Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Mo Money Mo Problems


This past year Jay Z had several business ventures go belly-up costing him millions.

Yesterday The Post tallied up all of Jay Z's bad business moves. Wanna read 'em? Here they go:

* Two Manhattan hotel development projects, one in Chelsea and the other in the Meatpacking District, fizzled out this year, costing Jay-Z and a company he controls about $50 million.

* His almost 7-year-old 40/40 Club franchise, while still successful overall, has taken a few lumps as the 80,000-square-foot Las Vegas edition, with its 80-plus plasma TVs, was closed in late 2008 after just eight months in business — a victim of low attendance. Plus, a Chicago club, first expected to debut in 2009, is still not open.

* In March, he walked away from a reported $2 million investment in the Aqueduct Entertainment Group, an entity selected to develop a “racino” at Aqueduct Racetrack. He bailed after federal and state authorities started to investigate potential corruption in the selection process.

* An investment alongside Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith in “Fela!”, the critically acclaimed Broadway musical, has yet to turn a profit — but it could, theater-watchers say, especially if Jay-Z starts getting out in front of it and markets it the way Elton John is always promoting his 2008 hit “Billy Elliott.”
The trio invested a total of about $1 million in “Fela!,” which garnered 11 Tony award nominations .

* Plus, there is his 1.5 percent stake in the New Jersey Nets which has performed as poorly as the team since he bought it in 2004. Jay-Z was among the group that purchased the team for $300 million — but it’s now worth $269 million, a drop of 10 percent. Jay-Z could have done better putting the cash into a mutual fund that tracked the sickly S&P 500 Index — which is up 7.6 percent, not counting dividends, over the same period.

But it's not all bad. Jay cut some made some big money deals, too.
* Live Nation deal
Cuts deal with concert-promotion company valued at roughly $150 million over 5 years, which includes funding for Roc Nation — a music development, promotion company for Jay-Z. Roc Nation and Live Nation will split profits on album and concert revenue. The deal includes funding for Jay-Z music, acquisitions and investments.
* Rocawear
Co-founded the apparel company in 1999 with Damon Dash. Bought out Dash’s 25% stake for $30M in 2005. Grew sales to roughly $700M by March 2007, when he sold it to Iconix for $204M.
* Real Estate
314 West 11th St.: Owns the building that houses The Spotted Pig.
TriBeCa Penthouse: Paid $6.85M for 8,000-square-foot home in 2004. Patio where Jay-Z married Beyonce.