NICARAGUA’S EMERALD COAST
HOW TO MAKE MONEY FROM:
COAL, BONDS AND POPEYE!
Trang 2
2015 K900 V8 expected Spring 2014 Initially available in certain markets with limited availability K900 V8 with VIP package shown Not all optional features are available on all trims Some features may vary THE MATRIX, THE MATRIX RELOADED, THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS: TM & © Warner Bros Entertainment Inc (s14)
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Trang 4
2 | FORBES JunE 16, 2014
64 | ms fix-it
Mary Barra just became
the most powerful woman
in corporate America
First order of business:
Refurbish General Motors.
11 | Fact & cOmmEnt
by steve forbes
Sino-Russian gas pact! Yawn.
lEadERBOaRd
14 | michaEl’S immORtal mOnEy machinEThe King of Pop can’t be stopped A third of his
$2.8 billion career earnings have come in the f ve
years since his death.
16 | SummER REadSToo persnickety for Thomas Piketty?
Brave enough to read The Conf dence Code?
20 | tEll uS EvERything:
JESSica SimpSOn
22 | BiZ QuiZCan you ace our plutocrat photo puzzle?
24 | EyE-pOpping pOpEyESSteve Wynn’s $28 million Popeye isn’t the most expensive art world Gazookus
24 | thE $4.8 BilliOn BREakupElena Rybolovleva was just awarded the largest divorce settlement in history But can she collect?
26 | activE cOnvERSatiOn: can nOvaRtiS kill cancER?thOught lEadERS
by christopher helman cover photograph by jamel toppin for forbes
Trang 5
MOVADO TC ULTRA-THIN CASE DESIGN IN STAINLESS STEEL WITH
MODERN BLACK DIAL MOVADO.COM
JARED ®
THE GALLERIA OF JEWELRY
Trang 6
to the West
by parmy olson
48 | hwang’S wORldTim Hwang plants ideas all over the Internet, even if he has to scam a little bit to make them stick
64 | pOwER ShiFtMary Barra made history by working her way into Detroit’s car-guy club and becoming the frst female CEO of General Motors Now can
she fx the company?
Plus: The World’s Most Powerful Women
by joann muller
76 | gEEk chicThese six e-tailer entrepreneurs ofer
a stylish retort to the oft-heard lament:
“Where are all the women in tech?”
by caroline howard
42 | cute attacks!
Jeanie Han hopes your kids
will start blowing their cash on
imported digital doodads.
14 | earnings
from the crypt
Death becomes him.
38 | heartland hero
David MacNeil believes
in clean car foors and homegrown jobs.
50 | dmi’s sunny bajaj
“I’ve drunk tequila
with Samsung, with
Good Technology
You can be serious
but have a little fun.”
Trang 7
Insights Platform
Now the next big breakthrough might not be found in a test tube, but in big data.
This cloud makes data make a difference This is the Microsoft Cloud.
learn more at microsoftcloud.com
Trang 8
6 | FORBES JunE 16, 2014
contents — June 16, 2014
100 | banking for
dummies
Brian Moynihan’s strategy
for Bank of America: Keep
it simple.
108 | hot mukul
Nicaragua’s frst ultraluxury
resort boasts a private beach club, a
walk-in humidor and a David McLay
Kidd golf course.
96 | slim chance
Fitness franchise Curves
needs all the help it can get.
by daniel fisher
100 | utility playEROther than cutting costs and strengthening capital, Brian Moynihan has no grand plans for Bank of America Amen to that.
by halah touryalai
FRanchiSE ScOREcaRd
92 | hOuSE callS
As more of the population ages and tries to avoid nursing homes and hospitals, fast-growing Right at Home ofers help with basic chores or medical care Plus: America’s best and worst franchises.
by carol tice
96 | cRaSh diEtOnce the largest ftness franchise, Curves has been shedding thousands of units and enraging many franchisees Can the new owners turn it around?
Trang 9Achieve fi nancial security with a plan that addresses risk fi rst.
Create your fi nancial plan with a Northwestern Mutual Financial Advisor Together, we’ll design a disciplined andbalanced approach to protecting, accumulating and managingyour wealth, so you can take advantage of life’s opportunities
Who’s helping you build your fi nancial future?
northwesternmutual.com
Northwestern Mutual is the marketing name for The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI (NM) and its subsidiaries Securities of ered through Northwestern Mutual Investment Services, LLC, broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, subsidiary of NM, member FINRA and SIPC NCAA is a trademark of the National Collegiate Athletic Association
Trang 10
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juNE 16, 2014 — volumE 193 NumBER 8
of May 51% of visits were mobile—39% smartphone, 11.5% tablet What’s it all mean? Making money in the media business increasingly means fnding ways to tap consumer interest in online streams
I’ve been focused on the fow of content for some time,
at my startup and now FORBES I’ve watched readers move across our magazine, its app and Forbes.com via desktop, tablet and now smartphones I see the fow—mainly on phones—as a new opportunity to serve both consumers and marketers If done right, editorial, native ads, marketing messages and promotions can live together, even serve one another, all within the fow
In some ways Facebook and Twitter paved the way They buried the adage ad agencies recited like lemmings: Readers don’t scroll The trick for news outlets is to con-struct a mobile fow that appeals to visitors but also sup-ports video, sponsorships, interstitials, galleries and more
It takes the right publishing tools, collaboration with the sales and marketing teams, and integration with an ad server Maybe most challenging: getting editors to think like marketers of content, not simply creators
The task fts nicely with the newest trend Text-based social feeds, a popular kind of fow, are becoming more visual (think Facebook’s Paper app and TwitPics) We laid the groundwork with headline text modules within mobile streams In the last months we’ve supplemented these headlines with visual modules promoting our ebooks Smartphones present news organizations with interlock-ing challenges On computer ad exchanges, mobile rates go for less than $1 CPM Desktop rates are $3 Each is a far cry from premium digital ads sold by humans—$15 to $30 on desktops—and $40 to $50 for print ads That means the cost
of quality content in the fow must come down
Print to digital Narrowband to broadband Desktop
to mobile Journalists need to pay attention to the phone fow It might help save their jobs—maybe even jolt their metastasized culture into change F
Trang 11
Northwestern Mutual is the marketing name for The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI (NM) and its subsidiaries Securities of ered through Northwestern Mutual
Investment Services, LLC, broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, subsidiary of NM, member FINRA and SIPC NCAA is a trademark of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
Follow fi nancial principles, not fads or trends.
