I Sold for $25M. The Buyer Went Bankrupt. I Bought It Back for $2M.
Moneywise
Hampton
4.7 β’ 701 Ratings
ποΈ 26 May 2026
β±οΈ 53 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
Summary
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CHAPTER MARKERS
00:00 β Intro: Two trash bags and $3,000 in LA
02:15 β Austin's background: 10 years broke, restaurants, and the fitness world
07:52 β Gold's Gym, 1,000 employees, and the "building someone else's empire" moment
10:15 β The 203K loan, LA real estate at the bottom, and how it funded everything
12:41 β Buying one Bitcoin in 2013 at $700 and forgetting about it
15:37 β The Kickstarter: $445K raised, $150K in the hole, and 62 countries of shipping chaos
22:50 β Scaling to $35M and deciding to sell
25:23 β The $25M sale: deal structure, taxes, and what he actually walked away with
31:43 β Thrasio's collapse and buying the company back for $2M
37:48 β First thing he did with the money: retiring his parents and handing them a blank check
40:23 β Money, happiness, and why optionality is the real product
43:28 β Estate planning: why his son gets nothing until age 35
49:02 β Would you take $1 billion to walk away from everything?
He sold his company for $25M. The buyer went bankrupt. He bought it back for $2M.
Austin Wright moved to LA at 19 with $3K and two trash bags. He spent a decade broke, waiting tables, sleeping on an air mattress, sharing a car. Then he spent another decade grinding his way up to regional VP at Gold's Gym, overseeing nearly 1,000 employees and opening gyms across Southern California.
Then he quit to build something of his own.
What followed was a pop-up playpen that raised $445,000 on Kickstarter against a $20,000 goal β and nearly bankrupted him because he didn't account for international shipping. He dug out, scaled the brand to $35M in revenue, and sold it to a private equity firm called Thrasio for $25 million in 2021.Β
In this episode, Austin breaks down the real numbers: what he walked away with after the sale, how he structured the deal, where his $13β14M net worth actually sits today, the one thing he'd do differently with his money after the exit.
Topics covered:
- Growing up broke in LA and 10 years in the fitness industry
- How a $199K North Hollywood fixer became the seed capital for a gym business
- Buying one Bitcoin in 2013 at $700 and forgetting about it
- The Kickstarter that raised $445K and lost money
- Scaling California Beach Company to $35M and selling for $25M
- The Thrasio collapse
- Net worth breakdown: real estate, crypto, liquid vs. illiquid
- Estate planning and why his son won't inherit a dollar until he's 35
- Why Austin would turn down $1 billion
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Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | We ended up negotiating a deal to buy the company back for $2 million. |
| 0:04.0 | So less than one-tenth of what we sold it for. |
| 0:06.5 | Most founders dream about selling their company. |
| 0:09.3 | Austin Wright actually did. |
| 0:11.5 | He sold his company to a private equity firm called Thrasio for $25 million in 2021. |
| 0:17.0 | And then he walked away with somewhere around $7 or $8 million after taxes and payouts. |
| 0:22.3 | He went then and bought his parents a beach house in Florida in all cash. |
| 0:28.8 | Three years later, the firm that bought his company went bankrupt, |
| 0:32.8 | and Austin did the thing almost no founder ever gets to do. |
| 0:36.5 | He bought his company back. |
| 0:39.3 | This is the kind of story you only hear about in private rooms. It's the kind of conversation |
| 0:44.5 | that happens all the time in places like Hampton. Hampton is a private community for founders and |
| 0:50.3 | CEOs that actually produces money-wise. If you're running a company doing 3 million plus in |
| 0:55.7 | revenue, or you've had an exit of 10 million or more, Hampton might be the community you're |
| 1:01.3 | looking for. The average member is doing around $20 million a year. There's real founders. They |
| 1:06.5 | talk about their real numbers. It's awesome. Go check it out at joinhampton.com. What's up, everyone? |
| 1:13.7 | I'm Daniel Burke, and this is Money Wise. The show where wealthy founders tell you the real numbers, |
| 1:18.9 | what they made, what they kept, what they bought, and maybe what they regret. Today's guest started |
| 1:24.8 | with $3,000 and two trash bags of clothes in Los Angeles. |
| 1:29.0 | He bought one Bitcoin in 2013 and forgot he had it. |
| 1:33.0 | He sold for $25 million in 2021, and then he did The Impossible. |
| 1:38.5 | Let's get into it. |
... |
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