On March 20, 2000, one man lost $6 BILLION in a single trading day.
Not over months.
Not over weeks.
In just 6.5 hours.
The SEC verified it.
The Washington Post called it the largest one-day personal loss in history.
That man was Michael Saylor.
Fast forward to today:
Saylor now controls 672,497 BTC â roughly 3.2% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist.
đ° Total cost basis: $50.44 billion
Hereâs what Wall Street completely missed đ
The mindset required to survive a $6B wipeout without breaking is the same mindset required to hold extreme conviction in a single, volatile asset.
This isnât gambling.
This isnât recklessness.
This is trauma-forged conviction.
đ The 2000 dot-com crash taught him one brutal lesson:
Accounting profits are fragile. Regulators can erase them overnight.
đž The 2020 Fed response taught him another:
Fiat money is fragile. Central banks can dilute it instantly.
Bitcoin changed the equation.
âą No earnings to restate
âą No CEO to remove
âą No central bank to debase it
Bitcoin became the antithesis of everything that once destroyed him.
đź The falsifiable bet:
By December 2026, Michael Saylor will either:
Be worth $50B+, or
Suffer the second catastrophic loss of his career
There is no middle ground.
đ The math is unforgiving.
The same man who said âBitcoinâs days are numberedâ in 2013 (yes, the tweet still exists) now holds more BTC than any corporation, fund, or government â except Satoshi.
So what is it?
đ§ Genius?
đ Or repetition compulsion?
âł The final verdict arrives by 2030.
Bookmark this.
$BTC

#Bitcoin #BTC #MichaelSaylor #Macro #Finance #CryptoNarrativeShift