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What Marvel's History and Success Taught Us About Personal Finance

What Marvel's History and Success Taught Us About Personal Finance

profileMing Feng

Today, when we think of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, we associate it with our favourite superheroes, one of Hollywood’s biggest brand, a multi-billion-dollar business.

Let’s take a look back at how far Marvel has come from the 1960s to 2019 with their latest movie, Avengers: Endgame.

TL;DR: Marvel’s journey from bankruptcy to billions and personal finance

Editor’s Note: There will be NO SPOILERS for AVENGERS: Endgame in this article. I promise!

If you haven’t bought your tickets to catch Avengers: Endgame, use this movie ticket pricing guide we have here to help you get the cheapest ticket!

Also, let’s play a fun mini game! Share with us which Avengers represent which investment products?

Share with us!


How much does Marvel Cinematic Universe profit from each movie?

Out of curiosity, here’s how much Marvel Cinematic Universe Movies profited from their movies.

Release DateMovieProduction Budget (Approx)Worldwide Box Office Income (Approx)
May 2008Iron Man$186 million$585.1 million
June 2008The Incredible Hulk$138 million$265.6 million
May 2010Iron Man 2$170 million$621.2 million
May 2011Thor$150 million$449.3 million
July 2011Captain America: The First Avenger$140 million$370.6 million
May 2012The Avengers$225 million$1.519 billion
May 2013Iron Man 3$200 million$1.215 billion
November 2013Thor: The Dark World$150 million$644.6 million
April 2014Captain America: The Winter Soldier$170 million$714.3 million
August 2014Guardian of the Galaxy$170 million$773.3 million
May 2015Avengers: Age of Ultron$331 million$1.405 billion
July 2015Ant-Man$130 million$519.3 million
May 2016Captain America: Civil War$250 million$1.15 billion
November 2016Doctor Strange$165 million$677.7 million
May 2017Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2$200 million$863.8 million
November 2017Thor: Ragnarok$180 million$854 million
February 2018Black Panther$200 million$1.34 billion
April 2018Avengers: Infinity War$400 million$2.05 billion
Jul 2018Ant-Man and the Wasp$130 million$622.7 million
Mar 2019Captain Marvel$152 million$1.1 billion
Apr 2019Avengers: Endgame$400 millionT.B.C.

Source: The Numbers

*Note: The figures are reflected in USD

Here is what the numbers above tell us:

  • Marvel spent a total of approximately S$3.91 billion on production
  • And made $17.74 billion  and counting from their movies

“Money. The best superpower of all.” – IronMan

History of Marvel

With the crazy success that we are looking at now, it is hard to believe that Marvel almost ceased to exist years back.

Very much like most of their superhero movies, there is usually a phase where it all seems lost. The heroes are losing the war, the city that they are trying to protect is in ruins. Ultimately, they managed to overcome those difficulties to emerge victoriously.

Below is a break down of Marvel’s story.

In 1996: Marvel filed for bankruptcy

The year 1996 is probably the darkest day for Marvel.

With the company losing money after a series of financial bubbles and bad decisions, what Marvel did:

  • Filed for bankruptcy on December 27, 1996
  • Buried in so much debt
  • Laid off one-third of their employees

Marvel sold cinematic rights to survive

Desperate to stay afloat, Marvel sold the cinematic rights of their characters to whoever willing to put some money into their pocket.

Given the circumstances, most of these deals were not in favour of Marvel.

A few examples of such deals include:

  • Blade to New Line Cinema
  • X-Men and the Fantastic Four to 20th Century Fox
  • Spider-Man to Sony Pictures
  • Hulk to Universal Pictures

Source: schmoesknow.com

While most of these movies went on to bag in good profits, while Marvel earned “peanuts” from the success.

  • Blade earned $131.2 million at the U.S. box office. Marvel only pocketed $25,000 from the rights
  • Spider-Man 1 and 2 brought in $3 billion for Sony Pictures, but Marvel only got $62 million

In 2005: Marvel launched Marvel Studios

It is definitely painful to watch, with other filmmakers milking profit out of Marvel’s characters except for themselves.

Marvel at this point in time, is left with characters that might have been popular with comic fans but not so popular when it comes to households.

Source: T-Shirt Terrorist

Editor’s note: Back then, most people assume Iron Man was a robot.

Marvel’s last resort was to put up the remaining of their character rights as collateral for the $525 million loan which they were about to take up to form Marvel Studios.

The collateral includes the rights to these characters:

  • Nick Fury
  • Black Panther
  • Ant-Man
  • Captain America
  • The Avengers
  • Cloak & Dagger
  • Doctor Strange
  • Hawkeye
  • Power Pack
  • Shang-Chi

Marvel took the risk with Iron Man and Hulk.

  • Hulk was an A-list Marvel character and was expected to do well
  • Plus, Hulk already had an exposure to live-action
  • Iron Man, on the other hand, was a bigger risk
  • Iron Man has never been in live-action
  • Both the Iron Man and Incredible Hulk movie will include parts of the bigger Marvel Universe, as part of the plan to build up to the Avengers

In 2009: Marvel’s gamble paid off, Disney’s Acquisition of Marvel

The risk they took paid off. Iron Man made $585.2 million. It kick-started a whole chain of successful movies after, under the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Source: Market Watch

The success ultimately caught Disney’s attention and they eventually acquired Marvel for $4 billion in the year 2009. Which, as of today, has reaped more than 300% of whatever they paid for.

Avengers is like your portfolio

  • Not all of them is a success
    (eg. Hulk was bad, Black Panther broke the cinematic records etc.)

After-Credits: What Marvel’s success taught us about personal finance

Investments: The need to look out for market changes and staying relevant

Marvel was not poor, to begin with. Some background story:

Marvel has always been a big name and had created some of the world most recognised superheroes. They enjoyed great success in the 60s through the 80s when comics were popular.

As the world transit into the 90s where more advanced technology made available, comic books became a dying medium.

While they always had the idea of movies, they did not put much emphasis on it. Because of that when the comic bubble of the 90s burst, Marvel went bankrupt.

Since then, they shifted their positioning and expanded their business models from comics to include films under Marvel Entertainment.

Personal Finance Takeaways

Advancements in technology often render business models obsolete, sometimes seemingly overnight.

With that in mind, investors should pick companies which are nimble enough to adapt to such changes or are constantly reinventing themselves and seeking diversification.

Career: Looking out for market changes and Staying relevant

From a career perspective, it is important for employees to constantly upgrade ourselves to stay relevant.

Very much like business models, the demand for a specific skill set can decrease too.

There is probably no career that can grant you true stability, which makes constant self-upgrading especially important.

Investment: Diversification in your portfolio

Marvel could have gone all out on Iron Man’s success and just produce Iron Man series, but they didn’t.

If we go down the list of all the movies they did over the years, they all bring in different percentages of profit when compared to their cost of production.

  • Think of Avengers as your investment portfolio
  • Each individual superhero in the Avengers will be your individual stocks
  • While each stock brings in a different return, there was a combination of safer stocks and risky ones
    (Iron Man was considered a risky investment back then, and the Hulk was the safer investment)
  • Fast forward to today, ultimately the diversification paid off and made money
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About Ming Feng
A stint in Bloomberg gifted me with a beer belly, which only grew larger when I moved on to become a Professional Trader. Now I turn caffeine into digestible finance-related content.
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