March 20, 2000 – one man lost $6 BILLION in a single day.
Not over months. Not over weeks.
Just 6.5 hours.

The SEC confirmed it. The Washington Post called it "the most any single person had ever lost in 24 hours."

His name was Michael Saylor.

Today, he controls 672,497 $BTC – that's 3.2% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist.
Cost basis: $50.44 billion.

What Wall Street missed:
The same psychology that lets someone absorb a $6B loss without breaking is the exact same psychology that drives unbreakable conviction in one volatile asset.

This isn't recklessness.
This is trauma architecture.

The 2000 crash taught him:
Accounting profits are fiction – regulators can restate them overnight.

The 2020 Fed response taught him:
Fiat currency is fiction – central banks can debase it overnight.

Bitcoin has no earnings to restate. Bitcoin has no central bank to debase it.

He found the antithesis of everything that once destroyed him.

The falsifiable prediction:

By December 2026, Saylor will either be worth $50B+… or face his second catastrophic loss in one career.

There is no middle ground.

The math is merciless.

The same guy who tweeted in 2013 that Bitcoin's "days are numbered" (that tweet still exists) now holds more BTC than any corporation, any sovereign wealth fund, any individual – except Satoshi.

Genius… or repetition compulsion?

The verdict comes by 2030.

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Note: This is a fascinating story and analysis. Crypto markets are highly volatile – always DYOR! 😎

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