Are You Smarter Than Mark Cuban? Take This Quiz About His 'Shark Tank' Deals To Find Out T. WoodsAugust 23, 2025 at 10:18 PM Tony Rivetti / ABC Mark Cuban was on "Shark Tank" for 15 seasons and invested roughly $33 million in various businesses during that time.
- - Are You Smarter Than Mark Cuban? Take This Quiz About His 'Shark Tank' Deals To Find Out
T. WoodsAugust 23, 2025 at 10:18 PM
Tony Rivetti / ABC
Mark Cuban was on "Shark Tank" for 15 seasons and invested roughly $33 million in various businesses during that time. Earlier this year, he told CNBC he has profited $35 million in cash returns and a whopping $250 million in mark-to-market value (i.e., what they could be bought or sold for in today's market). Needless to say, Cuban knows what to invest in and how to make a profit on his investments.
Read More: Mark Cuban Says Trump's Tariffs Will Affect This Class of People the Most
Check Out: 8 Things You Must Do When Your Savings Reach $50,000
What about you? Do you have Cuban's knack for sensing an opportunity? Would you have avoided his few mistakes? Take this GOBankingRates quiz about Cuban's "Shark Tank" deals to find out.
Also see whether you are smarter than Warren Buffett.
Gage Skidmore/ZUMA Press Wire / SplashNews.com / Gage Skidmore/ZUMA Press Wire / SplashNews.comPaddle Boards
In 2011, Cuban was presented with the opportunity to invest in Tower Paddle Boards, a manufacturer of inflatable stand-up paddle boards. Ultimately, Cuban invested $150,000 in the company.
Would you have invested?
Find More: Mark Cuban Tells Americans To Stock Up on Consumables as Trump's Tariffs Hit — Here's What To Buy
Also See: Dave Ramsey Says This is the Best Way to Pay Off Debt
Trending Now: Suze Orman's Secret to a Wealthy Retirement--Have You Made This Money Move?
Jim Stone / Shutterstock / Jim Stone / ShutterstockThe Answer: Paddle Boards
If the answer is yes, you might be as smart as Mark Cuban. Per FinanceBuzz, the investment paid off over $1 million in dividends (and Cuban still has an ownership stake in the company).
See More: Here's How to Build an Emergency Fund Without Blowing Your Budget
Andrew H. Walker / Shutterstock.comNuts 'N More
A peanut butter bar that's healthy, high in protein, and tastes like delicious candy sounds just next to perfect, right? That's what Cuban thought when he invested $250,000 in the Nuts 'N More Company.
Would you have invested?
Jacob Kepler/Fortune / Shutterstock / Jacob Kepler/Fortune / ShutterstockThe Answer: Nuts 'N More
You'd be wise to say yes — per QZ, Cuban paid a quarter of a million dollars for 35% of Nuts 'N More, a company that then netted millions in profits.
ERIK S LESSER/EPA-EFE / Shutterstock / ERIK S LESSER/EPA-EFE / ShutterstockBreathometer
The Breathometer was a portable device that could connect to an iPhone and serve as a personal breathalyzer, allowing the user to test his or her blood-alcohol content before driving. The entire five-person "Shark Tank" panel, including Cuban, was so impressed with the Breathometer — and founder Charles Yim — that they pooled together $1 million for a 30% stake in the company, per Yahoo Finance.
Would you have invested?
Find Out: 7 Frugal Habits of the 'Shark Tank' Stars
Gage Skidmore/ZUMA Press Wire / Shutterstock / Gage Skidmore/ZUMA Press Wire / ShutterstockThe Answer: Breathometer
If you felt hesitant about investing in the Breathometer, you might be smarter than Cuban. He later called the investment "my biggest beating" on "Shark Tank." Cuban alleged that Yim took the "Shark Tank" financial investment and used it to party and travel under the guise of "networking" (something Yim has denied). Further, the Federal Trade Commission alleged the Breathometer was not accurate in measuring blood-alcohol content, and the device is not commercially available.
AFF-USA / Shutterstock.comSimple Sugars
Cuban felt a hometown connection to Simple Sugars skin care founder Lani Lazzari, who — like Cuban — is from Pittsburgh. Cuban also identified with the company because he, too, suffered from a skin condition. Ultimately, he invested a hefty $100,000 in the company.
Would you have invested?
Kathy Hutchins / Shutterstock.comThe Answer: Simple Sugars
Hopefully, you'd have invested, too. Following Cuban's investment, Simple Sugars now pulls in over $5 million yearly.
Explore More: Barbara Corcoran Put $62 Million Into Her 'Shark Tank' Investments — How Much Did She Make?
Roger Askew/The Oxford Union/REX / Roger Askew/The Oxford Union/REXHyConn
Cuban was so wowed by the HyConn — a device that connects fire hydrants to fire hoses more easily and speedily than normal — that he invested $1.25 million for sole ownership of the company.
Would you have invested?
Featureflash Photo Agency / Shutterstock.comThe Answer: HyConn
If you decided to opt out of such a massive investment, it's possible you're smarter than Cuban. The HyConn failed, though it's not clear as to why. As GOBankingRates previously reported, HyConn inventor Jeff Stroope alleges that Cuban's ego tripped up the device's ability to succeed, while Cuban maintains that Stroope artificially inflated his company's sale prices to fraudulently increase value.
More From GOBankingRates
5 Ways Trump Signing the GENIUS Act Could Impact Retirees
How Happy Couples Handle Money -- Even When They Disagree
How Middle-Class Earners Are Quietly Becoming Millionaires -- and How You Can, Too
5 Things You Must Do When Your Savings Reach $50,000
This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: Are You Smarter Than Mark Cuban? Take This Quiz About His 'Shark Tank' Deals To Find Out
Source: "AOL Money"
Source: EVENING MAG
Full Article on Source: EVENING MAG
#LALifestyle #USCelebrities