Shark Tank Billionaire Mark Cuban is perhaps one of the most famous people in the business world. But how exactly did he make his money?
0:00 - 0:55 Intro
0:56 - 5:02 Chain Letter
5:03 - 7:25 Broadcast.com
7:26 - 8:48 Rise to Fame
8:49- 13:40 Crypto Scams
13:41 Accident of Capitalism
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Foreign with more than 8 million Twitter followers, a net worth of 5 billion dollars, and having been the star host on 13 seasons of Shark Tank there's no doubt that Mark Cuban is one of the most influential businessmen in the world. When Cuban purchased the Dallas Mavericks basketball team in 2000, his Fame expanded beyond the business Community turning him into one of the most famous men in America his popularity increased further still when he played the President in the hit sci-fi film Sharknado Subsequently, he has considered running for president for real. While Cuban has perhaps won the most valuable reputations in the world, there's also a dark side to his history that very few of his fans know about in this video. We'll take a deep dive into the more nefarious aspects of Mark Cuban's career to see exactly how he became a billionaire.

Numerous interviews Cuban has talked about his humble beginnings and his gravitation towards entrepreneurship from a young age. Cuban Grew up in a poor suburb of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania to a working-class family. His parents limited financial means forced Cuban to turn to entrepreneurial Endeavors to secure Pocket Change He did whatever odd jobs he could, going so far as to go door-to-door in his neighborhood selling trash bags. After graduating high school, he enrolled at the University of Indiana majoring in business with his parents.

Unable to fund his tuition, he needed to find ways of making money on his own. He gave disco lessons and even started a small unlicensed bar. It's all great to do something entrepreneurial to pay for your college tuition, but in a 2019 interview, he also admitted to doing something that raises eyebrows to stay the least In college, he had various business ventures including a bar, disco lessons, and a chain letter. Yes, I did I went to Indiana University and I had to pay for my own school I had to figure out every which way in order to do it.

The pain letter was my junior year. You buy the chain letter from somebody and then the letter is a list of 10 names. You give fifty dollars to the person you bought the letter from and you sent fifty dollars to the person at the top of the list. Scratch their name off, put your name at the bottom, then find at least 10 people to sell it to so that one by one your name Works its way to the top of the list.

Well, I did that and got my name to the top of the list. So what is a chain letter? A chain letter is a form of financial fraud. However, there's a big difference between the types of fraud that Bernie Madoff where Sam Bakeman Freed did versus the fraud that Mark Cuban admitted to doing investors in both Madoff Securities and FTX Had no idea that they were investing in a massive Ponzi scheme. They thought they were investing with a legitimate company.

This is called an untransparent Ponzi scheme. What? Mark Cuban admitted to doing was different. It was a transparent Ponzi Scheme The victims of a chain leader know that they are investing in a scam, but they hand over their money anyway. But how can this be possible? Here's how the Chain Letter Works someone comes up to you with an investment proposal.
He gives you a list of names. If you send five dollars to the first six people on this list, your name will move up one notch on the list every time the letter is remailed. Subsequently, after six iterations, your name will reach the top of the list and you'll get five dollar bills in the mail from dozens or even hundreds of people far exceeding your 30 investment. The problem with the chain letter is the number of participants increases exponentially.

After just nine rounds of iterations, you would need to recruit 10 million new people each sending five dollars of the chain to keep it afloat. After just three more iterations, you would need 13 billion new people to buy in, which is far greater than the world population. What ends up happening in practice is that the vast majority of participants hit dead ends. They pay the thirty dollars to buy into the scheme, but they can't find anyone else foolish enough to buy in after them.

The few people at the top like Mark Cuban make huge amounts of money on the backs of hundreds or even thousands of victims at the bottom of the pyramid. Chain letters are inherently fraudulent. Participating in a chain letter is a felony punishable by up to 18 months in jail in some states, but because this happened so long ago is beyond the statute of limitations and Cuban faces No Prospect of facing prosecution. Perhaps the most disturbing part about the GQ interview is how Cuban tries to justify his crimes.

I also sold it so that none of the people I sold it to lost any money because I would have felt horrible Cuban would have felt horrible if anyone he sold the Chain Letter to lost money. While this sounds like benevolence on his part, it actually makes things even worse because chain letters grow exponentially. The fact that none of his direct contacts lost money just means that there are even more victims down the line. Cuban Didn't care about the fact that he was victimizing people.

He just didn't want to know who the victims were. He said they did the chain layer to pay for his college tuition as if this were some kind of justification. This gives us a glimpse into the mind of Mark Cuban He has no qualms about doing whatever it takes to achieve his goals. By the late 1990s, the internet was starting to pick up steam and there is a huge explosion of new startups creating new web applications.

