Alright, fam, buckle up for a wild ride into finance history with a banger fact that'll hit you like a hypebeast drop. Back in 1720, the South Sea Company bubble popped off in Britain, and it was straight-up peak brainrot energy. These OGs were flexing a scam-tastic scheme, promising mad stacks from trading with South America, but it was all cap—no ships, no drip, just vibes. Investors went full degen, yeeting their bags into the stonk like it was gonna 100x, pumping it to absurd valuations before the whole thing imploded harder than a TikTok trend after a ban. Peeps lost their minds and their shillings, and Sir Isaac Newton—yep, the apple guy—got rekt so bad he said, “I can’t math the madness of men,” dropping a fat L on his portfolio. It’s the ultimate glow-up-to-ghosted arc, a cautionary tale of FOMO gone turbo, and proof even the biggest brain chads can get cooked in the market. W history, no cap.
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