Create your fi nancial plan with a Northwestern Mutual Financial Advisor Together, we’ll design a disciplined andbalanced approach to protecting, accumulating and managingyour wealth, so you can take advantage of life’s opportunities
Who’s helping you build your fi nancial future?
northwesternmutual.com
Trang 12Together, we’ll create a blueprint to guide your fi nancial life.
Get the guidance you need to navigate the fi nancial world
At Northwestern Mutual, we take a disciplined and balancedapproach to fi nancial planning Together, we’ll help build your
fi nancial future on time-tested principles, not market trends
Who’s helping you build your fi nancial future?
Northwestern Mutual is the marketing name for The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI (NM) and its subsidiaries NCAA is a trademark of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
northwesternmutual.com
Trang 13BY STEVE FORBES, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
“With all thy getting, get understanding”
weakened themselves with idiotic economic policies of excessive taxation, unstable money, stifing regulations and bloated public sec-tors The U.S will deal with those artifcial obstacles decisively after the 2016 elections The 2014 mid-term elections will start the process
of regeneration Europe, or at least parts of it, will reluctantly follow suit, just as it did in the 1980s, after Ronald Reagan slashed taxes, con-quered infation and pushed deregulation
As for China’s obsession with securing ral resources, its ofcials should read Adam Smith to understand that trade is the source of wealth A large, fast-growing economy, barring times of war, guarantees that resource compa-nies will beat a path to your door to sell their wares They want your money
natu-After A decAde of
negotia-tions Russia and China announced
a 30-year, $400 billion natural gas
deal Vladimir Putin is portraying
the agreement as another brilliant
coup: Russia gets a large, long-term
customer and demonstrates that,
despite its aggression against Ukraine,
it’s not only not isolated
diplomati-cally but also has a new and powerful
strategic ally, which has the
second-largest economy in the world
Save all the breathless hype Putin is
natu-rally spinning the pact as an “epochal event,”
but in truth it’s really no big deal Divide that
$400 billion by 30 years and you get an annual
average of $13 billion The size of the global
economy today is almost $80 trillion Seen in
that context the contract rates barely a
foot-note AT&T’s proposed acquisition of DirecTV
merits more attention
Strategic alliance? The deal with China
un-derscores Russia’s core weakness Despite its
immense resources and highly educated
popu-lation, which includes a considerable
num-ber of capable scientists and mathematicians,
Russia has a shockingly small economy that is
amazingly dependent on the export of oil, gas
and a few other natural resources
This state of afairs is testimony to bad
gov-ernance In our high-tech era Russia should be
a powerhouse instead of a cipher The country
can cause considerable mischief, but if the EU
and the U.S ever get their economic, military
and diplomatic acts together, they’ll easily be
able to checkmate Moscow Russia’s neighbors
are all too aware that alignment with Putin
means stagnation and oppression
The U.S and Europe have gratuitously
An unheralded hero in the fght against Soviet communism during the Cold War, Ken Tomlinson died on May 1, at age 69, from cancer Ken played critical roles in two underappreciated organiza-tions, Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/
Radio Liberty, that were crucial in undermining what Ronald Reagan rightly called the Evil Empire
Totalitarian regimes like the Soviet Union and Maoist China need to have a monopoly on infor-mation to maintain absolute control If people have no way of getting the truth and are denied accurate news about the world and what’s hap-pening in their own country, efective opposi-tion becomes well nigh impossible
That’s why Moscow regarded VOA and RFE/
Trang 14
RL as lethal foes They provided a
critical lifeline of information to the
people of the Soviet Union and the
puppet regimes in Eastern Europe
The Soviet government spent
consid-erable resources jamming these radio
broadcasts and engaged in major
pro-paganda eforts to undermine support
for them in the West It understood
that the battle of ideas is fought each
and every day and that communism
couldn’t survive such a confrontation
Amazingly, most diplomats,
for-eign policy gurus and politicians
grossly underestimated the impact
the allegedly “soft power” of
radio broadcasting had in
bat-tling the U.S.S.R
One notable exception was
a former radio broadcaster,
Ronald Reagan When he
be-came President, Reagan moved
to beef up and revitalize these
neglected, rundown and—in
the halls of
Congress—politi-cally unpopular institutions
To this end, he persuaded Ken
Tomlinson, a superb journalist
rap-idly ascending the editorial ladder
at Reader’s Digest, to head the VOA
Ken did so for two years, achieving
great success in updating equipment
and improving programming The
Soviets were not pleased
Not long after Ken returned to the
Digest, Reagan prevailed upon him to
join the Board for International
Broad-casting (BIB), the oversight agency for
RFE/RL Moscow hated these entities
even more than it did the VOA because
they were “surrogate” broadcasters,
i.e., the programs were tailored to
each country, as if they were
broad-cast from inside the borders
I was privileged to chair the BIB
at this time, which is how I came to
know Ken well RFE/RL were under
constant attack from the American
and European left, as well as from
the U.S State Department, which
continuously tried to sabotage our
budgets and our mission Ken was
absolutely critical to fending of
these attacks and, indeed, to going on the political ofense He had superb political instincts and a keen sense of how to fght the endless bureaucratic battles with State and other govern-ment agencies He also possessed practiced insights in dealing with the eye-rolling challenges, especially per-sonnel issues, of managing the Radios themselves He was fun to work with:
Like Reagan, he had an ample store of good political stories and anecdotes
Ken’s tireless eforts during these years, along with those of others, were not for naught In 1989 the Evil
Empire collapsed, and in 1991 the Soviet Union itself broke up into 15 diferent countries (which Putin is now working to reunite) The unrav-eling started in Poland, thanks to the brave work of Solidarity, which was led by a shipyard worker named Lech Walesa When asked what role Radio Free Europe had played in these ex-traordinary events, Walesa answered with a question: “What is the Earth without the Sun?”