Prior to the internet, the only way to watch sports games was on linear television. This was fine for large games like the Super Bowl which were broadcast nationally, but many small local games were only broadcast on local TV channels. If you travel to a different city for vacation, for example, you would have no way of watching your hometown games when you were away. Cuban Saw the potential for the Internet to solve this problem.
He acquired a tiny company called Audionet and rebranded it as Broadcast.com The company bought commercial rights to local sports games and broadcast them over the Internet all across the country. While they did manage to get hundreds of thousands of users, within a few years, the company was burning huge amounts of money. It's unclear if the business model would ever be viable given the high cost of acquiring the commercial broadcasting rights. But none of that mattered because the.com bubble was in full swing.

Any business, no matter how flawed, could achieve astronomical valuations. So long as I had a.com attached to its name and Broadcast.com was no exception. Cuban's company ipo'd on the NASDAQ in 1999. at the peak of the bubble.

Within nine months, the internet giant Yahoo acquired the company for 5.7 billion dollars, giving Cuban a 1.4 Billion Dollar Payday Cuban knew that Yahoo was massively overpaying for his money losing company. That's why he agreed to sell it. The problem was Yahoo paid him in stock, not cash and he had a lockup period in which he wasn't allowed to sell. By this point, Yahoo's shares had become almost as overvalued as Broadcast.com shares, so the acquisition only traded one overpriced stock for another.

Unable to sell, he instead bought put options against Yahoo stock, which hedged the downside exposure. When Yahoo's share price inevitably crashed in 2001, the put options paid out big time and Cuban kept his 1.4 billion dollar. Fortune By 2002, just three years after the acquisition, Yahoo shut downbroadcast.com as they saw no realistic path to profitability for this cash burning. Machine by getting in on the ground floor of the.com craze and selling it at the right time, Cuban was able to amass a billion dollar Fortune without creating any sustainable value.

Thank you! There are a lot of billionaires. In fact, they're an estimated 2 700 of them across the world. Just having a billion dollars to your name isn't enough to become famous. You need to do something that gets your face in front of millions of people.

Cuban's journey of Fame started when he acquired the Dallas Mavericks basketball team in 2000 for 285 million dollars. His public profile increased further still when he joined the hit NBC show Shark Tank as a co-host in 2011. he leveraged his success on Shark Tank to land more theatrical roles. This culminated in 2015 when he got an acting role to play the U.S President in the hit sci-fi movie Sharknado 3..

Having already achieved billionaire and Celebrity Status, the next logical step for Cuban was to get into politics. Around 2016, he started making frequent appearances in mainstream media channels giving his opinions about the upcoming presidential elections. and if Cuban could play the President in Sharknado why couldn't he do it in real life in 2017? Mark Cuban Was actively considering running in the 2020 presidential election. He decided against it, supposedly because his family was against the idea.
His decision not to run was probably for the best. Given his admitted criminal history, it's hard to imagine he could have garnered more than one or two percent of the vote with his Presidential Ambitions failing before they even began Cuban turned his attention to cryptocurrencies to get an understanding of why Cuban was so bullish on crypto. Take a listen to this clip of him in early 2021 explaining his rationale: you know, kids today, younger generation look at things differently and I think what's really altered my perspective on it is what's happened in the The Crypto Market you know, huddling? hold on for dear life as has worked for a period. Maybe this, maybe you know Bitcoin Ethereum Etc will will go down again.

but at the same time we're starting to see the evolution of applications on blockchain that are really starting to build marketplaces. and I think younger kids you know Gen Z in particular, maybe younger Millennials have a different approach to you know how they look at stores of value, how they look at how assets are priced. Then we looked at traditionally and let me just add, look, you know the narratives um, that we create to sell stocks, price, earnings right? discounted cash flow? Those are all subjective, You know we. We just have been told by Wall Street that if the lower the price earnings ratio against your your growth rate, then that's an indicator that the Stock's going to do great things you know or Graham and Dodd in terms of asset valuation.

and you know that doesn't necessarily hold in a digital environment the same way it did in the past. According to Cuban outdated valuation metrics like price to earnings multiples are no longer relevant. The younger Generations invest based on hype and price momentum. It doesn't matter if Bitcoin has no fundamental utility, as long as people keep thinking the price will go up, you can sell it to a greater fool for a higher price.

