Slashdot Mirror


Al Gore Sells $29.5 Million In Apple Stock (appleinsider.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from AppleInsider: A U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Friday reveals Apple board member Al Gore this week sold 215,437 shares of Apple stock (APPL) worth about $29.5 million. Gore's stock sale, which was accomplished in multiple trades ranging from $136.4 to $137.12 on Wednesday, nearly matches a $29.6 million purchase of Apple shares made in 2013. When Gore bought the stock batch more than four years ago, he exercised Apple's director stock option to acquire 59,000 shares at a price of about $7.48 per share, costing him approximately $441,000. This was pre-split AAPL, so shares were valued at $502.68 each. Following today's sale, Gore owns 230,137 shares of Apple stock worth $31.5 million at the end of trading on Friday.

20 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Being on a board of directors is good work by Cytotoxic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's good work if you can get it. A couple of hours per quarter, and the company usually flies you in and puts you up in swanky digs and takes you out for expensive dinners.

    And for the effort he managed to pull in some $60+ million in bonus incentives. Nice.

    Although, given his history as a politician who complained of many things of "the rich", including CEOs making exorbitant salaries and bonuses..... Doesn't that make this..... I dunno, ironic seems inadequate.

    Still, if you are looking for someone to sit on your board, I'll be happy to do it at half that rate!

    1. Re:Being on a board of directors is good work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      given his history as a politician who complained of many things of "the rich", including CEOs making exorbitant salaries and bonuses

      They're called Limousine Liberals for a reason.

    2. Re:Being on a board of directors is good work by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd have to pass on the opportunity. There's no way I could sit on the board and quietly agree with the rest of them that Tim Cook is doing a great job. There are a number of problems that need addressing and I couldn't keep quiet about them, no matter how good the money was.

  2. Unjust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Director stock options are another unjust method of the one percent to take from everyone else while adding no value.

    1. Re:Unjust by darthsilun · · Score: 3, Insightful

      s/Al Gore is not.../I think it's safe to say Al Gore is not.../

      And as an Apple shareholder – indirectly through mutual funds in my 401k – I do object to sweetheart deals for selected individuals that rob me and other shareholders of the profits from our investments in the companies that do this..

  3. What does Apple get? by rmdingler · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Since this is in no way a rare instance of a powerful man cashing in public clout for some private wealth, ask yourself what the corporations get in return.

    A few hundred million in under priced stock options and bonus money for what? You may or may not like Apple, but they're not a stupid company. The value of a few meetings, a couple of favorable trade exceptions, and some lucrative government contract work probably more than covers this expense.

    The really civilized thing is, we do almost all of our bribery above board these days.

    --
    Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

    Ernest Hemingway

    1. Re:What does Apple get? by tomhath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The really civilized thing is, we do almost all of our bribery above board these days.

      Sometimes the money isn't a good investment. The Clinton Foundation went from collecting millions in donations from foreign nationals to layoffs in just a few weeks last fall.

  4. And? by Artem+S.+Tashkinov · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's in there for us, mere mortals? The guy got lucky and earned 6800% on his investment, great. Now where are the stories of people losing money by investing in a bad stock?

    Also, where would most people get $400K to invest in stock options when they have no spare money at all or even owe lots of money until they hit their late 50s?

    Or is it a story about a super successful company which is known to have a cult status, which allows it to sell the same product year after year with minimal changes, yet earn billions? I don't understand.

  5. Re:Sold at 1/5th original value? ummm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You missed that it said pre-split. In 2014 Apple stock had a 7:1 split so $502.68 was equivalent to buying at $71.81. What blow my mind is they let him buy director options for $7.48/share when they were worth $71.81. Must be nice being able to spend $441,000 to buy stock worth $4.2 million.

  6. Re:Poor Guy. Guess He Needs the Money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Global Warming Carbon Credit Kickback Scam is not progressing as he thought it would...

    Call it what you will, but it's a compromise because no one wants to do anything about global warming if it comes out of their own pockets.

    But one way or another, we will pay for it. And as time goes on while very little is done, the costs will be grow and become ever more expensive.

    Even with the Free Markets making changes (green energy, EVs, etc...) there will be pain for the average folks as the climate gets worse. It's already happening.

    In other words, any criticisms or "skepticism" by folks who are completely unqualified to be skeptics; resistance; pointing of fingers are developing countries who mistakenly insist that they have to use fossil fuels to develop; and other distraction nonsense in this issue is completely and utterly irrelevant.

