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10 people who lost big in 2014

If your investment returns in 2014 tracked the stock market, you’d be up a respectable 8% for the year so far. If you bet big on one of several high-flying IPOs, such as Alibaba (BABA), GoPro (GPRO) or Lending Club (LC), you did a lot better.

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But big personalities tend to take big risks, and sometimes they end up a lot worse off than the average Joe. Here are 10 people who lost big in 2014:

Harold Hamm

AP Photo/Kevin Cederstrom
AP Photo/Kevin Cederstrom

This former wildcatter is one of the fracking leaders guiding the United States toward energy independence -- yet the markets have punished Hamm lately. The oil glut has pushed shares of Hamm's firm, Continental Resources (CLR), down 44% this year, and since Hamm owns 253 million shares, or about 69% of the firm, the value of his stake has fallen by some $6.2 billion. In November, a judge also ordered Hamm to pay his ex-wife Sue Ann $1 billion in a divorce settlement. That leaves Hamm down $7 billion or so.

Jeff Bezos

AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

He may have saved a storied outpost of journalism by purchasing The Washington Post earlier this year, but the source of Bezos' wealth -- Amazon.com (AMZN) -- suffered a steep 23% drop in its stock price in 2014. Amazon is still a leader in online retail, but big chains such as Walmart (WMT) and Target (TGT) are catching up, and Amazon's Fire phone was a flop. Since Bezos owns about 84 million shares of Amazon, roughly 18% of the company, the stock's slide cost him more than $7.5 billion. But don't worry: Bezos still has at least $25 billion.

Vince McMahon

AP Photo/Jessica Hill
AP Photo/Jessica Hill

World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), which McMahon founded and leads as CEO, has been on and off the mat this year, with the stock surging early in 2014 on big hopes for a new streaming network, then plunging as the streaming plan and other TV deals turned out to be disappointing. The brash McMahon, who owns nearly half of all WWE shares, briefly became a Forbes billionaire in January, but lost $500 million or more as the shares plunged a few months later.

Ray Rice

AP Photo/Gail Burton
AP Photo/Gail Burton

The former star running back for the Baltimore Ravens lost about $10 million in pay for the next three years when the NFL banned him indefinitely following the release of a videotape showing him hitting his wife in a hotel elevator. Rice has now been reinstated, and he's free to sign with another team for whatever he can get. But his two corporate sponsors, EA Sports and Nike, both canceled their contracts with him, thought to cost Rice about $1.6 million per year. He may never regain stardom or attract another corporate sponsor.