Held mstr leaps for 20 months, big up then failed to sell.

    https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1p4gja9

    Posted by staygold-ne

    37 Comments

    1. I’ve been telling everyone around here, butt nobody wants to listen…so hear me meow.

      Fries in the bag, please.

    2. Sober_Alcoholic_ on

      How can you not put away at LEAST 500k to be your retirement fund forever, then just not be retarded and live off the 200k using ICs or something?

      This probably isn’t real is it. Fuck it. Already this deep into typing

    3. Womp Womp bro, anyone who deserves to make money would’ve sold MSTR long time ago, the dip just keeps dipping. HODLL

    4. Stay strong, you did it once you can do it again. But have an exit plan and manage your risk next time.

    5. It’s funny because all the past-the-post retards that will laugh at you for “XYZ wasn’t enough?” say that only because they’ve never been in that position where you’re up so high because you held through conviction. The only part they get right is that the same determination to hold to get you to those insane highs is also what brings your downfall as well. Hard to have the balls to hold for so long to forget that the objective is to eventually exit. Sorry for the loss, had a rough go of it in the past month as well, good luck to the both of us in the future.

    6. 740K down to 1K. no where in between you wanted to set a stop loss or sell? like at 600K or 500K or 400K or 300K or 200K or 100K

    7. mord_fustang115 on

      Don’t worry, Michael saylor will post another weird AI generated picture of himself in some sort of scenario, maybe he’ll be flying this time. What could go wrong when your entire company depends on BTC increasing in price forever. The sad part is that he and the scam artists behind tether will be fine

    8. I listen to Adami and Nathan and one of the common narratives they’ve been pitching is that if the price of corn goes below MSTR’s average price of $74k it could not only cause a precipitous fall in MSTR but also do a not inconsiderable amount of collateral damage to the wider market.

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