Anybody wants to guess?
Was it Yahoo, wasting 6 billions on broadcast.com? Was it pets.com going out of business shortly after buying SB ads? Well, wonder no more:
https://cryptotips.eu/en/news/micro...ng-dotcom-bubble-could-history-repeat-itself/
"Another person who would rather forget about history seems to be MicroStrategy’s CEO Michael Saylor (who just last week invested a second billion dollars of his company directly into Bitcoin).
In 2001, Fortune Magazine published a list of the top losers of the Tech Bubble. Ranked #1 was none other than Michael Saylor, who had a whopping $13.53 Billion LOSS! MicroStrategy’s shares went from $3300 to $4 (-99.99% decline), and SEC even accused him of fraud.
We’ve looked it up, and even Newsweek features a story on the man called confessions of a crash from back in 2001. To his credit, Saylor was 35 and has probably learned a lot in the past two decades."
https://www.newsweek.com/confessions-crash-153687
"When he was on the way up, Saylor had boasted about reading Machiavelli and ancient history (in his bookshelf, alongside Letitia Baldrige's "Complete Guide to Executive Manners," is a thick volume on the Romans). Did he have any premonition that he was guilty of hubris? No, he says."
History repeats...
Was it Yahoo, wasting 6 billions on broadcast.com? Was it pets.com going out of business shortly after buying SB ads? Well, wonder no more:
https://cryptotips.eu/en/news/micro...ng-dotcom-bubble-could-history-repeat-itself/
"Another person who would rather forget about history seems to be MicroStrategy’s CEO Michael Saylor (who just last week invested a second billion dollars of his company directly into Bitcoin).
In 2001, Fortune Magazine published a list of the top losers of the Tech Bubble. Ranked #1 was none other than Michael Saylor, who had a whopping $13.53 Billion LOSS! MicroStrategy’s shares went from $3300 to $4 (-99.99% decline), and SEC even accused him of fraud.
We’ve looked it up, and even Newsweek features a story on the man called confessions of a crash from back in 2001. To his credit, Saylor was 35 and has probably learned a lot in the past two decades."
https://www.newsweek.com/confessions-crash-153687
"When he was on the way up, Saylor had boasted about reading Machiavelli and ancient history (in his bookshelf, alongside Letitia Baldrige's "Complete Guide to Executive Manners," is a thick volume on the Romans). Did he have any premonition that he was guilty of hubris? No, he says."
History repeats...