This way of thinking is nothing new. People thought the same thing during the Dutch tulip Mania of the 1600s as well as the.com bubble of 1999. Cuban should have known this better than anyone else givenbroadcast.com's history. It's even more surprising that even as late as 2019, he was openly skeptical of Bitcoin going so far as to say as zero intrinsic value.

Boom! If you're really into providing the opportunity for people to grow their net worth, why they hate for Crypto Ico is the new IPO Here's the thing about crypto, particularly Bitcoin Bitcoin is worth what somebody will pay for it. Do you ever see someone who collected baseball cards and they were really, really, really proud of their baseball cards because they kept on saying they were going to go up in price. Comic books. same thing, even artwork.
There's no real intrinsic value. You can't eat a baseball card or shouldn't need a baseball card. Artwork might look good on the wall, but not much you can do with it. Bitcoin there's even less you can do with it at least I can look at my baseball card and go, oh, that's my favorite player that's Roberto Clemente I Can look at artwork and go.

Wow! Crypto is the key that is so complicated for 99 of the population to put it in the device. Do you print it out? How do you keep from being hacked? Who's going to host it for you? It's just so difficult that it's only worth what somebody will pay for it. So what was behind this change of heart? It could have been that I saw a massive money making opportunity for himself. in October of 2021.

The Dallas Mavericks signed a sponsorship deal with a Crypto lending company Voyager digital. The terms of the deal were not disclosed, but given the size of the Mavs it was likely in the tens of millions of dollars. Voyager offered customers nine percent yields on stablecoin Holdings Cuban Told his fans that the nine percent return was almost risk-free This could not have been further from the truth. Voyager generated its yield by lending user funds out to weird crypto hedge funds like three arrows Capital Just a few months after sponsoring the Mavs Voyager digital went bankrupt and it is expected that depositors will only get back around 50 percent of their funds.

A nine percent yield doesn't do you much good when you have to take a fifty percent bankruptcy haircut. While the Voyager sponsorship probably costs Mavericks fans millions of dollars in losses, it wasn't even Cupid's most controversial crypto. Endeavor In or around 2021 if you've been invested in an Instagram page called at Nft, which had 1.7 million followers at its peak, at Nft promoted various Nft projects to its followers. According to the Twitter user, Space Cowboy at NFTA promoted scammy Nft projects, including many that purchased fake Instagram followers To gain the appearance of legitimacy, at Nft charged one hundred thousand dollars in promotion fees to display Nfts on their Instagram page and pump them in their Discord server.

They did not label their posts as paid advertisements as required by FTC regulations. You might not be surprised to hear that the majority of the Nfts they pumped ended up disastrously for their followers, with multiple of them being blatant rug pulls according to Space Cowboys analysis. Shortly thereafter, Instagram banned the Nft account for most billionaires like Jeff Bezos or Elon Musk. they became Rich because they created something of value for the world.

That's how a capitalist system is supposed to operate. Entrepreneurs are motivated to create something of value for society because they know it will make them rich. And if you create something that millions of customers find valuable, you can become obscenely wealthy. Mark Cuban has an estimated net worth of almost 5 billion dollars, but it's unclear what if any value he has created Broadcast.com was apparently not that valuable as Yahoo Shut it down after just three years after acquiring it.
Since then, his main contributions have been appearing on Shark Tank and getting involved with a few Shady crypto projects. This all just goes to show that our capitalist economic system is not perfect. Every once in a while somebody can become a billionaire just by being in the right place at the right time. Alright guys, that wraps it up for this video.

What do you think about Mark Cuban Would you vote for him if he runs for president? Let us know in the comments section below. As always, thank you so much for watching and we'll see you in the next one. Wall Street Millennial Signing out.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

34 thoughts on “What mark cuban doesn’t want you to know”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars CP 97 says:

    Just because Cuban is a con man don’t compare Bitcoin to having as much utility as tulips in the tulip bubble. That’s already really dated and is going to sound so much worse a decade from now.
    I mean even from the charts Bitcoin is nothing even close to Tulip mania. It’s not like it’s just been one pump that popped, it’s already had repeated exponential growth and crashes yet trudges on.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars PsiliPharm2012 says:

    Every time I hear the words intrinsic value being thrown around, I cringe because it’s only ever used to describe something that the person thinks has no value, but there is no established formula for calculating intrinsic value. Ultimately, it boils down to the opinion of the person making the claim on what intrinsic value means to them. This is because the value of EVERYTHING is actually subjective. By the same logic used in this video to claim Bitcoin has no intrinsic value, you could claim the same about all currencies, the value of a currency is based on faith and at the end of the day it’s “intrinsic value” is no more than the paper it’s printed on. Also, by this logic, nothing digital on the internet has any “intrinsic” value, yet it’s a multi-trillion dollar industry.