Ken left the BIB in 1994, but dent Bill Clinton brought him back into public service in 2000, naming him to the board of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
Presi-All of the U.S government’s overseas broadcasting eforts had been united into a single agency, the Broadcasting Board of Governors In 2002 President George W Bush named Ken chairman, a position he held into 2007 Despite scant political help, Ken started a TV broad-casting station aimed at the Middle East
He also managed to add more
broad-casting to Iran and other trouble spots in the region But Washington’s obtuseness over the importance of these eforts was pervasive, as it always has been If Ken had had czar-like powers he would have accomplished much more—and civili-zation today would be a lot safer As it
is, the Iranian popular uprising in 2009, which could have grown into a Solidari-ty-like movement had Obama not made clear he didn’t want that to happen, had some of its roots in the work Ken did
In 2003 Ken was elected chairman
of the board of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which oversees the money Washington spends
on public television and radio Ken courageously attempted to introduce some political balance into the programming and ran into vicious opposition He was hit with numerous—and base-less—attacks on his policies and his integrity Shamefully, neither the White House nor congres-sional Republicans efectively covered his back politically dur-ing these fghts
Ken was a constant friend When
I sought the presidency in 1996, he and his beautiful and gracious wife, Rebecca, were unstinting in their ef-forts to help out
Ken’s life is an inspiring model for young people He was hardworking and ambitious (his father died at a young age, and Ken knew he’d have to make it on his own), courageous (he never shirked a battle because of the odds), principled (his love of country and the values that make it great were unshakably deep), tenacious (when hit with a setback, he never stayed down), shrewd (he had good tactical sense when pursuing a goal or fght-ing a political battle, knowing when
to be indirect and when to make a frontal assault), religious (his moral compass never wavered), devoted
to family (Will and Lucas refect the superparenting skills of Ken and Rebecca) and, best of all—well, not quite—a lover of baseball
Ken and sF with Poland’s president lech Walesa.
F
Trang 15
Inspire Change
By Thinking Like an Entrepreneur
After attending the Forbes Women’s
Summit: Power Redefned in New York, I’ve returned to my offce energized and inspired It was an honor to share ideas with some of the most savvy, forward-thinking women
in leadership today
During the summit, it was my pleasure
to present the frst Northwestern Mutual Excellence in Entrepreneurship award to Ingrid Vanderveldt A lifelong entrepreneur, Ingrid is the frst ever Entrepreneur-in-Residence at Dell Inc., where she oversees Dell’s entrepreneurial initiatives globally, including the Dell Center for Entrepreneurs and the $130 million Dell Innovators Credit Fund, which she created
Her vision is to empower a billion women
by 2020 That effort includes giving them tools; she envisions a world where every woman has a mobile device It also includes giving them knowledge Ingrid works to facilitate opportunities for girls and women for learning, growth and entrepreneurship
I believe that each of us—in our own way and in our own world—can effect positive change by embracing the kind
of entrepreneurial spirit Ingrid strates At Northwestern Mutual, we encourage employees to act like owners
demon-We embrace change, celebrate our successes and promote experimenta-tion Whether you own a small business
or work for a large company, a key component of success is to think like
an entrepreneur by applying new and creative thinking to solve problems
I love Ingrid’s story because it shows the signifcant impact we can have when
we embrace our power and help those around us do the same Women in lead-ership roles can be uncomfortable with power, and may resist using the power
of their position for fear that others will view them as autocratic or bossy
I studied this topic for my doctoral sertation, and came to realize that the appropriate use of power—including the power afforded by leadership positions like mine and Ingrid’s—is essential for success Ideally, people will follow your lead not only because of your position, but also because they respect you and feel empowered to carry out your vision There’s much we can learn from Ingrid Vanderveldt, whether we’re leading a team of thousands or a household of four To be successful, you have to think like an entrepreneur Decide what’s important and fnd a way to make it hap-pen Lift the limitations you may have imposed on yourself Welcome new approaches and ideas And, perhaps most important, don’t be afraid to use power—and to empower others—to make your world a better place
dis-Ingrid Vanderveldt, Entrepreneur-
in-Residence, Dell Inc., winner of
the Northwestern Mutual Excellence
Senior Vice President, Human
Resources, Facilities and
Philanthropy, Northwestern Mutual
Learn more about leadership ment and thinking like an entrepreneur
Trang 1614 | FORBES JUNE 16, 2014
LEADERBOARD
Keeping Score on Wealth & poWer
1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 0
The King of Pop’s posthumous
album Xscape sold 157,000
U.S copies in its opening week
Not bad, but it’s barely a blip
in his $2.8 billion
infation-adjusted career earnings,
one-third of which has come in the
fve years since his death
efort, Of the Wall, sells
7 million copies in the U.S by
1982—at the time, the most
ever by an African-American
artist.
