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LeBron James Is the NBA’s All-Time Scoring Leader — and a BillionaireLeBron James Is the NBA’s All-Time Scoring Leader — and a Billionaire

The Los Angeles Lakers star has built a $1.1 billion fortune by being a dominant force on the basketball court and an active dealmaker and investor on the side.

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Sophie Alexander and Tom Maloney

(Bloomberg) -- LeBron James added to his vast list of accomplishments on the basketball court Tuesday night, when he scored 38 points in a Los Angeles Lakers loss to surpass Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s NBA career scoring record. 

Another of his impressive feats: becoming a billionaire while still dominating a league he’s been a part of for two decades.

James, 38, has a net worth of about $1.1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which is valuing his fortune for the first time. His wealth is made up of a mixture of his National Basketball Association salary — tens of millions of dollars a year in recent seasons — as well as sponsorships, investments and his own consumer and entertainment business, the SpringHill Co.

Dubbed “King James” since his prodigious high-school career led the Cleveland Cavaliers to select him with first pick of the 2003 NBA draft, James has long said he wanted to be a billionaire. He’s hobnobbed with business executives and dined with Warren Buffett, who advised him in a 2015 TV interview to be “making monthly investments in the low-cost index fund.”

“Somebody else will end up doing better with this or that, but somebody will end up doing a lot of worse with this or that too,” said Buffett, now 92, who ranks fifth on the Bloomberg index of the world’s richest people with a $109.1 billion fortune. “Their expertise is making a lot of money doing something they do extremely well, but they aren’t going to generally be able to take the time to become a professional investor too. So it’s the same advice I give 99% of people.”

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James has proven to be part of that rarefied 1%. 

SpringHill was recently valued at about $725 million after James and business partner Maverick Carter sold a minority stake to a group of investors, including Nike Inc., the company that James agreed to a lucrative lifetime sponsorship with in late 2015. That deal is expected to bring James $1 billion over his lifetime. 

James has also worked with companies like restaurant chain Blaze Pizza, acquiring a stake worth tens of millions of dollars. He collected more than $100 million after Beats Electronics was sold to Apple Inc. for $3 billion in 2014. In 2021, James converted his 2% stake in Liverpool FC into 1% of its owner’s Fenway Sports Group, which oversees a portfolio worth about $10 billion.

James, who’s making a $44.5 million salary this year, is averaging 30 points per game for the Lakers, seventh-most in the league. He also ranks 12th in assists and in the top 30 in rebounds — still stuffing the stat sheet after some 20 years in the NBA.

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He’s suggested that his goal is to keep at it long enough to take the court with his son, Bronny, a high school senior who’s widely considered an elite prospect. They’d be the first father-son duo to play together in an NBA game.

“My last year will be played with my son,” James told the Athletic a year ago. “It’s not about the money at that point.”

To contact the authors of this story:
Sophie Alexander in New York at [email protected]
Tom Maloney in New York at [email protected]

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