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9/29/2019 Life After Facebook: The Untold Story Of Billionaire Eduardo Saverin’s Highly Networked Venture Firm

DAILY COVER | 119,745 views | Mar 19, 2019, 06:00am

Life After Facebook:


The Untold Story Of
Billionaire Eduardo
Saverin’s Highly
Networked Venture
Firm

Alex Konrad Forbes Staff


Venture Capital
Covering venture capital, software and startups

W
hen Eduardo Saverin greets entrepreneurs who come to visit him in
his eighth-floor offices at the Singapore Land Tower, the 36-year-old
knows he’ll get asked the question. The Facebook question. The
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Life After Facebook: The Untold Story Of Billionaire Eduardo Saverin’s Highly Networked Venture Firm

cofounder of the social media giant is not only one of the world’s youngest
billionaires (net worth: $10 billion), but also something of a household name after
his portrayal in the 2010 hit movie The Social Network. A year later he renounced
his American citizenship, reportedly avoiding some $700 million in U.S. taxes. He’s
always denied moving to Singapore for tax reasons and cringes at his Hollywood
alter ego—he’s more comfortable behind a spreadsheet than on the silver screen.
But he rolls with it, all in the name of furthering what he wants the world to know
about the Eduardo Saverin of 2019, the cofounder of B Capital, a rapidly expanding
venture capital firm that’s on the cusp of taking bigger swings.

“I’m incredibly open, because I understand where the curiosity comes from,”
Saverin says in his first one-on-one interview for an article in seven years. “I’m
happy to have them learn from me than otherwise through movies.”

Since launching B Capital in 2015, Saverin and his partner, Raj Ganguly, have been
working on deploying their first $360 million technology fund (Saverin fronted an
undisclosed part of it), guided by a twist on the traditional firm-building approach.
Most venture capital firms start local, with a couple investments in companies in
their backyards. Not B Capital, where 30 employees in California (San Francisco
and Los Angeles), New York and Singapore pursued a multinational approach from
the start. Also key: an alliance with Boston Consulting Group providing Saverin’s
portfolio companies access to the elite consultancy’s brain trust and its clients. Now
with several high-profile hires joining the firm, including a U.S.-based chairman
and a new partner with Apple and Box credentials, Saverin and Ganguly are taking
the wraps off their business, which has grown well beyond a billionaire’s hobby.
They are expected to soon raise a second, much larger, fund.

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9/29/2019 Life After Facebook: The Untold Story Of Billionaire Eduardo Saverin’s Highly Networked Venture Firm

A friend from Saverin's Harvard days, Raj Ganguly cofounded B Capital with him in 2015. DAVID YELLEN

“No matter how lucky or blessed I might be, I will never retire on a beach,” says
Saverin. “We are still so early into making the technologies that will impact the
world.”

w
hen Mark Zuckerberg celebrated his IPO by ringing the Nasdaq opening
bell from Facebook’s California offices in May 2012, his cofounder
Saverin was thousands of miles away and out of mind, save for a
securities filing detailing that his 53 million shares were converting to common
stock. No surprise there. Saverin’s stint with the company had ended in 2005, mired
in controversy and lawsuits over his reduced stake in the company. By 2009,
Saverin had moved to Singapore, giving up his U.S. citizenship two years later. His
life seemed a cliché: Gossip sheets gushed about his Bentley, a standing table at an
elite night club and legendary bar tabs that could reach $50,000.

Saverin tells a different story today. The son of Brazilian parents who relocated to
Miami, Saverin was born in São Paulo but grew up affluent in south Florida,
attending boarding school there before heading to Harvard, where he made his
fateful connection to Zuckerberg while a junior studying economics. After his
involvement with Facebook, Saverin dabbled at several startup projects before
moving to Singapore for what was supposed to be a short stay to help a friend
launch a business. He never left, he says now, because he fell in love with his wife
Elaine, a Singapore local — whom he’d known briefly in his college days when she
attended Tufts University —and with the city itself. “Being a technology guy, it’s an
exciting place. It’s a five-hour plane ride from a large part of the world’s
population.” His decision to renounce U.S. citizenship the year before the IPO, he
says, had more to do with setting up roots in Singapore than paying a lower tax rate
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on his wealth. “It was nothing related to the news at the time. That is not true,” he
says. That reported $700 million was a speculative “back-of-the-envelope figure,”
says his spokesperson.

Facebook’s First Friends


Fifteen years ago, five young Harvard students started a little
social experiment on campus called The Facebook. It’s now a $475
billion tech giant, but only Mark Zuckerberg is still at work there.
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(1) Mark Zuckerberg, 34


CEO of Facebook recently announced a plan to more closely
integrate Facebook with two other apps it owns, WhatsApp and
Instagram.

(2) Dustin Moskovitz, 34


Zuckerberg's former college roommate and currently cofounder
and CEO of Asana, a work productivity software unicorn.

(3) Eduardo Saverin, 36


Cofounder of B Capital, a venture capital firm.

(4) Chris Hughes, 35


Worked as Facebook's first spokesperson before buying The New
Republic magazine in 2012—selling it four years later—and writing
a 2018 book on economic equality.

(5) Andrew McCollum, 35


Designed Facebook’s initial logo. Now CEO of TV streaming startup
Philo, which raised $40 million in July 2018.

