Mark Zuckerberg was 23 and clueless about money. She was 38 and about to make him one of the richest humans alive. Everyone told her she was insane to leave. Sheryl Sandberg was 38 years old. A Vice President at Google. One of the most powerful women in Silicon Valley. And she was about to throw it all away for a company that had no idea how to make money. "Stay at Google. You're set for life." "Facebook is a college website. It will never last." "Why take the risk? You've already made it." She didn't listen. In December 2007, Sandberg met a 23-year-old kid named Mark Zuckerberg at a Christmas party. He had a website with millions of users. But the company was bleeding cash. No clear business model. No path to profit. Just a cool product and a prayer. They talked for an hour by the door. Then they kept meeting. Dinner after dinner at her home. Over 100 hours of conversations in six weeks. Zuckerberg needed someone to help him figure out how to turn his social network into a real business. Someone who knew how to make money. Sandberg had spent six years at Google building their advertising business. She helped create AdWords and AdSense. The products that turned Google into a money-printing machine. But Google wouldn't give her the role she wanted. She asked to become COO. They said no. Too many cooks in the kitchen already. So in March 2008, she made a decision that stunned everyone. She quit Google. Joined a company with $272 million in revenue and $56 million in losses. Here's what Sandberg understood that everyone else missed. Facebook wasn't a college website. It was the largest collection of personal data ever assembled. And that data could be turned into the most powerful advertising platform in history. Before Sandberg showed up, Facebook was "primarily interested in building a really cool site." Profits, they assumed, would follow. They assumed wrong. Sandberg got to work. She walked up to hundreds of employees. Introduced herself. Listened. Learned the business. Then she built an advertising machine. Within two years, Facebook became profitable. By 2010, one-third of all internet display advertising appeared on Facebook. Revenue hit $2 billion. By 2012, the company went public. Sandberg became the first woman on Facebook's board of directors. She became a billionaire. But she wasn't done. By 2021, the company she joined for $272 million in revenue? It generated $118 billion. That's over 43,000% growth. She did this while raising two kids. Writing a bestselling book called Lean In. Becoming one of the most influential voices for women in business. Then tragedy hit. On May 1, 2015, her husband Dave Goldberg collapsed on a treadmill at a resort in Mexico. Cardiac arrhythmia. He was 48 years old. Sandberg found him. His face was already turning blue. At the hospital, they asked if she wanted to say goodbye. She held him. She didn't want to let go. Her friend had to physically pull her away. Weeks later, Sandberg was planning a father-child event. But there was no father. She broke down crying. "But I want Dave." Her friend put his arm around her and said something that changed everything. "Option A is not available. So let's just kick the shit out of Option B." Sandberg could have disappeared. Could have stepped away from everything. Could have let grief swallow her whole. Instead, she wrote another book. Option B. About resilience. About facing adversity. About finding joy even when life destroys your plans. She returned to work. Raised her kids. Kept building. Because that's what she learned early on. When people tell you to play it safe, sometimes the safest thing is the biggest risk. When life takes away your first choice, you still have choices. When everyone says your best days are behind you, you get to decide if that's true. Sandberg didn't just survive Google thinking she was crazy for leaving. She didn't just survive building a $118 billion business from a money-losing social network. She survived losing the love of her life. And kept going. What "safe" path are you clinging to because everyone says it's the smart move? What tragedy are you treating like the end of your story? What Option B are you refusing to kick the shit out of? Sheryl Sandberg left a guaranteed thing for an uncertain thing. Built one of the biggest businesses in history. Lost her husband. Rebuilt her life. Not because she was special. Because she understood something most people don't. You don't win by avoiding risk. You don't win by staying comfortable. You win by making moves that scare you. And when life takes away Option A? You find Option B. And you make it work. Think Big
At the age of 88, when most people feel tired just starting their day, Shigeru Fujimoto wakes up at 2 a.m. He does some light stretching, makes a cup of coffee, and then turns on three computer monitors.
He watches the U.S. stock market, reads reports, analyzes the news, and then slowly tries to understand which direction the Japanese market might move. Nothing is based on guesswork—everything comes from years and years of experience.
Now, he needs a walking stick to move around. He has vision problems, so sometimes he uses a magnifying glass. He types on the keyboard with one finger. He makes mistakes. He faces losses. Yet every single day, he sits down again.
Today, his wealth is over 2 billion yen.
But there is no luxury in his life. No mobile phone. No car. He still wears a 15-year-old hat, which his wife has repaired many times.
Because to him, money is not something to show off. Money means focus, discipline, and responsibility.
At the age of 66, he learned to use a computer for the first time. Before that, he had never even touched a PC. Still, he said,
🇺🇸 JUST IN: SCOTT BESSENT SAYS TRUMP MAY NAME FED CHAIR NEXT WEEK
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent says President Trump could announce his next Federal Reserve Chair as early as next week, speaking from Davos.
