Zoom CEO Eric Yuan will take a 98% pay cut but he is still a billionaire

Zoom CEO Eric Yuan. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

Zoom CEO Eric Yuan. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

Published Feb 9, 2023

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Zoom CEO Eric Yuan made headlines this week with the fact that he was laying off 1 300 workers.

He also told media outlets that he would also be taking a 98% pay cut as the reason for the lay-offs were his fault.

“As the CEO and founder of Zoom, I am accountable for these mistakes and the actions we take today – and I want to show accountability not just in words but in my own actions,” Yuan wrote in an email to staff on Tuesday.

“To that end, I am reducing my salary for the coming fiscal year by 98% and forgoing my FY23 corporate bonus,” Yuan said.

It should be noted that the lay-offs account for roughly 15% of the total company.

So what will Yuan earn? According to “Business Insider”, Yuan’s salary will come down to $10 000 (R174 000). Essentially, this will mean that Yuan’s annual salary for 2023 will be $500 000 (R8 877 641).

But before you start applauding the altruistic Zoom CEO it should be noted that Yuan won’t be missing any meals.

According to Forbes, he and his family are worth $3.8 billion.

A $6bn transfer

In 2021, Reuters reported that Yuan transferred about 18 million shares worth over $6bn, according to a regulatory filing.

The transfers were related to Yuan’s estate planning practices, a Zoom spokesperson said.

“The distributions were made in accordance with the terms of Eric Yuan and his wife’s trusts.”

Yuan transferred roughly 40% of his stake in the company to unspecified beneficiaries, Zoom disclosed in a filing in May 2021.

DISNEY

In other tech news, Disney said this week that it plans to eliminate some 7000 jobs as it embarks on a broad effort to rein in expenses, making it the latest high-profile company to slash workers amid global economic uncertainty.

The lay-offs are part of a drive to cut $5.5bn in costs across Disney, CEO Bob Iger said.

He outlined a reorganisation that seeks, among other things, to “return creativity to the centre of the company” and make its streaming business profitable.

REUTERS/THE WASHINGTON POST/BUSINESS REPORT