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/biz/ - Business & Finance


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6512859 No.6512859 [Reply] [Original]

>Everyone on /biz/ is about to lose everything.

That's the final endgame redpill of all this. No matter how high your total is, you walk away with nothing.

>> No.6512882

>>6512859
It's gonna be a fun 6 months

>> No.6512896

>>6512859
i hope so tbqh

>> No.6512902
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6512902

>>6512859
so they are going to take the money and gold bars that I have cashed out already from my bank?

>> No.6512915

>>6512859
Fuck off faggot, I already converted most of my assets to USDT

>> No.6512920

>>6512859
I actually want it to crash hard and will ride it all the way down. Then double down.

>> No.6513076

>>6512920
Same here. The crypto scene needs a major purging.

>> No.6513095
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6513095

>>6512915
>USDT
>doesnt know that it can get fucked at any moment due to bitfinex scam

>> No.6513126

>>6512859

Nope, i already sold enough to make up for my initial investment. Still have $60,000 in profits if I cash out now

>> No.6513128

>>6513076
I got in pretty late, so basically my only hope to be rich is a huge fucking crash. I'd lose a fair bit of money holding while it did but I can be patient.

Also I wouldn't mind shitcoins being washed out.

>> No.6513134

>Among the bubbles or financial manias described by Mackay are the South Sea Company bubble of 1711–1720, the Mississippi Company bubble of 1719–1720, and the Dutch tulip mania of the early seventeenth century. According to Mackay, during this bubble, speculators from all walks of life bought and sold tulip bulbs and even futures contracts on them. Allegedly, some tulip bulb varieties briefly became the most expensive objects in the world during 1637.[5] Mackay's accounts are enlivened by colorful, comedic anecdotes, such as the Parisian hunchback who supposedly profited by renting out his hump as a writing desk during the height of the mania surrounding the Mississippi Company.

Two modern researchers, Peter Garber and Anne Goldgar, independently conclude that Mackay greatly exaggerated the scale and effects of the Tulip bubble,[6] and Mike Dash, in his modern popular history of the alleged bubble, notes that he believes the importance and extent of the tulip mania were overstated.[7]

>> No.6513151

>>6512859
The smug anime girl that killed linkies forever