华灜2022-08-23 22:50:10

 

Billionaire regrets turning down 'slightly crazy' Elon Musk

John Doerr said he missed an opportunity to invest in Tesla in 2007.
 

The venture capitalist chose to invest in a competitor that later went bankrupt instead.
 

Doerr has been known for backing several key companies, including Amazon, Google, and Twitter. 

Billionaire investor John Doerr said passing up on an opportunity to invest in Tesla in 2007 is one of his biggest regrets.

"The conventional wisdom was that venture capitalists thought not to invest in electric vehicle companies and not new car companies at all," Doerr, the chairman of venture capitalist firm Kleiner Perkins, told Bloomberg Television.

"We had the choice of backing a brilliant car designer by the name of Henrik Fisker or an ambitious, slightly crazy entrepreneur by the name of Elon Musk with Tesla and we made the wrong decision," he added.

In 2008, Kleiner Perkins invested over $10 million in Fisker Automotive. About five years later the company filed for bankruptcy. Henrik Fisker started another EV company named Fisker Inc. in 2016 using the same logo and trademarks. Since, the company has gone public on the New York Stock Exchange, but has lagged far behind Tesla.

In 2007, Tesla was still a fledgling company in transition, its cofounder Martin Eberhard was in process of stepping down as CEO, and Musk didn't take over the role of chief executive until the following year. The company didn't produce its first car until 2008, nearly five years after the company was founded. Today, the electric-car maker is valued at almost $1 trillion.

"That's probably the worst investment decision of all time," Doerr said on "Bloomberg Wealth with David Rubenstein." "I don't obsess on these [regrets], but I won't ever forget," the billionaire added.

Despite his failure to recognize Tesla's potential, Doerr has jumped in on the ground floor of several major companies, including Amazon, Google, and Twitter.

The billionaire said he instantly connected with 30-year-old Jeff Bezos when he first met him.

"We were both kind of computer science geeks," he said. "He had a vision, which is true to this day, that if  he had the broadest selection with the most affordable prices and the best customer experience that flywheel he could get to grow by obsessing on the customer."

Doerr said he believed Amazon would be successful, but had no idea that it would grow into the company that it is today. The venture capitalist said Bezos had a clear business plan, while his decision to invest in Google cofounders Sergey Brin and Larry Page was more of a leap of faith.

It "was very controversial," Doerr said. "They had no business plan, no revenues."

The billionaire said neither he nor Google's founders had any idea how important the internet search function would become.

Tesla wasn't the only company Doerr said he regrets overlooking. The billionaire, who is valued at $5.8 billion via Bloomberg's Billionaire Index, said he also missed out on opportunities to invest in Cisco and Sun Microsystems.

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Billionaire investor John Doerr said passing up on an opportunity to invest in Tesla in 2007 is one of his biggest regrets.

"The conventional wisdom was that venture capitalists thought not to invest in electric vehicle companies and not new car companies at all," Doerr, the chairman of venture capitalist firm Kleiner Perkins, told Bloomberg Television.

"We had the choice of backing a brilliant car designer by the name of Henrik Fisker or an ambitious, slightly crazy entrepreneur by the name of Elon Musk with Tesla and we made the wrong decision," he added.

In 2008, Kleiner Perkins invested over $10 million in Fisker Automotive. About five years later the company filed for bankruptcy. Henrik Fisker started another EV company named Fisker Inc. in 2016 using the same logo and trademarks. Since, the company has gone public on the New York Stock Exchange, but has lagged far behind Tesla.

In 2007, Tesla was still a fledgling company in transition, its cofounder Martin Eberhard was in process of stepping down as CEO, and Musk didn't take over the role of chief executive until the following year. The company didn't produce its first car until 2008, nearly five years after the company was founded. Today, the electric-car maker is valued at almost $1 trillion.

"That's probably the worst investment decision of all time," Doerr said on "Bloomberg Wealth with David Rubenstein." "I don't obsess on these [regrets], but I won't ever forget," the billionaire added.

Despite his failure to recognize Tesla's potential, Doerr has jumped in on the ground floor of several major companies, including Amazon, Google, and Twitter.

The billionaire said he instantly connected with 30-year-old Jeff Bezos when he first met him.

"We were both kind of computer science geeks," he said. "He had a vision, which is true to this day, that if  he had the broadest selection with the most affordable prices and the best customer experience that flywheel he could get to grow by obsessing on the customer."

D oerr said he believed Amazon would be successful, but had no idea that it would grow into the company that it is today. The venture capitalist said Bezos had a clear business plan, while his decision to invest in Google cofounders Sergey Brin and Larry Page was more of a leap of faith.

It "was very controversial," Doerr said. "They had no business plan, no revenues."

The billionaire said neither he nor Google's founders had any idea how important the internet search function would become.

Tesla wasn't the only company Doerr said he regrets overlooking. The billionaire, who is valued at $5.8 billion via Bloomberg's Billionaire Index, said he also missed out on opportunities to invest in Cisco and Sun Microsystems.

https://www.businessinsider.com/billionaire-regrets-not-investing-slightly-crazy-elon-musk-2022-8?amp