@Crypto__Haris It would change how my family sees life, for the trading journey - it will make me take more sensible trades and wait for the accurate triggers as I’ve noticed small tiny portfolio triggers more impatience
@inmortalcrypto Resonating with it totally. Been through the days I felt like i'd finally be able to fulfil all my dreams and then also been through the days I felt like there would be no morning - The best part, the charts always gave hope
Warren Buffett bought a dying textile mill out of pure spite. It became a $1 TRILLION company. He still calls it the dumbest decision of his career.
> In 1962 Buffett was running a small investment partnership called Buffett Partnership Ltd
> He spotted Berkshire Hathaway a failing textile mill in Massachusetts.
> Every time the mill closed a factory they bought back their own shares at a small premium.
> Buffett kept buying shares and flipping them back for a tiny profit.
> In 1964 CEO Seabury Stanton shook hands with Buffett and verbally agreed to buy his shares at $11.50 each.
> When the written offer arrived it said $11.375 exactly 12.5 cents less than agreed.
> Buffett wrote later that he felt "chiseled".
> Instead of selling he went and bought every single share he could find.
> By May 1965 Buffett Partnership had taken control of Berkshire Hathaway.
> He fired Stanton on the spot.
> He had just spent $14 MILLION buying a dying textile business out of pure spite.
> For years it earned almost nothing.
> His partner Charlie Munger told him from day one it was a catastrophic mistake.
> Buffett ignored him, then he started using Berkshire as a shell to buy insurance companies and invest the premiums.
> That single pivot triggered entirely by anger over 12.5 CENTS built one of the greatest investment empires in history.
> Berkshire Hathaway is now worth over $1 TRILLION.
> It holds $325 BILLION in cash alone more than the GDP of most countries.
> Buffett retired as CEO on December 31 2025 at age 95 after 60 years.
> In a 2010 CNBC interview he called Berkshire "the dumbest stock I ever bought".
> He estimated his anger over 12.5 cents cost him $200 BILLION in lost compounding.
> His net worth today is $150 BILLION almost entirely from the company he bought out of spite.
The most expensive argument in business history started with 12.5 cents.
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I'll bless a bunch of people in few hours.
Must follow me, repost and like this post
Drop solana address
Time to give back some!
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