Forbes - USA (2020-03)

(Antfer) #1
MARCH 20 20 FORBES.COM

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25


F R O N T R U N N E R

Victoria James


Partner and beverage
director at
Cote restaurant,
sommelier, author

Stephen Fishler


CEO,
Metropolis Collectibles

Ken Gross


Author, former
director of the Petersen
Automotive Museum

Minor Marvel
Characters
As the Marvel Universe
expands, dust off rarities
like Marvel Mystery and
Sub-Mariner ($2,000 per
issue) from the wartime
Golden Age.

2015 Spe’y, Kitá Wines
Made by Native American
winemaker Tara Gomez on
tribal land in California’s
Santa Ynez Valley. Five
years in the bott le will have
this Rhône blend ($30) sing-
ing—and doubling in value.

Lexus SC 400
(1991– 2000 )
The svelte design of this
Grand Touring coupe
went virtually unchanged
for nine years. Forget its
squishy 200 1 second-gen
replacement and buy it
for less than $ 15 ,000.

Joker
Batman’s oldest foe
got a shot in the arm
from the 20 19 movie
Joker. A high-grade
cover ($3,000 to
$ 7 ,000) will net nicely
when a sequel rolls in.

Barolo Marassio,
Giulia Negri
Negri’s Italian red
is a breath of fresh
air for Piedmont’s
venerable vintners.
At $ 125 , expect it to
triple in a decade.

Datsun 240 Z
(197 0 –1973)
Crisply styled, fun to
drive and maintenance-
friendly, the 24 0Z single-
handedly put British sports
cars out of business.
Aim for $ 5 0,000—there’s
room to climb.

X-Men
With Dark Phoenix
having hit a wall last
year, it seems interest
in X-Men has pla-
teaued. Classic titles
in great condition
can fetch $2,000.

2018 SP68,
Occhipinti
Cult classics among
sommeliers, Arianna
Occhipinti’s other bio-
dynamic wines off er
more gravitas than this
cheerful $3 5 Sicilian.

Mazda MX-5 Miata
(1989–)
A rev-happy engine and
excellent handling made
the lovable litt le Miata
America’s most popular
club racing car. Built in
huge numbers, they’re un-
likely to go past $ 15 ,000.

BUY, HOLD, SELL


COMICS: HOLLYWOOD-RELATED MARVEL AND DC


WINE: WOMEN VINTNERS


AUTOS: JAPANESE SPORTS CARS


latest fi scal year (ending
on January 31, 2020), a
roughly 86% gain from
a year earlier. Shares are
about fl at since its June
IPO, but they’re still
enough for Kurtz’s 10%
stake to be worth nearly
$1.1 billion.
After getting a busi-
ness degree from Seton
Hall University and
spending years as an IT-
and security-consulting
drone, Kurtz launched
his own software security
startup, Foundstone,
in 1999. He sold that
company to McAfee and
later became the bigger
fi rm’s chief technol-
ogy offi cer. The idea for
CrowdStrike’s simpler,
faster, cloud-based soft-
ware came from watch-
ing a guy seated next to
him on a fl ight in 2011
spend a good 15 minutes
scanning his laptop with
McAfee. “I’m just sitting
there going, ‘Oh, my
God, this is terrible.’ ”
He quit McAfee
that same year to start
CrowdStrike. Five years
later, it had roughly
$50 million in revenue,
a fi gure that more than
doubled the following
year. Now CrowdStrike is
focused on current global
boiling points such as
Iran; it’s likely increas-
ing its reach in Europe,
where potential users
will face many of the
same threats as Crowd-
Strike’s stable of Ameri-
can customers. Trump’s
Ukraine conspiracy
theory, meanwhile, isn’t
hurting business. In fact,
Kurtz says, it has raised
“our visibility as a world
leader in cybersecurity.”
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