1983 There were 9.1 million cars sold in America in 1983—and more than 10 Million
copies of Thriller
The album has sold an estimated 100 Millioncopies worldwide since its release.
1989 The Bad Tour grosses $125 Million on sales of 4.4 Million tickets If he had gotten the $220 per head Jay Z and Beyoncé are charging for their upcoming summer concerts, Jackson would have grossed
$942 Million, more than any tour in history
1985 Jackson buys the Beatles’ publishing catalog for
$47.5 Million His investment is now worth about
$1 billion—more than twice what he would have made if he’d bought General Electric stock instead.
1988 Jackson purchases Neverland ranch for $17.5 Million; insiders say it could now fetch $100 Million on the open market, nearly twice what David Gefen paid for his new Hamptons mansion.
1984 After his hair catches fre during a Pepsi commercial shoot, he parlays the cola company’s lawsuit fears into a
$5.2 Million endorsement deal plus $1.5 Million to establish the Michael Jackson Burn Unit in Los Angeles.
1 Career earnings adjusted for infation;
Trang 17showman stands still for
72 seconds at the start
of his Super Bowl XXVII
halftime gig That’s more
than $8 Million of silence,
judging by recent ad rates
2001 Jackson’s last studio
album, Invincible, costs as
much as $40 Million to record, more than the current GDP of island nation Tuvalu.
2009Jackson dies on June 25, dramatically boosting his popularity By the end of the year 8.3 Million of his albums are sold in the U.S., more than any artist and nearly twice as many as runner-up Taylor Swift.
1995 Receives a $115 Million advance payment for merging his ATV publishing catalog, which contains the bulk of the Beatles’ biggest hits, with Sony’s catalog
The deal represents a fvefold increase in value over Jackson’s purchase price a decade earlier.
1993 Thirteen-year-old Jordan Chandler accuses Jackson of molestation and eventually settles out of court for $20 Million; the collateral damage to the Dangerous Tour proves equally costly.
1994 Jackson marries Lisa Marie Presley in a secret ceremony; the duo divorce two years later Jackson consistently outearns her father from beyond the grave.
Based on research from senior editor Zack O’Malley
Greenburg’s Michael Jackson, Inc., which
was published by Simon & Schuster/
“new” album, Xscape, to
number two on the charts.
2010 Jackson’s estate releases posthumous album
Michael after signing a new,
ten-year $250 Million deal with Sony— the biggest pact
in music history.
2013 The King of Pop easily outearns Madonna, the world’s highest-paid living musician, thanks in part to Cirque du
Soleil’s shows One and Immortal.
1990 LA Gear signs Jackson
to a sneaker deal worth
$20 Million —$2 million
more than Nike’s initial
payment to Michael Jordan.
Trang 18
16 | FORBES JUNE 16, 2014
1
Sales rank of Thomas Piketty’s
Capital in the Twenty-First Century among all books
ever published by Harvard University Press.
FLOW CHART
WHICH BUSINESS BOOK
SHOULD YOU READ THIS SUMMER?
Too persnickety for Thomas
Piketty? Brave enough to read The
Conf dence Code? Or should you
just chill out with Stress Test?
Are you a capitalist?
Are you reasonable? by Matt TaibbiThe Divide
Thrive
by Arianna Huf ngton
Lean In
by Sheryl Sandberg
The Confi dence Code
by Katty Kay and Claire Shipman
Think Like a Freak
by Steven D Levitt and Stephen J Dubner
David and Goliath
by Malcolm Gladwell
Flash Boys
by Michael Lewis The Wolf of Wall Street
by Jordan Belfort
Capital in the Twenty-
Do you like books by former traders?
Hell no!
Yes
Yes Yes Yes
Oui!
What else do
Do you like the
French?
Economists
Is fi nancial inequality a good thing?
With big hair?
Likable ones?
Obviously
No
No Nah
Trang 20No one makes more from
the election of
business-friendly Prime Minister
Narendra Modi than oil
tycoon Mukesh Ambani,
india’s richest man
Jimmy Iovine
+$170 millionNET WORTH:
$970 MilliON
Apple’s likely $3.2 billion buyout of beats looks certain to boost the value
of the stakes of record executive iovine and his rapper cofounder, Dr Dre
Rupert Murdoch
+$600 millionNET WORTH:
thanks to the Super bowl.
Evan Williams
battery factory, expanding
production to China and
designing a minivan that
goes sports-car speed.
