Say you owned 10% of Apple (AAPL) and you sold it for $800 in 1976.
What would that stake be worth today?
Try $80 billion.
That is the harsh reality that Ron Wayne, 84, faces every morning when he wakes up, one of the three original founders of the consumer electronics giant.
Wayne first met Steve Jobs when he was a spritely 21-year-old marketing guy at Atari who never took a bath, the inventor of the hugely successful “Pong” video arcade game.
Wayne dumped his shares when he became convinced that Steve Jobs’ reckless spending was going to drive the nascent startup into the ground, and he wanted to protect his assets in a future bankruptcy.
Co-founders Jobs and Steve Wozniak each kept their original 45% ownership.
Today, Jobs' widow has 0.5% ownership that is worth $4.2 billion, while the Woz’s share remains undisclosed.
Wayne designed the company’s original logo and wrote the manual for the Apple 1 computer which boasted all of 8,000 bytes of RAM (which is 0.008 megabytes to you non-techies).
Today, Wayne is living off of a meager monthly Social Security check in remote Pahrump, Nevada, about as far out in the middle of nowhere you can get where he can occasionally be seen playing the penny slots.
As they say in the stock market, timing is everything.