And to hear Saverin talk about it, he’s at peace with his Facebook past (and remains
one of the biggest individual shareholders, with a 2% stake in the $475 billion
company). Across two interviews, Saverin says the company is “incredibly close to
my heart” and shares praise for Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg’s leadership.
“I’m incredibly proud of what Mark has done, to build an institution of its size and
value. He’ll work hard to get things right,” he says.

Whether Saverin’s serenity is the result of maturity or careful practice, it’s


unfaltering. As he speaks via Google Hangout in January, Forbes asks if he’s used a
Facebook Portal, the video chat device the company launched in October to some
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criticism. Saverin bought one and hasn’t opened it, but he’s optimistic his son, now
a toddler, will be one of Facebook’s next billion members. “Today, hopefully he
doesn’t become a user at his age, he’s too young. But hopefully it will preserve and
be something then,” he says.

In the years since he secured his once-in-a-lifetime stake—$2 billion at the time of
IPO—he’s embraced a new role as venture capitalist at B Capital, the firm he
cofounded in 2015. While cofounder Ganguly oversees more of the day-to-day
management, Saverin’s on every investment call and oversees one key aspect of B
Capital’s strategy, its investments in Southeast Asia and India. Although he keeps a
lower profile among Singapore’s party set, now famous from Crazy Rich Asians,
access to Saverin is one key component of the B Capital pitch. “People come in
expecting him to be a rock star,” says Ganguly. "And he sits with the entrepreneur
and starts asking about first-time delivery success rates.”

Ganguly’s worked with Saverin since 2012, when the friends from their Harvard
days—Ganguly got his business school degree there—reconnected in Singapore.
Saverin was already writing smaller checks to startups, but with Ganguly, a former
consultant and vice president at Bain Capital, he set out to raise formal funds from
outside investors. Their first effort was Velos Partners, an $80 million private
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equity vehicle with a consumer bent they launched with several other friends. But
by 2015, Ganguly and Saverin split off with a new idea to build a firm around two
points of distinction: as a strong footprint in Southeast Asia, an emerging market
with less competition for deals, and as a matchmaker for one of the world’s most
prominent consulting firms, Boston Consulting Group.

Look at B Capital’s portfolio today—it’s made about 20 investments—and you’ll see


a pattern of international opportunism. Saverin and Ganguly have favored
companies involved in commerce and logistics, specifically European, Indian and
Asian companies that don’t make it onto Silicon Valley’s radar and where their
knowledge of local complexity can help.

One example: Ninja Van. A last-mile logistics provider for delivery services in
Southeast Asia, the Singapore-based startup employs 2,000 people and works with
10,000 drivers. It’s an expensive, complicated business, but B Capital stepped in to
write a check when others balked. “Eduardo and the team asked the right
questions,” says Lai Chang Wen, CEO of Ninja Van. “They’re able to give us a wider
perspective across businesses and geographies.”

Then there are more traditional VC-backed companies in healthcare and business
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p
software where B Capital’s U.S. team pitches its access to BCG. Armed with deep
knowledge and executive connections, consulting firms have tried their hand at
venture capital investing for years. But venture arms have traditionally been viewed
as distractions from the consultancies’ core businesses and usually are the first
projects to get cut when the economy slows. Ganguly’s and Saverin’s big idea was to
provide much of the benefit with no strings attached. BCG is a passive investor in B
Capital, meaning they only call in the consultants when founders ask. “It’s the
cherry on top of the cake,” says Samir Bodas, CEO of Bellevue, Washington-based
Icertis, a contract management software maker that has signed at least three
multimillion-dollar deals from connections made by senior partners at BCG.

Those ties impressed B Capital’s newest partner, Karen Appleton Page. The former
Box and Apple executive is joining B Capital in its San Francisco office, giving the
firm seven partners. Of the early days of Box, when she was the eighth employee
and ran business development, Page says: “At Box, we would have given our teeth
for those connections to BCG.”

Giving B Capital even more street cred: Howard Morgan, the cofounder of First
Round Capital, known for his early investments in Uber and Warby Parker, came
out of retirement in 2017 to become chairman of the entire firm.

B Capital is growing fast. But it’s too early to say if Saverin’s second act is a success.
The firm hasn’t had any exits yet. Only about half a dozen of its investments carry
significantly higher valuations than when B Capital invested, and it got into its best-
known brand—scooter company Bird—relatively late. But Saverin and Ganguly are
optimistic. With its first fund nearly fully committed, B Capital will go out to raise a
second fund expected to be twice as large, sources tell Forbes. B Capital declined to
comment on its fundraising plans.

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Founders who meet with Saverin and B Capital in 2019 can’t be sure if they’re
sitting down with a future Midas List-caliber tech investor or a billionaire dilettante.
But as in his second act as venture capitalist, Saverin is uniquely positioned to guide
entrepreneurs through the perils of success. Facebook famously implored its early
employees to “move fast and break things.” Fifteen years later, its estranged
cofounder offers up a twist on the old motto for 2019: “Make mistakes all the time,
but learn from it immediately,” Saverin says. “Apologize if it affects anyone else.
And make sure you don’t make that mistake again.”

Cover photograph by Bryan van der Beek for Forbes

Alex Konrad

I'm an associate editor at Forbes covering venture capital,


cloud and enterprise software out of New York. I edit the
Midas List, Midas List Europe, Cloud 100 list and 3...
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