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# 287 Carlos Sicupira $8.63B

Random fact: Visited Wal-Mart's Sam Walton to learn how to lead Lojas Americanas.

Overview

Sicupira is a shareholder of Anheuser-Busch InBev, the world's largest beermaker, with billionaire partners Jorge Paulo Lemann and Marcel Telles. The trio own stakes in Kraft Heinz and Restaurant Brands International, the company behind Burger King. They also control retailer Lojas Americanas and developer Sao Carlos.

As of :
Last change +$19.7M ( +0.2%)
YTD change -$382M ( -4.2%)
Biggest asset ABI BB Equity
Country / Region Brazil
Age 75
Industry Food & Beverage
View net worth over:   Max 1 year 1 quarter 1 month 1 week

Net Worth Summary

Cash
Private asset
Public asset
Misc. liabilities
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Confidence rating:

The majority of Sicupira's net worth is derived from his 4% stake in Anheuser-Busch InBev, the world's largest beermaker according to an August 2023 Bloomberg News report.

Along with his partners, Marcel Hermann Telles and Jorge Paulo Lemann, he controls New York-based investment firm 3G Capital. Ownership in 3G's Cayman Islands-based funds and the stakes it has in some of its biggest investments haven't been disclosed. Sicupira's 3G stake is calculated to be 20% based on disclosed stakes in the 3G partners' publicly disclosed investments, including Lojas Americanas, Sao Carlos and Ambev.

The valuation considers the firm's 28.3% voting interest in Restaurant Brands International, disclosed in a September 2023 filing, as economic interest. 3G partnered with Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway to put up $4.1 billion in equity financing for the $23 billion acquisition of condiment maker Heinz in 2013. The buyout company and Berkshire agreed in 2015 to pay a $10 billion special dividend to Kraft Foods shareholders as part of a merger with the ketchup maker, according to a statement by Heinz.

They like control when they invest, said Luiz Cezar Fernandes, who founded Banco Garantia with them in the 70s. While a 3G fund sought to raise $5 billion ahead of the Kraft Heinz deal, the partners also contributed equity of their own, said a person familiar with the deal who asked not to be identified because he wasn't authorized to speak on the matter. Reflecting the strategy of control, the valuation assumes they have 50.1% of 3G's stakes in Kraft Heinz and Restaurant Brands, and that they used dividends paid by Ambev before its 2004 merger with Interbrew to fund acquisitions.

A liability is included to reflect Sicupira's share of debt in 3G's Luxembourg-based holding company.

Arif Shah, a spokesperson for 3G, declined to comment on the net worth calculation.

Biography

Education: Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Harvard University

Born in 1948, Carlos Alberto Sicupira started his first brokerage at 17 and sold it a year later. He went on to study management at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. In 1973, he and Jorge Paulo Lemann met while practicing underwater fishing, and Lemann invited him to join the Garantia brokerage, where Marcel Herrmann Telles had joined the year before. Under the stewardship of Lemann -- who used the Goldman Sachs partnership model as his inspiration -- Garantia quickly became Brazil's premier investment bank. The three remain partners in business deals today.

They made one of their longest-standing investments in 1982, when Sicupira led the takeover of Lojas Americanas SA, a chain of retail stores that is now among the largest in Brazil. They acquired Cia. Cervejaria Brahma seven years later, in their first foray into the beer industry.

Following more than $100 million in trading losses on restructured government debt, Garantia was sold to Credit Suisse, netting the partners $675 million in cash and stock in 1998. The "three musketeers," as they are sometimes called, turned their focus to acquisitions. They combined a series of Latin American brewers into Brahma, which became AmBev in 1999. Through buyout firm GP Investimentos, which they founded in 1993, they also bought, turned around and sold companies such as railroad operator ALL.

The trio sold GP to junior partners in 2004, the same year they engineered Ambev's $11 billion merger with Belgium's Interbrew. They followed that up in 2008, with the $52 billion union of Interbrew with Anheuser-Busch, which created AB InBev, the world's largest brewer. Ambev, now a subsidiary of AB InBev's successor, Newbelco, is publicly traded in Brazil. Through New York-based 3G Capital, Lemann and his partners bought stock in U.S. rail company CSX in 2007 and waged a proxy fight for control of the board, ultimately abandoning the investment in 2010 (at a profit). That same year they completed the leveraged buyout of Burger King Holdings, putting up $1.5 billion in cash, funded in part by former Brazilian billionaire Eike Batista. They flipped a 29 percent stake for $1.4 billion to William Ackman's Pershing Square Capital Management in 2012. Burger King returned to being a public company in June of that year.

With Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, 3G agreed to acquire condiment maker Heinz for about $23 billion in February 2013.

Milestones
  • 1973 Carlos Alberto Sicupira joins Telles and Lemann at Garantia.
  • 1982 Sicupira leads the trio's takeover of retailer Lojas Americanas.
  • 1993 Buyout firm GP Investimentos is established.
  • 1998 Credit Suisse buys control of Garantia.
  • 1999 Ambev created; $11 billion merger with Interbrew completed 5 years later.
  • 2004 Sicupira, Lemann and Telles sell GP to junior partners.
  • 2008 The trio direct InBev's $52 billion merger with Anheuser-Busch.
  • 2012 3G sells 29 percent of Burger King for $1.4 billion.
  • 2013 3G and Berkshire Hathaway agree to buy Heinz for $23 billion.
  • 2016 AB InBev merges with SABMiller to form Newbelco, the world's largest beermaker.

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