Nas never lost brehs, "Nas On The Verge of Becoming a Billionaire"

Doobie Doo

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Nas is like...half man, half venture capitalist
Javier E. David | @TeflonGeek
Saturday, 6 Feb 2016 | 12:02 PM ETCNBC.com
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COMMENTShip-hop supergroup Jones fronted back in the '90s) funnels cash into start-ups as varied as health care, financial technology and Bitcoin.

QueensBridge, based in Los Angeles, invests in more than 40 start-ups across a range of sectors like financial technology, health care and music production. That has helped put Jones in the same strata as Ashton Kutcher and U2 frontman Bono as the tech world's most influential celebrity investors.

Read MoreChina's tech elite like a new asset class: Start-ups

So in a complex sector where billions are harvested — and cash hungry start-ups are born and buried in the blink of an eye — how does one of rap's living legends define his investment philosophy? Jones' answer is surprisingly simple.

"People. That is the absolute No. 1," Jones told CNBC via email. "I love to bet on great people that inspire me and make me think or see things differently."

A big part of that has to do with the management team, Jones added, which "makes a huge difference in the kinds of companies that will stick out to me."



Some of the companies that have grabbed the artist's attention include Silicon Valley darlings like Lyft, Dropbox, Coinbase and Tradesy, all of which are part of QueensBridge's investment bailiwick.

The ride-sharing service and online storage provider are among technology's biggest "unicorns" — private startups valued at least $1 billion — and are poised to become publicly-traded companies once the current downturn subsides. One of QueensBridge's latest investments is LANDR, a start-up that uses big data and artificial intelligence to produce music. LANDR has raised more than $8 million from various sources in the last few years, including Jones' firm.

Silicon Valley is a long way from the rough and tumble world of the New York City neighborhood that's interwoven in the lore of Jones' musical mythology. The 42-year-old artist, an autodidact who dropped out of school after the eighth grade, told CNBC his affinity for learning led him to technology investing.

"I've always wanted to be surrounded by the smartest people in the world, and didn't want to limit that to just music," he wrote to CNBC.

"I want to meet the people who are innovating in all different fields, and investing lets me do that," Jones said. "I meet the people that are changing the game across all different industries, and I get to be there first at the ground level. It's helped me to progress tremendously in my business."


"It's not easy to find the projects that are going to generate a return, and you have to invest your time and energy — not just your money — into researching the companies that are going to do big things."-Nasir "Nas" Jones, Rapper and angel investor
Despite the recent downturn in the market, it's been a lucrative time to be a technology investor. Last year was a record for venture capital, with more than $128 billion finding their way to a range of companies worldwide, according to data from KPMG Enterprise and CB Insights. Funds for small start-ups, otherwise known as angel investments, have boomed into a $24 billion market by itself, the Center for Venture Research says.

QueensBridge is pitched by more than 100 companies per month, and invests in only a small fraction of them. Anthony Saleh, Jones' manager and partner at QueensBridge, told CNBC in a recent interview that the firm invests from $100,000 to $500,000 in a company, and has done more than 100 deals in the last six years.

Overall, QueensBridge invests in about 20 per year, Saleh said, adding that the firm is "much more top-down than bottom-up as investors. We concentrate on idea or the product, how big the market is and how the founding team is."

Read MoreTech firms face funding 'Hunger Games'

The due diligence process, Saleh told CNBC, can be at least as qualitative as quantitative. Investing in a potential company can include intangibles like "experience, grit, life motivation … those are keys to what we look at. Then we look at how those things kind of mesh."

Even in the freewheeling world of tech companies, corporate governance is a critical ingredient, he added.

"Nas' biggest fear is investing in a company" where the leadership may be unethical, Saleh told CNBC. "He tends to ask more questions about that."

Helping musicians make music

Source: LANDR
LANDR’s web application
QueensBridge, along with a clutch of other firms such as Warner Music Group, Real Ventures and YUL Ventures, recently invested in LANDR, where CEO Pascal Pilon fused his training in software engineering with business.

LANDR is Pilon's second start-up, and the post music-production service helps master music for more than 300,000 musicians. Mastering is the final step in music production that happens after you record all of the parts and mix them together.

"We felt there was lots of room for musicians to embrace this thing," Pilon told CNBC in a recent interview.


Given the expense and cumbersome effort involved in creating music masters, "Some musicians have never felt the instant gratification of completing a song, and don't have the money to release more songs," and LANDR helps them get there.

That argument cuts to the heart of the notion embraced by Jones and his team at QueensBridge: that a start-up investment is more than just about financial gain.

"I think anyone can be involved with investing if they have the means, but I'd advise anyone who wants to invest to be careful. You have to study it," Jones said. "It's not easy to find the projects that are going to generate a return, and you have to invest your time and energy — not just your money — into researching the companies that are going to do big things."


This rapper is an angel...investor, that is
 
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JamilALAmin

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:obama: Good shyt Nasir.
Never been a super huge fan of his music but I always fukked with dude. It's just music at the end of the day and breh always seemed like he was the type of cat I would want to demo with in real life.
 

QuavoFlow

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At30wecashout

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he was blessed with talent tho
We all have *some* sort of talent. Even then, just be forward thinking. I wanna get into the stocks soon cause im going to be out of all debt by years end, and ive spotted a couple companies I wanna get my feet wet in. Throw in IRAs and whatnot, time to spend this bread on making more bread. If you have a job and some self control, there is no reason to not be investing in something, and if not some entity, invest in yourself. He had a talent that paid off to a level many of us can only dream to achieve, but we can still make moves.
 

lucky lefty

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West Philly aka Illadelf aka Tha 215
bytch, plz
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FOH with these Lostsir Buffet bullshyt
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As if the monkey mascot for the failed, mafioso wannabe ass nikka's official clothing line Eschoe and a nikka who invested 18 years of child support payments into skeeting in that cartoon Arthur faced thot Kelist would ever be capable of amassing a billion pesos much less $'s
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And to do it b4 the GOAT aka Jigga?
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ciubaca

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We all have *some* sort of talent. Even then, just be forward thinking. I wanna get into the stocks soon cause im going to be out of all debt by years end, and ive spotted a couple companies I wanna get my feet wet in. Throw in IRAs and whatnot, time to spend this bread on making more bread. If you have a job and some self control, there is no reason to not be investing in something, and if not some entity, invest in yourself. He had a talent that paid off to a level many of us can only dream to achieve, but we can still make moves.
the "we all have some sort of talent" is bullshyt. Do you realise that there are 7 billion ppl on this planet.
Skill and talent are not the same thing
 

At30wecashout

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the "we all have some sort of talent" is bullshyt. Do you realise that there are 7 billion ppl on this planet.
Skill and talent are not the same thing
:wtf:Noooo, what you are saying is you dont have a talent. Everybody has a talent in *something*, that doesnt mean you can monetize it. However, that dont mean you shouldnt try.:francis:
 
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