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Peloton’s former billionaire CEO says he’s lost all his money and had to sell his possessions

finance.yahoo.com

Peloton’s former billionaire CEO says he’s lost all his money and had to sell his possessions

82 comments
  • "The ex-Peloton chief was forced to downsize twice—including selling a $55 million East Hampton waterfront home and uprooting his family. "My family took it well," the 53-year-old told the New York Post. "My wife's super supportive. My kids are probably better for it, if we're keeping it real."

    Can we burn these fucking people for warmth?

  • I prefer my uplifting news without the schadenfreude.

    • Yeah I am not into uplifting news because somebody had to go down. I like news of socially conscious people doing good to people in need of uplifting.

      • He's still got millions, so it's not that bad.

        Except the fact that his "down to millions" is a setback and not a planned reinvestment in the economy or something.

        mumble mumble..."trickle down"... mumble ...My ass...

  • What a coincidence. I too am a temporarily embarrassed billionaire! He should come to our meetings where we show you how to find a million dollars just by checking the couch cushions and working 148 concurrent jobs.

  • Yeah, the thing is - I just don't get it. Like most people likely do, I have thought about what I'd do if I came into a large sum of money, maybe by selling a company, and honestly, the answer is, a relatively normal flat in the city I live in; some travel, but nothing 'luxury', just seeing places I find interesting; giving both to charities I find worthwhile, and my local community; and investing in a responsible way (fuck returns if you get them by investing in oil and weapons, one could argue that investor owned companies as such are a problem, but I'm probably not going to be able to solve that can of worms).

    So the difference in my life would be having less financial stress, being able to give back more, and focusing more on family, friends, and hobbies, and I just couldn't imagine blowing through money like that man has.

    It may be partially because I saw my father find incredible success, only to spend a lot of it on pointless luxuries before dying in incredible debt, but it also just feels like common sense.

82 comments