How to Make a Cool Half-Billion

Entrepreneurs with high-tech companies are cleaning up

The stock-market surge that has been making investors steadily richer since last August is also producing a crop of instant multimillionaires: owners of companies that are selling their first shares to the public. The "new issue" boom is being fueled by rising demand from investors for high-technology stocks. According to Roger Lopata, editor of the trade journal Going Public, the cash raised this quarter alone by companies making their public debut could top the total of $1.45 billion for all of last year.

Since there is no public market for these stocks until the offering, the entrepreneurs behind the ventures have no accurate yardstick for measuring what they, or their companies, are worth. Finding out is likely to be a pleasant experience for K. Philip Hwang, 46, chairman of Tele Video Systems Inc., and Allen Paulson, 60, chairman of Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. Their companies are among the 145 now in registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission for first-time offerings. Preliminary prospectuses show that, at the prices anticipated by the underwriters, Hwang and Paulson will soon be worth about half a billion dollars each, at least paper.

Just 15 years ago, Hwang was sweeping floors at a Lake Tahoe casino to make ends meet while earning his engineering degree. A native of North Korea who fled to the south during the Korean War, Hwang served in the South Korean army before coming to the U.S. In 1976, when he started TeleVideo in his northern California garage, he had trouble finding backers. Some friends chipped in enough to keep him going after he won a small contract to supply Atari with video monitors for its electronic games.

Today TeleVideo, based in Sunnyvale, Calif, is the world's leading independent supplier of the ubiquitous video display terminals (VDTs) used for both games and computers, with 9% of the market. Moreover, TeleVideo's vox sales have already been overshadowed by those of the company's popular small business computers (some 20,000 sold in 1982). Total company sales last year were $98.5 million, up from $1.8 million in 1978. When TeleVideo goes public, perhaps this week, its investment bankers think the stock can be sold for $16 to $18. At $18, the 700,000 shares Hwang plans to sell will bring him $12.6 million, and his remaining 28.2 million shares will be worth $507.8 million.

A few weeks after TeleVideo goes public, Gulfstream Aerospace is expected to follow. Paulson, a former airline mechanic who once sold secondhand airplanes, set up a company in 1976 that two years later bought Grumnian American Aviation Corp., maker of the Gulfstream line of corporate aircraft. Its principal product, the 19-passenger Gulfstream III fanjet aircraft, costs upwards of $10.5 million and, according to the offering prospectus, boasts the longest range and fastest cruising speed of any business aircraft. In 1982 the Savannah-based company's sales rose by 33%, to $575.5 million, and profits more than tripled, to $43 million.

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MICHEL SIDIBE, UNAIDS executive director, to South African President Jacob Zuma, just before Zuma announced that the country would treat all HIV-positive babies and expand testing; South Africa has the most HIV-infected people in the world