JAY-Z has once again earned a huge win when it comes to music, money and power.
According to Forbes, the Brooklyn rapper became the first billionaire through investments in liquor, art, real estate, and shares in growing companies like Uber. He’s also one of only a few entertainers to become a billionaire, and the first rap artist to do so.
His ascent from the Marcy Houses in Brooklyn to starting Roc-A-Fella Records and releasing his 1996 debut Reasonable Doubt was no easy feat. He’s had a business-oriented mind from the beginning, launching Rocawear in 1999 (which he sold in 2007 for $204 million), co-owning D’Ussé with Bacardi, and starting Tidal.
Frequent collaborator Swizz Beatz shared how impressed he is with Hov’s business acumen and explained how he’s a role model for others: “It’s bigger than hip-hop … it’s the blueprint for our culture. A guy that looks like us, sounds like us, loves us, made it to something that we always felt that was above us,” Swizz told Forbes.
“If he’s a billionaire now, imagine what he’s about to be,” he continued. “Because he’s only just starting.”
Forbes calculated that Hov has around $220 million in cash and investments, which includes an estimated $70 million stake in Uber that he purchased for $2 million in 2013. He’s invested $100 million in D’Ussé and $310 million in his champagne, Armand de Brignac.
As for music enterprises, he has $100 million in Tidal, which he purchased for $60 million in 2015; $75 million in Roc Nation; and $75 million in his own music catalog. Jay-Z has $70 million invested in his art collection, which includes Basquiat’s “Mecca” that he reportedly purchased for $4.5 million in 2013; and lastly, $50 million in real estate, which includes properties in Tribeca, East Hampton, and Bel Air.