Uber’s ex-CEO Travis Kalanick has sold nearly $900 million in stock since lockup expired

FAN Editor

Uber Ex-CEO Travis Kalanick speaks at a Vanity Fair summit at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts on October 19, 2016 in San Francisco, California.

Mike Windle | Getty Images

Uber co-founder and director Travis Kalanick sold more than $170 million worth of stock last week and through Monday of this week, bringing his total sell-off since the company’s lockup expired to about $882 million.

When Uber’s 180-day restriction on inside and early investor sales ended earlier this month, Kalanick was among the wave of sellers that drove the stock down. The former CEO of Uber, who was ousted from the top seat over concerns that he had fostered an unhealthy workplace environment, sold more than $700 million worth of shares in the company earlier this month, according to financial filings submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Kalanick sold an additional $171 million in shares over a three-day period beginning Nov. 14, according to a financial filing submitted to the SEC on Monday. The latest filing brings his total sell-off to more than $882 million since Nov. 6.

Uber’s stock has plummeted to below $27 per share as of Monday’s closing price since the company debuted in May at $42 per share. The company’s market value is now about $45 billion, down from nearly $70 billion at the end of its first trading day.

Kalanick still owns more than 65 million shares in Uber, according to the latest filing. Despite his tenuous relationship with the company following accusations of sexual harassment and discrimination at Uber under his leadership, Kalanick still sits on the board and was present at the New York Stock Exchange during the company’s IPO in May, though not on the dais with company executives.

Kalanick’s recent sales may indicate his interest in other investments such as CloudKitchens, the entrepreneur’s latest venture. According to its website, the start-up plans to rent space to restaurateurs for delivery-based businesses. The project has again cast controversy on Kalanick after The Wall Street Journalreported he raised $400 million from a Saudi fund that is also a major investor in Uber, the fund’s first-known deal in Silicon Valley since Jamal Khashoggi’s death. The Central Intelligence Agency concluded last year that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the killing of Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist.

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