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mr. J says:

    Chain letters should be considered a form of community service to society. It teaches people to be skeptical and not buy into more serious scams that deprive us all through taxation (to take care of the needy who fall for this crap) of much more serious amounts of money. The victims aren't even real victims having taken part in the greed and scam they knew or should have known about. Talk about the cheapest form of education. In comparison the alternative is paying law enforcement which you probably haven't realized is yet another scam to deprive us all of even more money.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sans the spooky scary skeloton says:

    Low key felt like u was hating on him lol 😂

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Thomas Chow says:

    I like the visual section headers but the sound effect might work against the otherwise great flow of your presentation

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Derek says:

    Mark is the origin of the phrase "Luck beats skill"

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Two Left Shoes says:

    Cuban is a Jew.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars 0ptimusbibIe says:

    TRUMP … KEVIN OLEART … MARK CUBAN …. why would a billionaire need to be on a reality TV show

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rick says:

    Having 5 Billion dollars won't help you sleep better and clear your conscience!!

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Shoshana says:

    SBF did not invest in a Ponzi scheme!

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Quidpro Quo says:

    So ftx investing wasn’t available to Americans right ? Ummm I’m still confused about that and why it’s even such a big deal here in america. Or am I missing something ?

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Robert Beisert says:

    Why does the skin around his eyes look prosthetic? I don't subscribe to the lizard person idea, but…

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Vassimau says:

    How mant ads do you need in one video????

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars caneprints says:

    Didn’t this guy start some kind of pharmacy that provided medicines cheaper? I wonder how he was able to achieve that and how that business is going these days?

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Foster Ngowe says:

    I didn't hear anything egregious here to be honest. Just a man who played the capitalism game to the dot and won. More power to him ✊🏾

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars AxL says:

    No such thing as a good billionaire.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars J T says:

    To be fair, I am pretty sure u can do an episode on each billionaire. Some might not be outright scamming people, but where does exploiting workers for example stand in the scale?

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ann Laughrin says:

    WOW!! I too had to self-fund my undergraduate & graduate degrees. However I often worked 3 p/t jobs at once, or 1 f/t & attended night courses. I DID attend a top 20 fancy graduate school—BUT only b/c I earned many academic grants, based on academic excellence. Unlike Cuban. Then went on to serve our Government. I hv NO RESPECT for him. None at all. His tuition is NO excuse. I too am from a lower-class family, who never had plans to send me to ANY higher education. I just HATE his “explanations” & whining.

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Keith Goh says:

    Only 5 billion? Come on, even SBF was worth more at one point.

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Owen Brady says:

    The greatest crime was that mullet

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars bryan says:

    Wait, he's talked about the chain letters, he openly admitted it in an interview.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars AustralianLeprechaun says:

    All these business types have shady/criminal origins.

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Bins Wanger says:

    Is this why Luka can’t get real help at Dallas?

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dread Pirate Danneskjold says:

    Say what you want about Trump but there are skyscrapers and golf courses that exist because he built them.

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars douchebag patrol says:

    His contribution to society is price efficiency of goods and services by buying low and selling high just like warren buffet. That's how trading in the secondary market works.

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dread Pirate Danneskjold says:

    He’s a typical salesman. He says whatever he needs to say right then to get you to sign on the dotted line. Just like a car salesman that will say Dodge is the best when he works there and then badmouth them if he goes to work at Ford.

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars 88MetalMania says:

    Well to be fair, the 280 MILL buy of the Mavericks was decent. Considering they are valued at 3.3 billion U.S. dollars today…

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars N B says:

    Hi, why did you disable close captioning? It’s very helpful for non native English speakers.
    Please enable it. Thank you.

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dread Pirate Danneskjold says:

    According to Cuban P/E is outdated because young people are ignorant. Sounds like a sound investing plan.

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lyper says:

    Cuban and Oleary…. i swear…

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Amoroso Gombe says:

    2700/8000000000 is not "a lot" though. 0.00003375% of the world are billionaires. Billionaires are EXTREMELY rare.

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Phil Long says:

    He is a Grub, no respect for him. Con man. I was approached years ago with chain letter & airplane captain etc and told them to F off each time.

  33. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Al Thunder says:

    The Shark Tank panel are all self-important duds. Look at Kevin O'Leary as an example. And who's ever heard of those other ones besides Cuban and O'Leary who both self-promote themselves endlessly?

  34. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dread Pirate Danneskjold says:

    Not every game broadcast was under license. IIRC he didn’t have a license for his alma mater, Indiana.

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