The 39-year-old joins fellow co-founder Forrest Li, whose larger stake in the fast-growing games-to-shopping company earned him a ten-digit fortune earlier this year. Ye, who moved to Singapore from China in the 1990s as a teenager and became a citizen shortly after his return from the US, has served as Sea’s chief operating officer since 2017.
The executive holds an 8.4% stake in the company and is worth US$1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. A company representative declined to comment on his net worth.
Shares in the company, which is part-owned by Chinese social media titan Tencent Holdings Ltd., reached an all-time high this month after Sea reported a tripling in revenue to US$610.1 million in the third quarter.
Sea's shares surged after outlook was raised for a second time in 2019
While gaming is Sea’s biggest business, e-commerce platform Shopee is also growing fast. The segment’s revenue more than tripled in the quarter, helping narrow net losses to US$206 million. Sea’s dependence on the success of “just a few game titles” was listed as one of its business risks in a 2018 annual report.
Shopee, whose television and online ads feature Juventus soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo, topped the mobile shopping category in Southeast Asia by monthly active users and downloads in the third quarter, according to researcher Iprice Group. While an influx of e-commerce giants from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. to Amazon.com Inc. onto Sea’s turf has sparked concerns over its growth, the company has a “firm lead in the region that’s tough to break,” Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Matthew Kanterman wrote in November.
Ye and Li are the latest billionaires to emerge from the gaming scene. Tim Sweeney, founder of Fortnite maker Epic Games, has a US$7.2 billion fortune while Gabe Newell -- whose Valve Corp. operates the Steam platform -- has a net worth of US$5.7 billion, according to Bloomberg’s ranking.