2019-11-11_Bloomberg_Businessweek

(Steven Felgate) #1
◼ FINANCE Bloomberg Businessweek November 11, 2019

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THEBOTTOMLINE In a citywherevastamountsofstartupwealth
have been swirling around for years, there’s a whiff of caution in the
air after some high-profile IPOs disappointed.

● TheBayAreais stillmintingmillionaires,but
techiesaren’tsplashingoutliketheyplanned

SanFrancisco’sIPO


BoomGetsMuted


It wasmeanttobethelatestSanFranciscogold
rush.Aftera startupboomthatsawtechunicorns
spendanunprecedentedamountoftimeonthe
privatemarket—amassingloftyvaluationsinthe
process—thiswastheyearinwhichdreamsofini-
tialpublicofferingrichesweresupposedtobecome
a reality.A cityalreadyflushwithwealthgirdedfor
a spendingspreebynewlymademillionaires.
ThenLyftsank,Ubertumbled,Slacksagged,
andWeWork’sofferingcollapsedinanepicbust.
SanFranciscohomesaleshaveslowed,withprices
evenfallinginsomepartsoftheBayArea.Party
plannersareparingbackonce-ostentatiouscel-
ebrations.Somestartupemployeeshavebeenleft
withholdingsworthlessthantheyexpected—or
willhavetowaitevenlongerfora payoutastheir
companiesdelayplanstogopublic.“Alotofpeople
joined these big startups with the hope of making a

lotofmoney,andtheythoughtthiswasgoingtobe
whenit happened,”saysBrandonSmith,director
ofestateplanningatWetherbyAssetManagement.
A cool-downmayactuallybewelcomeformany
ina regiongrapplingwithdeepeninginequality
andthecountry’smostexpensivehousingmar-
kets.Theeffectsofthechangearepalpablein
manyareas:InthespringtheprospectofIPO-
fueleddemandcausedsomehomebuyerstorush
tomakedeals,tryingtobeatrisingprices,real
estatebrokerssay.Nowthefrenzyhasdieddown.
Theflopshaveledtohousingseminarssuch
asoneheldinOctoberbySanJoserealestate
agentRobertCruzcalled“IPOsAreinTrouble,Is
HousingNext?”Closetoa dozenpeopleconsider-
ingbuyinga homecametotheevent,including
someinthetechindustry.“Inourmarketthere
area lotoftechbuyersreadingnegativeheadlines
aboutIPOs,”Cruzsays.
But while some big-ticket purchases may
be scaledback, day-to-dayspending forSan
Francisco’stechandinvestingeliteis littlechanged,
saysSmith,thewealthmanager.Hedoesn’texpect
hisclientswillmakecutstoprivateschooltuitions
orbigvacationbudgets.BrettThurber,whoowns
NewWheel,anelectricbikestoreinSanFrancisco,
sayseverythinghasbeengoingwell—betterthan
normal,infact.“Wedohavea lotofpeoplewho
areintechnology,andtheyseemtobedoingall
right,”hesays.“Inthisstrata,it’snotthatexpen-
sivetospend$10,000onane-bike.”
Therewillstillbeabout4,500newmillionaires
intheBayAreafromthisyear’sIPOs,according
toDenizKahramaner,founderofdata-drivenreal
estatebrokerageAtlasa.AndsomeIPOshavehad
betterstarts.SanFrancisco-basedPinterestInc.
atonepointnearlydoubledinprice.Itslock-up
period,whenearlyemployeesandinvestorsare
restrictedfromsellingshares,expiredinOctober.
Thestockis nowjustaheadofitsIPOprice.
Forthepresent,thebigissuemaybepublicper-
ception.Withsharepricesflounderingandcriticism
growingofprofligatestartupspending,it might
notlookgoodforexecutivestobeseenthrowing
moneyaround.Thatmeansrequestsforeventplan-
nerstotonedownthisyear’sholidayparty.Anna
MarieRembold,presidentofAnnaMarieEvents,
says,“Clientswillbelike,‘Hey,willyoumakeit look
reallynicebutnottooexpensive?’Becausethey
don’twanttohearfromemployeeslater,‘Whydid
youspendsomuchmoney?’” �Noah Buhayar,
Sophie Alexander, and Candy Cheng

arguethata mark-to-markettaxcouldfallheavily
onentrepreneursinhigh-risk,high-returnventures
whileleavingwealthypeoplewithmoreconserva-
tiveinvestmentsrelativelyuntouched.
Tosurviveconstitutionalscrutiny,scholarssay,
a wealthtaxmightberedesignedtolookmorelike
a taxonincome.Orperhapsaspectsofthemark-
to-marketandwealthtaxescouldbecombinedto
makethemworkbetter.Forboththewealthyand
theU.S.Treasury,the“detailsarereallygoingto
matter,”saysDeloitte’sTraub.A futureDemocratic
Congresscouldintheendpursue“muchlesssexy,
incremental”changes,saysUniversityofChicago
financeprofessorEricZwick.Abetter-designed
andhighercorporatetax,forexample,couldtake
cashfrombillionaireshareholdersthattheyaren’t
payingontheirindividualreturns.“There’sa lotof
roomtoimproveexistingtaxes,”Zwicksays.“Butit
doesn’tlookasgoodona bumpersticker,soI’mnot
surprisedthatpoliticiansaren’tjumpingonthat.”
�BenSteverman,withTomMaloney

THE BOTTOM LINE The very wealthy may never have to sell the
majority of their assets, which makes them harder to tax. One way
to change that: Put a levy on their unrealized gains.

0

● Change in share
price from IPO
throughNov.5, 2019
▲ Pinterest 7.7%

▲ Levi Strauss 2.1%

▼ Uber 37.7%

▼ Lyft 42.5%

▼ Slack* 46.1%

*SLACK WAS A DIRECT LISTING, SO THE PERCENTAGE CHANGE SHOWN IS SINCE ITS OPENING PRICE. DATA: COMPILED BY BLOOOMBERG
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