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Larry Page Exits California to Dodge Billionaire Tax While Nvidia's Jensen Huang Says 'So Be It'

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Google co-founder Larry Page orchestrated a last-minute exit from California before a critical deadline, moving billions in assets to avoid a proposed 5% wealth tax. Meanwhile, Nvidia's CEO says he hasn't lost sleep over it.

The Great California Divide

Silicon Valley's billionaires are splitting into two camps, and the dividing line is a proposed wealth tax. On one side: Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) (GOOGL) co-founder Larry Page, who quietly packed up his empire and left. On the other: Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang, who says the whole thing never even crossed his mind.

It's a fascinating divergence in philosophy. Both men are tech royalty. Both have built massive fortunes in California. But when faced with a potential 5% levy on their wealth, they chose radically different paths.

Racing Against the Clock

Page, currently the world's second-richest person with a $276 billion net worth according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, didn't leave this to chance. He orchestrated a complete exit before January 1, 2026, the critical deadline that would determine who's on the hook.

Here's how it works: California's proposed "Billionaire Tax Act," heading to voters in November, would retroactively hit anyone who was a state resident on Jan. 1, 2026 with a 5% levy on their global assets. That's retroactive taxation with a clear line in the sand. Stay in California past New Year's Eve 2025, and you're potentially liable for billions.

For Page, the math was straightforward. Filings reviewed by Business Insider show his family office, Koop, was converted from a California entity to a Delaware corporation in late December. He had already physically departed the state. One extra day could have meant a tax bill measured in the billions.

Huang's Indifference

Now contrast that with Huang's response. During a recent Bloomberg interview, the Nvidia chief dismissed the entire controversy with the kind of zen confidence that only comes from either not caring about money or caring deeply about something else.

"We work in Silicon Valley because that's where the talent pool is," Huang explained. When directly asked if the billionaire tax worried him, his answer was refreshingly blunt: "It never crossed my mind once. Whatever taxes I guess they would like to apply, so be it. I'm perfectly fine with it."

Huang framed his decision around building the future rather than optimizing tax strategy. It's a stark philosophical difference from the careful asset migration happening elsewhere in Silicon Valley.

Where Everything Went

Page didn't just change his mailing address. He systematically relocated the physical and legal footprint of his various ventures to states with friendlier tax regimes.

Delaware got the legal incorporation of his empire, a predictable choice given the state's corporate privacy protections. But the actual operations scattered to various tax havens. Flu Lab LLC, his influenza research organization, now lists Nevada as its principal office. One Aero, which funds flying car ventures, relocated to Florida. Dynatomics, his AI startup, set up shop in Keller, Texas.

It's a textbook example of what happens when high-net-worth individuals face aggressive taxation: assets become mobile, and suddenly Delaware, Nevada, Florida, and Texas look a lot more attractive.

The Bigger Picture

Page isn't alone in this exodus. He's joining Peter Thiel and Elon Musk, who previously left California for similar reasons. The trend is creating genuine concern among those who worry about the state's innovation ecosystem.

Venture capitalist Vinod Khosla argued on X that California would "net off much worse" by driving away its wealthiest taxpayers. San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan went further, calling the proposal "a political plan that will sink California's innovation economy."

The tax is designed to fund healthcare and education initiatives, but critics warn that the capital flight could cost the state more than it gains. When your top taxpayers have the resources and motivation to relocate, a wealth tax becomes a game of chicken.

With the measure heading to voters in November and the deadline looming in early 2026, the question now is how many more tech titans will follow Page out the door. The divide between the Larry Pages and Jensen Huangs of the world tells you everything about how differently the ultra-wealthy think about money, place, and legacy.

Larry Page Exits California to Dodge Billionaire Tax While Nvidia's Jensen Huang Says 'So Be It'

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Google co-founder Larry Page orchestrated a last-minute exit from California before a critical deadline, moving billions in assets to avoid a proposed 5% wealth tax. Meanwhile, Nvidia's CEO says he hasn't lost sleep over it.

The Great California Divide

Silicon Valley's billionaires are splitting into two camps, and the dividing line is a proposed wealth tax. On one side: Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) (GOOGL) co-founder Larry Page, who quietly packed up his empire and left. On the other: Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang, who says the whole thing never even crossed his mind.

It's a fascinating divergence in philosophy. Both men are tech royalty. Both have built massive fortunes in California. But when faced with a potential 5% levy on their wealth, they chose radically different paths.

Racing Against the Clock

Page, currently the world's second-richest person with a $276 billion net worth according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, didn't leave this to chance. He orchestrated a complete exit before January 1, 2026, the critical deadline that would determine who's on the hook.

Here's how it works: California's proposed "Billionaire Tax Act," heading to voters in November, would retroactively hit anyone who was a state resident on Jan. 1, 2026 with a 5% levy on their global assets. That's retroactive taxation with a clear line in the sand. Stay in California past New Year's Eve 2025, and you're potentially liable for billions.

For Page, the math was straightforward. Filings reviewed by Business Insider show his family office, Koop, was converted from a California entity to a Delaware corporation in late December. He had already physically departed the state. One extra day could have meant a tax bill measured in the billions.

Huang's Indifference

Now contrast that with Huang's response. During a recent Bloomberg interview, the Nvidia chief dismissed the entire controversy with the kind of zen confidence that only comes from either not caring about money or caring deeply about something else.

"We work in Silicon Valley because that's where the talent pool is," Huang explained. When directly asked if the billionaire tax worried him, his answer was refreshingly blunt: "It never crossed my mind once. Whatever taxes I guess they would like to apply, so be it. I'm perfectly fine with it."

Huang framed his decision around building the future rather than optimizing tax strategy. It's a stark philosophical difference from the careful asset migration happening elsewhere in Silicon Valley.

Where Everything Went

Page didn't just change his mailing address. He systematically relocated the physical and legal footprint of his various ventures to states with friendlier tax regimes.

Delaware got the legal incorporation of his empire, a predictable choice given the state's corporate privacy protections. But the actual operations scattered to various tax havens. Flu Lab LLC, his influenza research organization, now lists Nevada as its principal office. One Aero, which funds flying car ventures, relocated to Florida. Dynatomics, his AI startup, set up shop in Keller, Texas.

It's a textbook example of what happens when high-net-worth individuals face aggressive taxation: assets become mobile, and suddenly Delaware, Nevada, Florida, and Texas look a lot more attractive.

The Bigger Picture

Page isn't alone in this exodus. He's joining Peter Thiel and Elon Musk, who previously left California for similar reasons. The trend is creating genuine concern among those who worry about the state's innovation ecosystem.

Venture capitalist Vinod Khosla argued on X that California would "net off much worse" by driving away its wealthiest taxpayers. San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan went further, calling the proposal "a political plan that will sink California's innovation economy."

The tax is designed to fund healthcare and education initiatives, but critics warn that the capital flight could cost the state more than it gains. When your top taxpayers have the resources and motivation to relocate, a wealth tax becomes a game of chicken.

With the measure heading to voters in November and the deadline looming in early 2026, the question now is how many more tech titans will follow Page out the door. The divide between the Larry Pages and Jensen Huangs of the world tells you everything about how differently the ultra-wealthy think about money, place, and legacy.