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.
đ¸ The 2020 Fed response taught him another:
Fiat money is fragile. Central banks can dilute it instantly.
Bitcoin changed the equation.
⢠No earnings to restate
⢠No CEO to remove
⢠No central bank to debase it
Bitcoin became the antithesis of everything that once destroyed him.
đŽ 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.
#Bitcoin #BTC #MichaelSaylor #Macro #Finance
#CryptoNarrativeShift