eBay is one of those internet brands that feels like it has always existed. eBay was founded as AuctionWeb in California on September 3, 1995, by French-born Iranian-American computer programmer Pierre Omidyar as a hobby to make some extra money. Thirty years later, it’s one of the world’s biggest e-commerce platforms — but the question of who actually owns eBay today is more complex than most people realize.
The short answer: eBay trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker EBAY and is a component of the S&P 500 index, with a market cap of approximately $30 billion as of early 2026. No single person owns it — it is a publicly traded company dominated by large institutional investors. Here’s the full story.
eBay — Company Highlights
| Full Name | eBay Inc. |
| Founded | September 3, 1995 |
| Original Name | AuctionWeb |
| Founder | Pierre Omidyar |
| HQ | San Jose, California, USA |
| Current CEO | Jamie Iannone (since April 2020) |
| Stock Exchange | Nasdaq: EBAY |
| Market Cap | ~$30 billion (2026) |
| Type | Publicly traded company |
| Known For | Online auctions, buy-it-now marketplace, global e-commerce |
Who Owns eBay?
eBay is a publicly traded company, meaning ownership is distributed among millions of shareholders worldwide. The largest shareholders are institutional investors: The Vanguard Group, BlackRock, and State Street.
Vanguard Group owns 57.61 million eBay shares, accounting for 12.86% of the company. These ownership percentages are derived from 448 million outstanding shares, accurate as of December 31, 2025, according to SEC filings.
| Owner / Shareholder | Ownership Type | Stake | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Vanguard Group | Institutional Investor | ~12.86% | Largest single shareholder |
| BlackRock Inc. | Institutional Investor | ~8.5% | Major index fund manager |
| State Street | Institutional Investor | ~4.6% | Global asset manager |
| Morgan Stanley | Institutional Investor | ~3.9% | Investment bank |
| Pierre Omidyar | Founder | Under 5% | Focused on philanthropy |
| Jamie Iannone (CEO) | Insider | ~530,000 shares | Largest individual insider stake |
| Public / Retail Investors | Public Market | Remaining | Traded freely on Nasdaq |
eBay The Founder — Pierre Omidyar
Pierre Morad Omidyar is a French-born Iranian-American billionaire, technology entrepreneur, software engineer, and philanthropist. He is the founder of eBay, where he served as chairman from 1998 to 2015.
One of the first items sold on AuctionWeb was a broken laser pointer for $14.83. Omidyar contacted the winning bidder to ask if he understood that the laser pointer was broken; the buyer explained: “I’m a collector of broken laser pointers.”
Pierre Omidyar no longer holds a significant direct stake in the company. He sold the bulk of his shares years ago and has directed much of his wealth into the Omidyar Network, a philanthropic investment firm. His influence on eBay’s day-to-day operations is effectively zero.
In 2020, Omidyar stepped down from the board of eBay as part of a broader overhaul of the company.
Key Milestones and History
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1995 | Pierre Omidyar founds AuctionWeb in San Jose, California. First sale: a broken laser pointer for $14.83 |
| 1996 | Jeff Skoll joins as business partner |
| 1997 | Omidyar renames the company from AuctionWeb to eBay |
| 1998 | Meg Whitman comes aboard as CEO; company goes public on Nasdaq |
| 2002 | eBay and PayPal merge; acquisition valued at $1.5 billion |
| 2015 | PayPal spins off as a separate public company |
| 2019 | Elliott Management pushes for strategic overhaul |
| 2020 | Jamie Iannone takes over as eBay CEO in April 2020; Pierre Omidyar steps down from board |
| 2026 | eBay reports strong Q1 2026 results with accelerated GMV growth |
Current Leadership
CEO — Jamie Iannone

Jamie Iannone is the President and CEO of eBay Inc., a role he has held since April 2020. Before rejoining eBay, he held significant roles such as COO of Walmart eCommerce and CEO of SamsClub.com, where he spearheaded digital transformation initiatives. His earlier tenure at eBay from 2001 to 2009 saw him overseeing global search and buyer experience divisions.
Jamie Iannone’s net worth is estimated at $41–69 million as of 2025, including approximately $39 million in eBay stock holdings.
Board Chair — Paul Pressler
The eBay Board of Directors is chaired by Paul Pressler, with the board comprising experienced leaders from technology, retail, and finance, largely independent to ensure rigorous oversight of executive performance and strategic direction.
My Take on eBay
eBay doesn’t get enough credit for what it actually built. It didn’t just create an auction website — it created the concept of trusting a stranger on the internet with your money, which in 1995 was a genuinely radical idea. The platform survived the dot-com crash, the rise of Amazon, the PayPal spinoff, and years of activist investor pressure. That’s not luck — that’s a genuinely durable business. The current challenge under Jamie Iannone is relevance: eBay sits in a strange middle ground between Amazon’s convenience and the niche resale platforms like StockX and Depop that have captured younger buyers. The STEM-like opportunity here is in authentication and collectibles — categories where eBay’s depth of inventory is unmatched. Whether the company fully capitalizes on that remains the central question of the next decade.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Who owns eBay?
eBay is a publicly traded company. Its largest shareholders are The Vanguard Group (~12.86%), BlackRock (~8.5%), and State Street (~4.6%).
Q: Who founded eBay?
eBay was founded by Pierre Omidyar in 1995 in San Jose, California, originally under the name AuctionWeb.
Q: Does Pierre Omidyar still own eBay?
Pierre Omidyar no longer holds a significant direct stake in the company and stepped down from the board in 2020.
Q: Who is the current CEO of eBay?
Jamie Iannone has been President and CEO of eBay since April 2020.
Q: Is eBay publicly traded?
Yes. eBay trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker EBAY and is a component of the S&P 500 index.
Q: What is eBay’s market cap in 2026?
eBay had a market cap near $28–30 billion in 2026.
Q: What was eBay’s original name?
eBay was originally called AuctionWeb when it launched in 1995. The name was changed to eBay in September 1997.