    You and your opinion are irrelevant.

    Things are happening and it's just a question of where one wants to be when the shit hits the fan.

  7. Re:Poor Guy. Guess He Needs the Money... by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sure, but when you are racking up $30K utility bills at your Tennessee estate you can blow through your millions pretty quickly...

  8. News for Nerds ? by Crashmarik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This isn't even front page material for Yahoo Finance.

    1. Re:News for Nerds ? by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a clumsy and back-handed attempt to gin up an Alarmist vs. Denier thread, which is the only reliable source for pageviews slashdot has these days. C'mon, play along...!

  9. Re:What does Apple get? - Stability, sanity, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What Apple gets is simple. Stability, sanity and some level of honesty in the face of huge temptation and fear.

    You only have to look at Nokia to see what can happen if the wrong people get onto the board of a company. Somehow or other, the Nokia board managed to convince its self that a company which had managed to survive multiple revolutions in mobile communications was best led by a man who had failed repeatedly to build mobile success at Microsoft. The results are well known (image from this article).

    Why the did this I have no idea. Panic? Bribes? Stupidity? There has been no clear criminal investigation when there should have been but it seems they were just taken in by fear and a smooth talking failure in Elop. Still, the point is that now Apple may be in a similar situation. They have various long term technologies which won't pay off immediately. Nokia was doing Meego, it's own independent touch screen OS; Apple is doing it's own smart phone chips. They will now be under pressure from Chinese rivals and will go both down as well as up. If you keep working on these technologies you will survive and profit but you are very likely to suffer some relative decline even so. If your board panics and changes everything to try to force growth in a market where there is no more space, you may lose everything that you already have.

    No idea if Gore is the right guy, however I know how much could be lost if he's the wrong one. Apple's profits, around $40Billion yearly, are more than ten times Nokia's. Imagine those disappeared in two years because Apple became involved in someone like Microsoft and brought in someone like Elop.

  10. Re:He should sell the remainder... by v1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    regardless of whether or not this was the optimal time to sell, you can't buy groceries with stocks. Gotta cash out at some point. He's just decided he's ready to quit growing his money and start spending it.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  11. Re:Funny how conservatives hate success by ooloorie · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read through some of the comments on this story, and I couldn't help but notice there were quite a few that related Gore's politics and finance. None gave him any credit at all for financial acumen.

    Financial acumen? Gore got rich the same way Clinton did: by translating his political power, political advocacy, and connections into money.

    If you get rich legally before you enter politics, that shows that you can succeed by producing stuff people want. If you get rich after you leave high government office, it strongly suggests that you are a corrupt fraud. Gore clearly did the latter.

  12. Re:Poor Guy. Guess He Needs the Money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It also requires a 5" main to his house, which is why 80% of
    rural Tennessee does not enjoy natural gas to their homes.

    CAP === 'confers'

  13. Re:Funny how conservatives hate success by hyades1 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Wrong. Gore made all the right moves, especially with Current, and conservatives hate him for walking the walk. Meanwhile Trump, their anointed god, made a fortune by ripping off hard-working small businessmen in a series of planned bankruptcies made possible through laws enacted by crooked politicians bought and paid for by people like Trump.

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  14. Because he forced us to pay him millions by raymorris · · Score: 1, Insightful

    > How do your politicians, both left and right, so filthy rich?

    In Gore's case, he wasn't filthy rich when he started. As a Senator, he sponsored a law forcing companies to buy something called "carbon credits" (pieces of paper) from another company called an "exchange". Guess who owned the exchange? Before that, he had hundreds of thousands of dollars, his carbon exchange made hundreds of millions by legally forcing people to buy his product.

    You might ask how he got away with that. The key is, the whole time he whined about "big business" and polar bears. As long as a politician whines about big bad business people, they're allowed to do whatever they want.

  15. More seriously, we pick a team & don't pay att by raymorris · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I joked that politicians can do anything they want as long as they complain about big business while they do it.

    The more serious explanation, I think, is that most Americans just pick a party or politician as their "team", then move on to other things. Most don't spend a lot of time, or have the inclination, to carefully watch what "their" politicians do after they are elected. Their attention span is just long enough to root for their favorite team/player, not enough to actually see what the politician is doing. So whoever originally decided they like Hillary, or Trump, or Gore, is unlikely to later hold them accountable for their actions. Once a majority of Americans "like" you, once they are rooting for you, you can do whatever you want with little consequences.