Ken Griffin’s 150 Million-Year-Old Jurassic Stegosaurus Skeleton Purchase Stuns the World

If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to have an almost unlimited bank account, just take a look at what Ken Griffin purchased for a whopping 8-figure sum at a Sotheby’s auction this week.

Eye-Watering Auction Numbers

Image Credit: Shutterstock / TZIDO SUN

Billionaire investor and founder of multinational hedge fund Citadel Ken Griffin has spent an eye-watering sum on a literal museum piece. But is it a work of art? Or a piece of ancient history? Not quite.

Apex at Auction

Image Credit: Shutterstock / lev radin

At a Sotheby’s auction in New York on Wednesday, Griffin beat out six other bidders to claim a 150 million-year-old late-Jurassic stegosaurus skeleton named ‘Apex.’

Beating Out Bidders

Image Credit: Shutterstock / PeopleImages.com – Yuri A

The 7 bidders reportedly went back and forth for 15 minutes, raising the price to an enormous $45 million.

7 Times the Estimated Sale Price

Image Credit: Pexels / Tima Miroshnichenko

The price tag ballooned much higher than the Sotheby’s auctioneers expected. Initially, Apex was only projected to sell for approximately $6 million.

Potential Loan to Museums

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Stock-Asso

Despite spending so much of his own money on the fossil, sources close to Griffin claim that he is already looking for avenues by which to loan the stegosaurus to a US institution.

Not the First Time

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Africa Studio

It wouldn’t be the first time the CEO has loaned items and made donations with US museums and other educational institutions in mind. In 2018, he donated $16.5 million to the Chicago Field Museum, contributing to a fund to purchase a cast of the world’s biggest dinosaur fossil.

Loaning Out the US Constitution

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Freedomz

Then in 2021, Griffin spent a similar $43.2 million to buy a first-edition copy of the US Constitution, which he then loaned to Arkansas’ Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.

Born in America, Staying in America

Image Credit: Shutterstock / zieusin

“Apex was born in America and is going to stay in America!” Griffin announced in a press release following the sale.

Unearthed in Colorado

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Nikolas_jkd

Apex, a nearly 27-foot-long specimen with 254 fossil bone elements, was discovered on private property in Moffat County, Colorado, and excavated between 2022 and 2023.

“Finest Specimen to Come to Market”

Image Credit: Shutterstock / fizkes

The enormous dinosaur skeleton was described by Sotheby’s as “the finest stegosaurus specimen to come to market, distinguished by its incredible size, virtual completeness, and exceptional level of preservation.”

Perfect Specimen

Image Credit: Shutterstock / lev radin

The global auction house also made note of its bone development and lack of any signs of arthritis, which would indicate that it lived to comparatively old age. It also bears no signs of post-mortem scavenging or other injuries.

Record-Breaking Fossil

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Wasan Tita

Apex was one of the most complete dinosaur specimens ever found and is now the highest-valued fossil to ever be successfully auctioned off.

Previous Record Holder

Image Credit: Shutterstock / TierneyMJ

The previous record was held by a full-sized T-Rex skeleton named “Stan,” which sold for $31.8 million at a Christie’s auction in 2020. Like Apex, it is one of the most complete dinosaur skeletons ever excavated.

A Rising Trend

Image Credit: Shutterstock / LStockStudio

Dinosaur auctions have increased in popularity in recent years, with demand sending fossil prices soaring at auction. Some paleontologists have raised alarms over the consumer trend, fearing that public institutions cannot compete with private bidders.

History of Large Purchases

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Indypendenz

Griffin, who is worth approximately $38 billion according to Forbes, is no stranger to making extravagant purchases, whether historical or material.

Real Estate Tycoon

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Michael O’Keene

In addition to his donations and loans to museums, he also broke real estate records when he purchased a New York penthouse for $238 million in 2019 – making it the most expensive home ever sold in the US.

Another Record Broken

Image Credit: Shutterstock / wutzkohphoto

He then broke a second real estate record in 2022 when he purchased a $107 million waterfront property in Miami-Dade County, the most expensive home purchased in the region.

$1 Billion Art Collection

Image Credit: Shutterstock / zhu difeng

The billionaire investor is also one of the world’s foremost art collectors, with a collection worth more than $1 billion that contains pieces by some of modern history’s most renowned artists,  including Basquiat, Degas, and Cézanne.

Continuing Success of Citadel

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Photo Smoothies

Through his Citadel hedge fund, Griffin and associates now manage more than $60 billion in client assets and trade the most stocks of any company in the world.

An Expanding Empire

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Pressmaster

Griffin’s empire is only expanding, and he is now the 35th richest person in the world and the richest resident of his new home state of Florida, after moving south in 2022.

23 Steep Taxes Adding to California Residents’ Burden

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Alex Millauer

California: a place of sunshine, innovation, and, unfortunately, some of the nation’s highest taxes. From LA’s beaches to Silicon Valley’s tech hubs, residents grapple with a maze of state taxes. Here’s a glance at 23 taxes that might surprise both Californians and outsiders. 23 Steep Taxes Adding to California Residents’ Burden

Cash in on Nostalgia: 21 Toys Now Worth a Fortune

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Kostikova Natalia

Time to dust off the boxes and find that once-cherished toy from your childhood. For collectors and enthusiasts, these items have become valued objects, and they can be worth big bucks – are there any of these in your attic? Cash in on Nostalgia: 21 Toys Now Worth a Fortune

Millennials Don’t Buy These 19 Products Anymore

Image Credit: Shutterstock / mariakray

Millennials are changing consumer habits, quietly replacing once-staple products and traditions. Often criticized for their disruptive preferences, this generation is reshaping the marketplace with digital expertise, ethical buying, and a taste for the unconventional. Millennials Don’t Buy These 19 Products Anymore

Featured Image Credit: Shutterstock / lev radin.

The content of this article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute or replace professional financial advice.