Darrell Cavens
as a billionaire ended after the company announced a quarterly loss.
FiGuRES REFlECT THE CHANGE iN vAluE OF PubliCly TRADED HOlDiNGS FROM APR 30 TO MAy 20
SourceS: InteractIve Data vIa FactSet reSearch SyStemS; ForbeS.
since our feature
story on the WWE’s Vince McMahon came out he has lost more than $750 million, including a pile-driving
$350 million in one day as shares in his WWE took a beating in the wake of a TV deal WWE had signed with NBCUniversal That brutal day in May knocked McMahon out of the billionaire ranks WWE’s shares were up 89% in the frst three months of
2014, and McMahon’s net worth peaked in mid-March at $1.6 billion
Trang 21World’s Most Ethical Companies, Ethisphere Magazine, Quarter 1, 2014 From FORTUNE Magazine, February 3, 2014 & February 27, 2014 © 2014 Time Inc FORTUNE 100 Best Companies to Work For and World’s Most Admired Companies are registered trademarks of Time Inc and are used under license FORTUNE and Time Inc are not affi liated with, and do not endorse products or services of, Afl ac Afl ac’s family of insurers includes American Family Life Assurance Company of Columbus, American Family Life Assurance Company of New York, Continental American Insurance Company and Continental American Life Insurance Company.
Z140349 4/14
We couldn’t have done it without you.
Our customers are at the heart of everything we
do, and it feels good to be recognized for just doing what we believe We help you protect your employees — without impacting your bottom line.
Learn more at af ac.com/business
Our customers are at the heart of everything we
do, and it feels good to be recognized for just doing what we believe We help you pr employees — without impacting your bottom line.
Learn more at af ac.com/business
Trang 22
LEADERBOARD The most expensive item of clothing in $188
Macy’s Jessica Simpson Collection—a
sleeveless Sequin Panel Sheath dress.
FacebooK / Kristi marcy how do you handle bad business decisions?
being in the public eye for so long, i’ve made a ton of mistakes and everybody knows about them but i don’t look at my mistakes as any sort of failure but as a lesson to be learned
twitter / @treystaFFordypr:
what drove you toward entrepreneurship?
My business is the heart of who i am i want to make every woman feel confdent in what she’s wearing and in her shoes and, i mean, i have been every size on the planet i understand women and i know how to dress them.
tUmblr / @bravegirl18
is your celebrity your biggest selling point?
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residential real estate market from
the bottom in November 2011 to
March of this year for America’s
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22 | FORBES JUNE 16, 2014
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LEADERBOARD Number of years a large statue of Popeye has 77
stood in front of City Hall in Crystal City, Tex.,
which hosts a Spinach Festival every year.
24 | FORBES junE 16, 2014
Las Vegas casino
magnate Steve Wynn just
paid $28.2 million for a
6-foot-5-inch Jef Koons
sculpture of Popeye That’s
a lot of spinach, but it’s not
the most valuable piece of
art featuring the tough
Ga-zookus These two pieces—
one in a German museum—
would likely fetch more if
they ever came up at auction
The nasTy diVorce between Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev and his
wife of 27 years, Elena, reached a crescendo in May, when a Swiss court ruled that
Rybolovlev owed her $4.8 billion in cash, real estate, art, child support and alimony
Her lawyer was quick to label it the “most expensive divorce in history.” Maybe, but
only if she can collect: Not only have the couple been battling in various
jurisdic-tions for nearly six years already—and Dmitry’s lawyers vow to fght for another
ten—but since selling his fertilizer business for $6.5 billion in 2010, a bunch of
his $8.8 billion fortune has been sunk into ultraluxe real estate owned by legally
opaque LLCs and trusts These three are currently being contested in U.S courts
Maison de L’Amitie
rybolovlev bought donald trump’s palm Beach
home for $95 million in 2008 through a limited
liability company After elena fled for divorce in
2008, she sued him in palm Beach for ownership
of the property he countered, saying it didn’t
be-long to him her lawyers deposed him in london
and claim he admitted to providing the money
for the purchase and its maintenance.
15 Central Park West
A company that dmitry’s camp says is tied to his daughter ekaterina paid $88 million in February
2012 for former Citi chairman sandy weill’s tan apartment elena then fled a complaint alleging her ex had paid for it using assets acquired during their marriage, in violation of a 2010 swiss Court order he made a motion to dismiss, saying he’s not subject to jurisdiction in new york no ruling yet
manhat-Kilauea, Hawaii
Another llC paid $20 million in August 2013 for actor will smith’s three-bedroom home on the hawaiian island of kauai and then transferred it
to a trust elena sued, claiming dmitry was hiding the money the court dismissed the action, saying that it would not enforce a temporary order; she appealed and will now ask it again to reconsider based on fnal judgment from the swiss court
Elena Rybolovleva
“Saturday’s Popeye” (1961)
Andy wArhol
ludwIG Forum Für InternAtIonAle kunst
estImAted vAlue: $50 mIllIon this painting was one of fve warhols—superman appeared in another—displayed in new york City’s Bonwit teller department store windows Few paid attention to the pop artist’s pop-up gallery on the corner of 5th Avenue and 57th street warhol switched to screen printing a year later.
of his signature style the born artist was still far from a household name and identifed with the scrappy sailor man’s fght against the bigger Bluto
Trang 27
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LEADERBOARD
KILLING CANCER
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The social networks were abuzz in
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thought leaders
jonathan bush — the apothecaryHealtH care reform:
Disruptors NeeD Not Apply
Jonathan Bush iS CEO OF athENahEalth aNd aUthOR OF Where Does it hurt? An entrepreneur’s GuiDe to
FixinG heAlth CAre.
