The Billionaire Who Wanted To Die Broke . . . Is Now Officially Broke
By Steve Bertoni
Forbes Staff
Senior VP & Senior Editor: Forbes CEO Network, Tech, Investing
It took decades, but Chuck Feeney, the former billionaire cofounder of retail giant Duty Free Shoppers has finally given all his money away to charity. He has nothing left nowâ and he couldnât be happier.
Charles âChuckâ Feeney, 89, who cofounded airport retailer Duty Free Shoppers with Robert Miller in 1960, amassed billions while living a life of monklike frugality. As a philanthropist, he pioneered the idea of Giving While Livingâspending most of your fortune on big, hands-on charity bets instead of funding a foundation upon death. Since you canât take it with youâwhy not give it all away, have control of where it goes and see the results with your own eyes?Â
âWe learned a lot. We would do some things differently, but I am very satisfied. I feel very good about completing this on my watch,â Feeney tells Forbes. âMy thanks to all who joined us on this journey. And to those wondering about Giving While Living: Try it, youâll like it.â
Over the last four decades, Feeney has donated more than $8 billion to charities, universities and foundations worldwide through his foundation, the Atlantic Philanthropies. When I first met him in 2012, he estimated he had set aside about $2 million for his and his wifeâs retirement. In other words, heâs given away 375,000% more money than his current net worth. And he gave it away anonymously. While many wealthy philanthropists enlist an army of publicists to trumpet their donations, Feeney went to great lengths to keep his gifts secret. Because of his clandestine, globetrotting philanthropy campaign, Forbes called him the James Bond of Philanthropy.
But Feeney has come in from the cold. The man who amassed a fortune selling luxury goods to tourists, and later launched private equity powerhouse General Atlantic, lives in an apartment in San Francisco that has the austerity of a freshman dorm room. When I visited a few years ago, inkjetprinted photos of friends and family hung from the walls over a plain, wooden table. On the table sat a small Lucite plaque that read: âCongratulations to Chuck Feeney for $8 billion of philanthropic giving.â
Thatâs Feeneyâunderstated profile, oversize impact. No longer a secret, his extreme charity and big-bet grants have won over the most influential entrepreneurs and philanthropists. His stark generosity and gutsy investments influenced Bill Gates and Warren Buffett when they launched the Giving Pledge in 2010âan aggressive campaign to convince the worldâs wealthiest to give away at least half their fortunes before their deaths. âChuck was a cornerstone in terms of inspiration for the Giving Pledge,â says Warren Buffett. âHeâs a model for us all. Itâs going to take me 12 years after my death to get done what heâs doing within his lifetime.â
Feeney gave big money to big problemsâwhether bringing peace to Northern Ireland, modernizing Vietnamâs health care system, or spending $350 million to turn New Yorkâs long-neglected Roosevelt Island into a technology hub. He didnât wait to grant gifts after death or set up a legacy fund that annually tosses pennies at a $10 problem. He hunted for causes where he can have a dramatic impact and went all-in.Â
In 2019, I worked with the Atlantic Philanthropies on a report titled Zero Is the Hero, which summarized Feeneyâs decades of go-for-broke giving. While it contains hundreds of numbers, stats and data points, Feeney summarized his mission in a few sentences. âI see little reason to delay giving when so much good can be achieved through supporting worthwhile causes. Besides, itâs a lot more fun to give while you live than give while youâre dead.â
The Atlantic Philanthropies
On September 14, 2020, Feeney completed his four-decade mission and signed the documents to shutter the Atlantic Philanthropies. The ceremony, which happened over Zoom with the Atlantic Philanthropiesâ board, included video messages from Bill Gates and former California Gov. Jerry Brown. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi sent an official letter from the U.S. Congress thanking Feeney for his work.
At its height, the Atlantic Philanthropies had 300-plus employees and ten global offices across seven time zones. The specific closure date was set years ago as part of his long-term plan to make high-risk, high-impact donations by setting a hard deadline to give away all his money and close shop. The 2020 expiration date added urgency and discipline. It gave the Atlantic Philanthropies the time to document its history, reflect on wins and losses and create a strategy for other institutions to follow. As Feeney told me in 2019: âOur giving is based on the opportunities, not a plan to stay in business for a long time.â
While his philanthropy is out of business, its influence reverberates worldwide thanks to its big bets on health, science, education and social action. Where did $8 billion go? Feeney gave $3.7 billion to education, including nearly $1 billion to his alma mater, Cornell, which he attended on the G.I. Bill. More than $870 million went to human rights and social change, like $62 million in grants to abolish the death penalty in the U.S. and $76 million for grassroots campaigns supporting the passage of Obamacare. He gave more than $700 million in gifts to health ranging from a $270 million grant to improve public healthcare in Vietnam to a $176 million gift to the Global Brain Health Institute at the University of California, San Francisco.Â
One of Feeneyâs final gifts, $350 million for Cornell to build a technology campus on New York Cityâs Roosevelt Island, is a classic example of his giving philosophy. While notoriously frugal in his own life, Feeney was ready to spend big and go for broke when the value and potential impact outweighed the risk.Â
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