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FinanceJeff Bezos

Jeff Bezos sells $1.8 billion of Amazon stock in two days after surge

By
Tom Metcalf
Tom Metcalf
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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By
Tom Metcalf
Tom Metcalf
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
February 5, 2020, 2:44 PM ET
BEVERLY HILLS, CA - JANUARY 06:  Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos attends the Amazon Prime Video's Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 6, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California.  (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images)
BEVERLY HILLS, CA - JANUARY 06: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos attends the Amazon Prime Video's Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 6, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images)Emma McIntyre—Getty Images

In the 15 years after Amazon.com Inc. went public in 1997, Jeff Bezos sold about a fifth of the company for roughly $2 billion. In just the past week, he sold 0.2% of the retailer for $1.8 billion.

Bezos offloaded 905,456 Amazon shares on Friday and Monday under a pre-arranged trading plan, according to filings. That brings his total stock sales to about $12 billion, with two-thirds of those occurring in the past four years, according to calculations by Bloomberg.

The scale of the recent sales — including $2 billion in 2017 and $2.8 billion in 2019 — partly reflects Amazon’s soaring valuation, which closed above $1 trillion for the first time on Tuesday. That means Bezos’s remaining 11% stake is worth $116 billion.

Their size and frequency though also reflects the changing needs of his increasingly public profile.

In the past few years, he’s had a style makeover and rarely been out of the headlines since he and MacKenzie Bezos divorced in 2019. That includes hitting the red carpet with girlfriend Lauren Sanchez, hosting a bash at his Washington mansion for the political and financial elite, and even being part of an international controversy after the incendiary claim that the crown prince of Saudi Arabia was involved in hacking his phone.

It’s a far cry from the low profile Bezos cultivated for years. Like fellow Seattle billionaire Bill Gates, he showed little interest in matching the glitzy lifestyle of other tech titans, such as Oracle Corp.’s Larry Ellison, whose purchases have included a Hawaiian island and super-yacht.

That doesn’t mean Bezos hasn’t spent boatloads of money. As well as properties on both coasts, he has his own rural getaway: 170,000 hectares of desert scrub in Texas, where he indulges his passion for space exploration. He’s previously said that he’s funding rocket company Blue Origin LLC with about $1 billion a year through the sale of Amazon stock.

“The price of admission to space is very high,” Bezos said in 2018, accepting the Buzz Aldrin Space Exploration Award at the Explorers Club Annual Dinner. “I’m in the process of converting my Amazon lottery winnings into a much lower price of admission so we can go explore the Solar System.”

That still leaves plenty left over for other pursuits, from the Washington Post to a clock built in the Sierra Diablo mountain range in Texas that’s designed to run for 10,000 years. He’s also currently house hunting in Los Angeles, according to the New York Post.

His wealth is still soaring. The value of his remaining Amazon stock has climbed by $11 billion this year.

More must-read stories from Fortune:

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—The health of the economy in nine charts
—Why investors are cooling on “direct-to-consumer” brands
—The coronavirus is already disrupting the global supply chain
—WATCH: Biggest investing opportunities and risks for 2020

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