F
For example, as they stand now, rules require that ACOs be at least 75%
provider-controlled, so physicians must do the heavy lifting when starting one The reality is that, once formed, an ACO requires extensive management, technical resources and granular in-sight into, and analysis of, patient data
Many of these requirements are yond the realm (or interest) of your av-
be-erage physician That’s made some dependent physicians fee to hospitals and large health systems for employ-ment, an avenue they see as their only way into shared savings models This rampant physician employment trend
in-is not only reducing patient choice in health care, it is also driving up cost—
the very opposite of the intended efect
of ACOs
The ACO model, if meant to survive and thrive at mass scale, is ripe for disruption Most independent physi-cians want to focus on what motivated them to attend medical school in the frst place: caring for patients They
are not interested in jumping through administrative hoops to form an ACO, only to then analyze steady streams of data on thousands of patients, to then track and submit data to satisfy dozens
of quality measures, to then process and divide group bonus payments And no one wants them doing this work, either Especially when there are operational experts and technology in-novators at the ready to do these tasks more efciently and at scale
Our nation’s care providers are being squeezed at every angle as they navigate through the very narrow re-quirements set up by the government
to participate in new care models If the government truly wants to defne the ACO model as an innovative care delivery mechanism, it must let inno-vators swirl around it to tackle and im-prove upon the concept’s early phases Yes, at the core of an ACO is the work
of the physician, but any nonclinical work that a physician can’t or doesn’t want to do, including formation of an ACO in the frst place, should be al-lowed to be managed, processed and completed elsewhere
Unfortunately, ideas like these are too often met with skepticism
in Washington, D.C One of the few points of agreement in that town is that health care is barreling down an unsustainable-cost path This is a real-ity that cannot be addressed by main-taining the status quo We need to let innovative solutions and efciency in the door Can we persuade our policy-makers to let the disruptors swirl?
the ACo moDel, iF meANt to survive AND thrive, is ripe For DisruptioN
It Is axIomatIc in the
technol-ogy sector that disruptors fuel the
breakneck pace of innovation These
are thinkers and dreamers who look at
the established players and the status
quo and see, clear as day, that there is
a better way They see a better way of
programming thermostats, controlling
light switches, listening to music and
doing a million other daily tasks, and
our lives are infnitely better for it
For reasons that keep me up at
night and make me want to bang my
head against a wall, it seems similarly
obvious that disruption in health care
might as well not exist Sure, our
expe-riences with health care are horrible
expressions of our humanity and it
seems that there must be a better way,
but the message from all sides is loud
and clear: Disruptors need not apply
The Afordable Care Act includes
a program that creates Accountable
Care Organizations, or ACOs, where
this antidisruptor sentiment could not
be stronger ACOs, purported to be an
innovative care delivery and payment
model where physicians better
coor-dinate, are more accountable for care
management and can even proft from
savings they create, are inadvertently
too closed and inefcient
Owing to their complex nature it
is very hard for ACOs to be fnancially
and clinically successful In part this is
because the program is largely closed
of from the types of innovation and
work fows that could hardwire ACOs
to bud, evolve and improve Rather
than introducing a good model and
letting industry iterate around it in a
hundred diferent ways, the
govern-ment too tightly defned exactly how
an ACO must form and operate
Trang 31
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30 | FORBES JUNE 16, 2014
thought leaders
rICh Karlgaard — INNoVatIoN rules
versities and colleges appeared on the verge of French-like suicide Student hissy fts at Brandeis, Haverford, Rut-gers and Smith caused either an invita-tion for an honorary-degree candidate
to be withdrawn or the invited mencement speaker at those schools
com-to bow out In the case of Smith the irony was thick Smith, a women’s col-lege, had invited IMF Chief Christine Lagarde, who ranks ffth on the 2014 FORBES Most Powerful Women list,
to speak The Smith students accused Lagarde of patriarchy Go fgure
Make no mistake: The expensive liberal arts colleges in America are going down—fast and hard Schools like Haverford and Smith are ex-tremely vulnerable The return on
a four-year $250,000 investment in such colleges will be poor in future years Their brands have become laughingstocks Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley and Princeton are protected because they are true universities
Their engineering departments and graduate schools for medicine and business are (for the most part) iso-lated from the ideological nonsense found in liberal arts schools Caltech
buys and sells
if colleges were stocks
Rich KaRlgaaRd iS thE pUBliShER at FORBES hiS latESt BOOk, the soft edge: where great companies find lasting success, camE OUt iN apRil FOR hiS paSt cOlUmNS aNd BlOgS viSit OUR wEBSitE at www.foRbes.com/KaRlgaaRd.
