Berliner Boersenzeitung - Bobby Kotick: Embattled Activision CEO faces uncertain future

EUR -
AED 4.205548
AFN 73.28972
ALL 94.107975
AMD 420.050267
ANG 2.050275
AOA 1050.676593
ARS 1705.145684
AUD 1.6492
AWG 2.064128
AZN 1.938485
BAM 1.956043
BBD 2.298455
BDT 140.707453
BGN 1.936307
BHD 0.430229
BIF 3405.807572
BMD 1.145147
BND 1.476377
BOB 7.902946
BRL 5.961979
BSD 1.141097
BTN 108.922706
BWP 15.475379
BYN 3.310624
BYR 22444.881975
BZD 2.295105
CAD 1.622044
CDF 2572.000268
CHF 0.918362
CLF 0.026898
CLP 1058.642311
CNY 7.774516
CNH 7.767097
COP 3858.859236
CRC 519.36442
CUC 1.145147
CUP 30.346397
CVE 110.278197
CZK 24.192039
DJF 203.20722
DKK 7.474632
DOP 67.858417
DZD 152.676273
EGP 56.264847
ERN 17.177206
ETB 184.192346
FJD 2.588548
FKP 0.857033
GBP 0.856622
GEL 3.017443
GGP 0.857033
GHS 12.981554
GIP 0.857033
GMD 83.020965
GNF 10007.673264
GTQ 8.705966
GYD 238.708566
HKD 8.981102
HNL 30.542055
HRK 7.534607
HTG 149.260693
HUF 353.871042
IDR 20559.969948
ILS 3.422787
IMP 0.857033
INR 109.162802
IQD 1494.99196
IRR 1575665.068718
ISK 143.956789
JEP 0.857033
JMD 179.233014
JOD 0.811916
JPY 184.444825
KES 147.849763
KGS 100.142561
KHR 4581.328211
KMF 493.558382
KPW 1030.632736
KRW 1759.140787
KWD 0.34959
KYD 0.951022
KZT 541.869577
LAK 25597.286751
LBP 102189.898112
LKR 383.039183
LRD 207.118456
LSL 18.681065
LTL 3.381321
LVL 0.692688
LYD 7.329621
MAD 10.69438
MDL 20.209977
MGA 4847.431936
MKD 61.642957
MMK 2403.672193
MNT 4101.351695
MOP 9.219684
MRU 45.553065
MUR 53.879066
MVR 17.704294
MWK 1978.87633
MXN 19.957566
MYR 4.65857
MZN 73.186326
NAD 18.681799
NGN 1567.752033
NIO 41.992825
NOK 11.233761
NPR 174.260549
NZD 2.002198
OMR 0.4403
PAB 1.141137
PEN 3.900684
PGK 5.014337
PHP 70.377875
PKR 317.32089
PLN 4.285083
PYG 6934.587636
QAR 4.159898
RON 5.232633
RSD 117.359295
RUB 88.749671
RWF 1673.014819
SAR 4.296698
SBD 9.228214
SCR 16.003561
SDG 687.667512
SEK 11.047732
SGD 1.477929
SHP 0.854968
SLE 27.884161
SLL 24013.165042
SOS 652.183742
SRD 43.111379
STD 23702.231676
STN 24.501648
SVC 9.985282
SYP 126.575504
SZL 18.680072
THB 37.982224
TJS 10.555955
TMT 4.019466
TND 3.376104
TOP 2.75724
TRY 53.596084
TTD 7.741994
TWD 36.581674
TZS 3008.877269
UAH 51.148758
UGX 4182.500519
USD 1.145147
UYU 45.805081
UZS 13594.686231
VES 731.638188
VND 30120.230007
VUV 137.668357
WST 3.181856
XAF 656.01259
XAG 0.018366
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.094817
XCG 2.056664
XDR 0.815873
XOF 656.01259
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.457077
ZAR 18.556312
ZMK 10307.704435
ZMW 20.797307
ZWL 368.73688
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

Bobby Kotick: Embattled Activision CEO faces uncertain future
Bobby Kotick: Embattled Activision CEO faces uncertain future

Bobby Kotick: Embattled Activision CEO faces uncertain future

Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick built a video game empire with flagship titles like "World of Warcraft", but he could lose control of it after a whopping Microsoft buyout deal announced Tuesday.

Text size:

As Activision has been ensnared in allegations that the firm discriminated against women employees, he has weathered calls to step down from some of his workers and critics.

But once the $69 billion deal is finalized by mid-2023, he is expected to depart, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The running scandal -- which has prompted ugly headlines, vows of company reform and an apology from Kotick himself -- follows decades of success in business.

Legend has it that part of Kotick's destiny was laid out by Apple founder and tech legend Steve Jobs one day in 1983.

Jobs advised him to leave the University of Michigan, where he was an art student, to become an entrepreneur, Kotick has said.

It was the start of a life in business for the native of Long Island, a suburb of New York City, who while still in high school made cash by running parties at night clubs for his fellow teenagers.

The young man convinced casino magnate Steve Wynn to write him a check to start developing a cheap graphical interface for Apple, in partnership with a friend, Howard Marks, the project's programmer.

An old-fashioned entrepreneur, Kotick differs from many big names in computing and video games, more interested in business than in the technology.

- Big pay day -

According to Forbes, he even believed in the 1980s that playing video games was a waste of time.

After trying to buy the microcomputer giant Commodore in 1987, he managed to get his hands on Activision, on the verge of bankruptcy, in 1991, for a pittance.

He restructured the company, raised new money and changed its strategy.

The idea was to integrate small studios without absorbing them, in order to give them the necessary latitude to create and develop original content.

This was the logic behind the merger with Vivendi Games, which included Blizzard, and the acquisition of King, creator of the hugely successful "Candy Crush".

This hands-off philosophy -- alongside an old school management style dominated by often white men -- bears some of the elements that have been cited by critics and officials.

In July, California state regulators accused the company of condoning a culture of harassment, a toxic work environment and inequality.

"Male employees proudly come into work hungover, play video games for long periods of time during work while delegating their responsibilities to female employees," the California state suit says.

Kotick issued an apology on behalf of the company, implemented a "zero tolerance" policy, while dozens of employees were sanctioned or fired, including Blizzard president J. Allen Brack.

But these concessions have not managed to calm his critics, and nearly 20 percent of employees have signed a petition demanding his departure, in line with several major investors.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the 58-year-old executive, whose fortune is estimated at several hundred million dollars, had been aware for several years of reports of harassment, but sought not to publicize these incidents rather than take the problem head on.

Assured of remaining as head of the group at least until the acquisition is finalized, he could then leave with a huge check, which American media estimated at around $300 million.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)