Early career After graduating college in 1993, Lore began his career at
Bankers Trust in New York City. He held various investment banking positions, including vice president of emerging markets risk management at
Credit Suisse First Boston and executive vice president of
Sanwa International Bank in London, where he was head of the bank's risk management division. In 1997, while at Credit Suisse First Boston, Lore and his colleague, Lev Borodovsky, started the
Global Association of Risk Professionals (GARP) and founded the
Financial Risk Manager (FRM) – a certification for
financial risk managers. Today an estimated 50,000 people have earned the certification while GARP has over 150,000 members from 195 countries. Lore and Borodovsky also wrote The Professional's Handbook of Financial Risk Management.
The Pit In 1999, Lore co-founded The Pit, Inc., an Internet market-making collectible company constructed as an alternative to
eBay. Lore was CEO and The Pit was sold to the sports collectibles company, The
Topps Company, Inc. for $5.7 million in 2001. Following the acquisition, Lore joined Topps as chief operating officer of gaming subsidiary
WizKids.
Diapers.com In 2005, Lore and Vinit Bharara founded 1800DIAPERS, later rebranded as
Diapers.com. Lore was CEO and in November 2014, Jet launched a campaign offering
stock options to users, generating word-of-mouth for the company in advance of launch. In January 2015, Jet was featured in a cover story in
Bloomberg Businessweek, in which it was revealed that Jet would be a shopping club in which members would pay an annual fee of $49.99 to access the lowest prices on millions of items; the membership fee was eliminated in October 2015. In February 2015, Jet raised $140 million in pre-launch funding from investors including
Bain Capital Ventures,
Accel Partners,
Alibaba Group,
New Enterprise Associates, and others. Beta testers in May 2015 reported cheaper prices than Amazon but longer delivery times. On July 21, 2015, Jet.com opened to the public. On August 8, 2016,
Walmart announced it had agreed to acquire Jet.com for $3.3 billion. Following the acquisition, Lore was appointed president and chief executive officer of Walmart U.S. eCommerce. On May 19, 2020, Walmart announced that it was shutting down Jet, directing visitors to use
Walmart.com instead.
Walmart After its first full year with Lore as CEO, Walmart's U.S. eCommerce sales grew 44%. According to Fool.com, "In the three full fiscal years since the Jet acquisition Walmart's eCommerce sales have nearly tripled, jumping 176%. The company has rapidly expanded grocery pickup and delivery and now has about 3,300 stores with grocery pickup and more than 1,850 stores offering grocery delivery, up from just a handful at the time of the Jet acquisition. Under the guidance of Lore, the company rolled out free two-day delivery for orders over $35 without a membership fee to compete with
Amazon Prime, and that was accelerated to free one-day delivery last year, shortly after Amazon made the same move in Prime. In the most recent quarter, Walmart expanded ship-from-store capabilities to 2,500 stores, leveraging the power of its store base, and it launched Express Delivery, promising delivery in two hours." In 2017, Walmart and Lore announced the launch of Store No. 8, a technology incubator based in the Silicon Valley. The initiative was named after an early Walmart store that founder,
Sam Walton, used to try out new retail strategies. At the 2017
Shoptalk conference in
Las Vegas, Lore said Store No. 8 will work with startups that specialize in areas that include
robotics,
virtual reality and
augmented reality,
machine learning, and
artificial intelligence. However, despite revenue growth, Walmart's e-commerce division incurred increasingly large losses: approximately $1.4 billion in 2018 and $1.7 billion in 2019.
Post-Walmart After stepping down from Walmart, Recode reported that Lore's latest project will be "a multi-decade project to build 'a city of the future' supported by 'a reformed version of capitalism.'"
Investor Lore is the lead investor in
Archer Aviation, an
electric vertical take-off and landing (
eVTOL) company focused on "advancing the benefits of sustainable air mobility." In February 2021, Archer announced Lore would be investing an additional $10 million as the company announced their $1 billion purchase order from
United Airlines and a
SPAC. On May 12, 2021
Alex Rodriguez and Lore announced a new
venture capital firm called Vision Capital People or VCP. The company launched with $50 million of the pair's own money and could eventually raise $300 million to $500 million. Rodriguez and Lore plan to take early-stage stakes of 40% to 80% in their portfolio companies, much larger than the typical venture approach, a model that Lore said he found "frustrating" when he sought capital for his previous startups. Their first investment was NOW//with, a social commerce company. On July 21, 2021, Lore, Rodriguez, and
Dave Portnoy were named as investors of online brokerage firm, Tornado.
Minnesota Timberwolves and Minnesota Lynx On April 10, 2021, Lore and Alex Rodriguez signed a letter of intent to purchase the
Minnesota Timberwolves and
Minnesota Lynx from
Glen Taylor. The deal became official on July 21, 2021, as the
NBA approved Rodriguez and Lore's purchase of the Minnesota Timberwolves. The deal began with a minority share and was designed to incrementally transfer additional shares over three years until majority ownership was established. In 2024, Taylor claimed a delayed payment invalidated the deal. In 2025, an arbitration panel decided in favor of Lore and Rodriguez, and final transfer awaits approval by the
NBA Board of Governors.
Telosa In September 2021, Lore announced
Telosa, a city he is building from scratch. The project's planners intend for the city to be built on desert land, with Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Arizona, Texas, and Appalachia proposed as potential locations. The name Telosa is derived from the Ancient Greek word telos, meaning "higher purpose". The proposed land ownership in the city is inspired by
Georgist principles, as advocated by political economist
Henry George in his 1879 book
Progress and Poverty. Under the proposed rules, anyone would be licensed to build, keep or sell a home, building or any other structure, but the city would retain ultimate ownership of the land.
Wonder Lore founded Wonder Group, a food delivery startup, in 2018; he is the
chairman and
CEO. Wonder calls itself a "modern food court," with brick-and-mortar storefronts in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and multiple towns in New Jersey and Long Island, as well as an outlet in a
Walmart in Pennsylvania. Customers can order from up to 30 different virtual restaurants, created with Wonder chef partners like
Bobby Flay,
Marcus Samuelsson, and
Jose Andres, and restaurants like DC-based Maydan or Texas-based Tejas Chocolate and Barbecue, from a single Wonder location. In December 2021,
CNBC reporting on Lore's involvement in Wonder, wrote: "Whether Americans are looking to order a quick bite from a local fast-food chain, or they want to feel like they’re eating at a five-star restaurant from the comfort of the living room, Marc Lore wants to redefine at-home dining." Wonder acquired
Blue Apron in November 2023. In March 2024, Wonder announced a $700M fundraising round. In November 2024, Wonder bought
Grubhub from
Just Eat Takeaway for $650 million. In May 2025, Wonder announced a $600M fundraising round led by existing shareholders
New Enterprise Associates,
Accel,
Google Ventures, and
Forerunner, as well as strategic investors, such as Amex Ventures. This round brought Wonder's valuation to $7 billion. ==Professional recognition==