Colleges rise Colleges fall
Let’s look at France and the U.S to
see how they fare
In May 1968 student riots broke out
in universities across France What
followed was a general strike of 11 mil-
lion workers The government of
Charles de Gaulle nearly fell, and the
French economy slid into recession
At frst the rioting students
en-joyed the support of the French
population More liberty, more
equal-ity, more fraternity—who could argue
with that? French higher education
had always been a bit stufy,
hier-archical and pompous Maybe the
students were correct
Then the facts emerged The
stu-dent uprisings had not been, as the
French people were led to believe,
spontaneous afairs They had been
organized by French communists and
student anarchists months before The
student organizers made a huge public
relations mistake by going on
televi-sion They “behaved liked irresponsible
utopianists who wanted to destroy the
‘consumer society,’ ” wrote historian
Mattei Dogan The students quickly
lost the support of the French people
A silly spring fing? Kids being
kids? French higher education was
permanently damaged by the 1968
riots In the 2013 Academic
Rank-ing of World Universities by the
Center for World-Class Universities
of Shanghai Jiao Tong University,
France had no schools in the top 35
and only 4 in the top 100
Which were the ten top-ranked
universities? In order: Harvard,
Stan-ford, UC Berkeley, MIT, Cambridge,
Caltech, Princeton, Columbia,
Chi-cago and Oxford
In May 2014 several American
uni-and MIT are pure plays in science uni-and engineering and thus are protected
three cheers for state U.
If colleges were a stock market, I’d short the heck out of Haverford, Brandeis, Smith and their ilk I’d want
to own those American universities
in the Global Top Ten I’d also buy America’s great public universities known for their strength in science and engineering: Michigan, Texas, UCLA and the like And I’d be biased toward universities with a land-grant history These often have the word “State” before “University.” Most were started
in the latter half of the 19th century to provide educations in agricultural and other practical sciences I’d buy Iowa State for ag science, Oklahoma State for oil and gas engineering, and Mon-tana State for its tech hub in Bozeman.I’d also buy community colleges They’re the great untapped resource
in the U.S today There are two kinds
of community colleges: One is a low-cost feeder system to four-year universities; the other is a high-tech trade school Both kinds are wonder-ful American assets
Lastly, I’d buy some for-proft online universities The University of Phoenix is reinventing itself as a cor-porate-employee trainer Solid idea: Employers know what they want Ashford University has a Forbes M.B.A program, so I vouch for that! Northcentral University, where I’m giving a commencement speech, is an impressive up-and-comer
Don’t despair for American higher education: The fools will perish, and the golden age will burn brighter.f
Trang 33
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Trang 34
of coal to the surface, another team mans the
“roof bolter,” which drills 6-foot-deep holes into the ceiling and inserts epoxy-covered rods that hold the rock together, prevent-ing cave-ins The average worker down here makes $80,000, roof bolters $100,000 These
There have been more people
who have stood on the moon
than where you’re going,” says
Dave Dillon, safety
representa-tive at Deep Mine 41, operated
by Alpha Natural Resources in the
south-western corner of Virginia Dillon is a
third-generation miner, but he still gets excited
showing of the coal face, where a
thunder-ing “continuous miner” with hundreds of
tungsten-carbide-tipped teeth claws
bitu-mining
Coal Case
By Christopher helman
Share prices have plunged as draconian regulations and falling natural
gas prices cripple U.S miners Looks like a perfect time to buy
human relations: alpha Ceo Kevin Crutchfeld addresses miners
at Deep mine 26 in Clintwood, Va
STRATEgiES
Trang 35
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Trang 36
eration market, coal’s biggest customer The price of Appalachian coal burned for electric-ity is down 25%; metallurgical coal is of 44%, thanks to a drop in Chinese demand U.S
usage slumped in recent years from 1.1 billion tons a year to about 900 million No surprise that shares of coal companies have fallen faster than canaries in an unventilated shaft
Since last year Patriot Coal and James River Coal have gone bankrupt Since peaking in early 2011 Peabody Energy is down 75% and Arch Coal of 89% Alpha has plunged 94%—
the whole company now worth a small tion of the Massey acquisition
frac-It would be all too easy to assume that Alpha, and coal, is on its deathbed But de-spite fears of global warming coal remains the fastest-growing fossil fuel worldwide, thanks to China’s sprawling economy and fears of nuclear disasters in places like Ger-many and Japan, which mothballed nuke plants after Fukushima Coal’s share of the domestic power-generation pie has bounced back to 42%, from a low of 36% in 2012, amid a rebound in natural gas prices over the past two years Solar and wind energy may grab headlines and taxpayer subsidies, but coal’s share of U.S electrical genera-tion remains nine times greater than that of those two combined “Declaring the death
of coal is premature,” says Bob Yu, analyst at
are increasingly important jobs in a region
that has seen thousands of layof s and the
closure of dozens of mines “If the price isn’t
right, we’ll leave it in the ground for another
day,” says Kevin Crutchf eld, CEO of Alpha
Investors have been saying the same thing
about shares of Alpha and its fellow miners
lately Based in Bristol, Va., the company has
endured a nightmarish few years In 2010
Crutchf eld looked on as 29 miners of
Appala-chian rival Massey Energy died in an explosion
at the Upper Big Branch mine in Montcoal, W
Va He had coveted Massey’s high-quality
re-serves of metallurgical coal, used in
steelmak-ing, and in 2011 (amid record-high
metallurgi-cal coal prices) he led Alpha to double down,
acquiring Massey for $8.5 billion He should
fed by fears of global
warming and a
plen-tiful supply of
clean-er-burning natural
gas that’s stolen share
in the electrical
gen-mining
strategies
“I see coal making a comeback
The best thing for coal will be when we start exporting natural gas.”
miners earning $80,000 to $100,000 have been laid off by the thousands amid the industry’s implosion.