The shortlist has narrowed from 11 candidates to 4, all of whom Trump has personally met with. Jerome Powell’s term ends May 2026.
FINALISTS: • Kevin Hassett = Director, National Economic Council -10% • Christopher Waller = Federal Reserve Governor - 13% • Kevin Warsh = Former Fed Governor - 46% • Rick Rieder = BlackRock CIO, Global Fixed Income - 26%
📊 POLYMARKET CURRENTLY PREDICTS KEVIN WARSH AS THE FRONTRUNNER.
🚨🇺🇸SUPREME COURT DELAYS RULING ON TRUMP'S TARIFFS -- NO DECISION TODAY
The Supreme Court delayed its ruling on Trump's tariffs again today, marking the third straight postponement.
This ongoing wait is keeping markets jittery, especially with fresh tariff threats floating around (like those 10-25% warnings aimed at European NATO allies over Greenland).
Investors see these repeated ruling delays as quietly bullish for the White House. Each extra week without a negative ruling seems to tilt the odds more toward Trump prevailing, avoiding any sudden policy U-turn.
Trade-sensitive sectors are still playing it cautious -- importers hedging costs means less appetite for stocks and crypto in the short term.
Tariff revenues currently account for ~$30B+ a month, and the longer SCOTUS delays a decision, the higher the odds of tariffs being upheld. ⚖
BILLIONAIRE RAY DALIO JUST WARNED THE GLOBAL MONETARY ORDER IS BREAKING DOWN ⚠️
Central banks are shying away from fiat currencies & sovereign debt. Trust in paper money? Eroding fast. Gold crushed tech markets last year as the ultimate hedge.
And with Trump’s Greenland push sparking tariff threats & “capital wars” fears—countries dumping U.S. assets? This accelerates the flight from fiat. 💸
👉 This chaos is why Bitcoin exists. When fiat trust crumbles & central banks hunt for harder assets, BTC steps up as digital gold—decentralized, scarce, borderless. No government can print it away.
Dalio even holds a bit himself. In a world of devaluing dollars & geopolitical madness, Bitcoin isn’t just surviving—it’s positioned to thrive as the ultimate non-sovereign money.
The old system cracks → new era for sound money begins
Right now we've got massive clusters of long liquidations stacked between ~90k–92k and another decent pocket around 95k–96k.
That green band at the top (supercarts / high-leverage longs) around 96k–98k is juicy – exactly the kind of liquidity pools that get hunted when the market wants to flush weak hands and then rip higher.
Short-term: Yeah, the market is getting jittery about Trump's tariff threats (China/Iran stuff resurfacing).
Sentiment is spooked, funding rates are flipping a bit negative in spots, and we could see a quick shakeout dip to grab those lower clusters.
Realistic targets: 88k or even a wick down to 86k if the fear spikes hard.But here's the bullish part: once those lower liqs get swept (classic liquidity grab), the path of least resistance flips. No real heavy resistance overhead until we clear the 96k–98k zone.
After flushing the weak longs below, expect a strong rebound – price should hunt that top green band, take out the 96k–98k liquidity, and likely print new highs in the process.This is textbook market-maker behavior: scare retail out, sweep lows, then deliver the real move up. Stack dips if you're conviction long – the structure still looks primed for continuation.
This cycle is different from the past ones.In previous Bitcoin runs, it was retail investors driving the wild rides—FOMO buying, panic selling, moon-or-bust swings.Now? It's institutions taking the wheel.Big players like hedge funds, corporations, and ETFs don't chase hype the same way. They build positions methodically, hedge their exposure, rebalance portfolios, and treat BTC as a long-term strategic asset.What that means in practice:Fewer explosive, one-way vertical pumps fueled by euphoria Smoother, more structured uptrends with real accumulation phases Pullbacks that feel "boring" compared to old-school chaos
Bottom line: Don't trade Bitcoin like it's still 2017. The game has changed—adapt to the institutional flow or get left behind. #CryptoMarkets #BTCCycle
The Bermuda government just announced a plan to build the world’s first fully on-chain national economy with help from Coinbase and Circle, revealed at the World Economic Forum in Davos. 🤯
Key facts: ✅ Government agencies will pilot stablecoin (USDC) payments for services. ✅ Local banks and businesses will integrate tokenization and digital payment rails. ✅ Nationwide digital finance education and onboarding programs are planned. ✅ Bermuda’s 2018 Digital Asset Business Act (DABA) laid the regulatory groundwork that enabled this. ✅ A $USDC airdrop at the 2025 Bermuda Digital Finance Forum already accelerated merchant acceptance on-chain.
This isn’t a pilot sandbox. It’s a national rollout of onchain infrastructure from government to SMBs to consumers.
Small island, big signal. Innovation isn’t coming, it’s already here.