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Trang 37create tailor-made
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Innovative thinkers everywhere use INDUSTRY SOLUTION EXPERIENCES from Dassault Systèmes to explore the true impact of their ideas Insights from the 3D virtual world allow health professionals to gain a precise understanding of their patients’ medical profi le and to tailor healthcare to match them perfectly How long before kite surfi ng can be done at any age?
Trang 38
36 | FORBES JUNE 16, 2014
Redinger, managing director at KeyBanc tal Markets, who has done investment bank-ing work for coal utilities and solar developers alike “The best thing for coal will be when we start exporting natural gas.”
Capi-And the outlook for Alpha? It’s improving
Despite his horrid market misread with the Massey deal, Crutchfeld remains convinced that he can create value and that the tough part is behind him Massey was a “reputa-tionally challenged entity,” he says “But we felt that given our management structure and moral compass that we could take that on and we could change it.”
That’s been true, but it has not come cheap Alpha spent more than $500 million
to settle Massey’s legacy—everything from federal fnes to shareholder suits Crutchfeld permanently closed Upper Big Branch and added new safety measures at other Massey mines, like sensors that monitor air fow and methane buildup After the acquisition Alpha had 14,000 employees Having closed
64 out of 150 combined mines, it’s now down
to 10,400 Alpha sufered a net loss of $2.4 billion in 2012 and $1.1 billion in 2013, but in the past quarter operating income (excluding costly depreciation and depletion charges) has fnally turned positive again A dim light at the end of a long tunnel, but a light nonetheless
Bentek Energy, a division of Platts
Last winter’s polar vortex demonstrated
coal’s continued importance in the U.S As
ferce cold gripped the Northeast, natural gas
ran short, and prices spiked from $4.50 per
1,000 cubic feet to more than $70 in some
areas Had coal-fred plants slated for
clo-sure in the area already been shut down, the
result would have been blackouts in subzero
weather By the time winter was over, coal
in-ventories had fallen to ten-year lows Back in
2012 it cost $10 more to generate a megawatt
hour of electricity from coal than it did from
gas Now, according to Bentek, that’s fipped,
and coal is $12 per MWh cheaper
That doesn’t mean the industry will roar
back to life While coal prices have likely
bot-tomed out, the road to recovery will be slow
To ensure long-term success the industry will
need to meet proposed EPA regulations
re-quiring coal-fred power plants to install
mul-timillion-dollar scrubbers to clear emissions
of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide
Con-struction of new coal plants will be banned
unless they can match the lower emissions of
plants burning natural gas
A turning point should arrive in 2016
That’s when the U.S is likely to begin
export-ing natural gas, which will raise its current
price and give coal a chance to compete “I
see coal making a comeback,” says Andrew
mining
strategies
“The industrial age emerged literally in a haze of coal smoke, and in that
smoke we can read much of the history of the modern world.” —BarBara Freese
final thought
rock Bottom?
They’re all risky beTs, buT given how far some coal sTocks have fallen,
even small rebounds would pay nicely aT This poinT here are six To waTch:
stock coal production performance (short tons 1-year 3-year per year)
Coal produCtion refleCts 2012 results, aCCording to u.s energy information administration
Trang 39
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“It was an evolutionary step and an investment in our future in branding the WeatherTech name and getting it out to all of America,” says Weather-Tech CEO and founder David Mac-Neil, 55, when asked why he shelled out $4 million to put the ad, which was based on his own experience,
on TV “And it helped us get across
a message that is near and dear to me: the importance of U.S manufac-turing, our industrial infrastructure, using American raw materials and hiring American workers.”
Not that MacNeil is some istic super patriot While there are sound operational reasons for keep-ing his manufacturing local, for him
jingo-a big drjingo-aw for mjingo-aking his $150 (on jingo-averjingo-age) foor mats in America is that in an age of out-sourcing, “Made in the U.S.A.” sells And MacNeil has bet big on that approach He employs 1,000 workers at six factories and 400,000 square feet of factory space in subur-ban Chicago He forges all of his own tooling for 18,000 diferent parts, including pickup-bed liners, mud faps and other auto accesso-ries WeatherTech designs its packaging and prints all of its materials in-house, right down
to a tiny product catalog the size of a pocket map with one of MacNeil’s American-manu-facturing screeds on the inside cover They ex-port to 21 foreign markets around the world The company is the largest consumer of sheet plastic in America After nearly a decade of double-digit annual growth, sales were about
$400 million last year, with estimated pretax
Three minutes into the second
quarter of the Super Bowl, soon after a Bank of America ad fea-turing a new song by U2 and Tim Tebow shilling for T-Mobile, a curious 30-second spot broke the slick run of corporate pitchmen It looked like a local cable ad: A banker, a lawyer and a guy in a hard hat stare straight into the camera and tell an en-trepreneur aiming to manufacture products, hire workers and build facilities in the U.S that
“You can’t do that.” Too expensive Too risky
He defes them, and wins
There’s nothing odd, of course, about wrapping yourself in the fag to sell products
Next to sex, it’s the most obvious play in vertising But in this case the ad happened to tell the true story of one of the stranger lux-ury goods companies in the world: Weather-
ad-Mat in America
By Dale Buss
By wrapping $150 car foor liners in the fag, WeatherTech’s David MacNeil
is creating one of the world’s more unlikely luxury brands.