Most Expensive Mistakes in History - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

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Imagine how it would feel to hit the jackpot at one point in your life, but to not even
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realize it until years later.
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To be involved in the early stages of a startup that would go on to become a multi-billion-dollar
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enterprise, but then walk away practically penniless before it had even gained momentum.
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It would probably be similar to that feeling you get when you put off buying a plane ticket,
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then check the airline website a few weeks later to find the price has doubled.
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If you want to feel better about yourself for all the times you wasted or lost money,
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then keep watching.
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Your slip-ups won’t even come close to these ridiculously expensive historic mistakes – I’ll
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bet you ten thousand dollars.
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Let’s start off modestly – and by modest, I mean a mistake that cost less than $100
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million dollars.
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That’s how expensive we’re talking for the rest of the video.
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In 2014, a French train company ordered two thousand new trains for its cross-country
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railways.
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The manufacturer proceeded to design, make, and ship out these trains…only for the French
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officials to have a horrible realization.
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The trains they’d ordered were too wide to actually fit on the rails.
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How could this have happened?
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Turns out those officials failed to measure all the stations.
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Some of the rails fit the train perfectly, but others were 50 years older and much thinner.
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Amazingly, everyone had forgotten that there were railways of different sizes.
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The good news is that they didn’t need to throw away the trains.
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But the bad news is that the only way to solve the problem was to widen all the older, thinner
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rails to make them the right size for the trains.
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There were over a thousand stations to change, making the total cost $68.4 million.
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That’s on top of the $20.5 billion it cost to make the trains in the first place.
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But if you thought that was bad, wait until you hear about the guy who single-handedly
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lost more than $100 million.
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Investing in Bitcoin at its low and selling during the peak is an investor’s dream.
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But the only people crazy enough to buy Bitcoin in its early days were a few technology afficionados
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with a passion for cybersecurity.
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One of them was the British IT worker James Howells.
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Can you see where I’m going with this?
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Howells mined a whopping 7,500 bitcoins back in 2013.
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Do you know how much a single bitcoin is worth now?
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Yeah…
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Unfortunately, James got careless.
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One day he decided he wanted a new computer, so he broke his old laptop into parts so he
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could sell them individually.
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Although he had the foresight to keep the hard drive in case bitcoins did gain value
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one day, let’s face it.
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Keeping a hard drive worth millions lying around your house is a disaster waiting to
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happen.
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One day, the man was cleaning his house when he accidentally placed the hard drive in the
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trash can.
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The trash ended up in a landfill site – and James didn’t even notice until years later.
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Bitcoin eventually hit its peak, leaving James’ collection to be worth a whopping $127 million.
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In theory.
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Except there was absolutely no way of accessing it.
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Naturally, James did everything he could to try and retrieve the bitcoins, turning up
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at the landfill and begging his local council to let him search for the hard drive himself.
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But it was no luck – the officials deemed searching through the landfill a safety risk
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due to the potential of toxic gases and fires.
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Alas, James was forced to soldier on knowing he’d made one of the most expensive mistakes
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ever.
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Poor guy.
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You could say that investing in Bitcoin in the early days is just like winning the lottery,
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and losing the coins is like throwing away your winning ticket.
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But what about actually winning the lottery and losing it?
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Yup, that’s happened too.
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Some more careless Brits bought a few lottery tickets, one of which went on to be the winner.
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Imagine the joy!
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The excitement!
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Your mind racing as you thought about how you’d spend the money…
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Unfortunately, this pair made a fatal error.
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They also had a few losing tickets, so to avoid confusion, the husband tried to throw
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away the losing tickets.
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But – you guessed it – he ended up throwing away the winning ticket instead.
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If ever there was a test of true love, it’s got to be that…
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In some ways, you could say that their lottery ticket was as good as lost in space.
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And it’s not the only thing lost in space that’s worth millions…
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In 1998, NASA launched a Mars Climate Orbiter – in other words, a space probe that was
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sent off to orbit Mars and study its atmosphere and surface.
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As that orbiter left earth, little did the engineers know that they’d made a fatal
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mistake when calibrating the units of measurement on the machine.
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The team had used English units of measurement instead of the metric system more commonly
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used for that type of operation.
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It might not sound like a big deal, but we’re talking about rocket science here – kind
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of.
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As a result, the spacecraft team managing the orbiter were using different units to
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the flight team.
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Everything was mixed up.
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Navigation commands were released in one set of units, and read in another.
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And yet nobody realized until everyone was together to celebrate the entry of the ship
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into Mars’ orbit.
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Instead, they watched everything go wrong.
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Due to the problems with unit conversions, the engine of the orbiter fired when it was
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100 kilometers closer to Mars than planned and 25 kilometers below the level it was designed
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to function at.
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The engine failed to fire once it got to Mars and just continued into the atmosphere, leaving
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a nice crater behind.
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The total damage was $193 million.
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But it gets worse.
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Far worse.
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We’ve all pressed send on a text in a split second, only to realize that we had a stupid
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typo in the message.
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Most of the time, these messages are simply minor inconveniences or embarrassments – but
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occasionally, typos can be very expensive.
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This is one of those occasions.
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You don’t want to make a slip-up like this when you’re trading stocks and shares.
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In 2005, a Japanese broker listed a new company called J-Com at just 610,000 shares for 1
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yen each instead of issuing one share for 610,000 yen.
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Oops.
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Easy mistake.
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To put that into context, one Japanese yen was then the equivalent of 0.8 cents in US
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dollars.
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All in all, not a bad price for more than a half a million shares…
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The number of shares in the order was 41 times more than the number of shares that were actually
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available, so the broker was left with an order it literally couldn’t execute.
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Yet even though it was completely nonsensical, they couldn’t cancel it.
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In total, $225 million was lost as a result of the transaction.
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It was so phenomenal an error that the entire Nikkei 225 index, the Japanese equivalent
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of the S&P, dropped by almost 2% that day.
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One broker embarrassed the whole of Japan.
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I can only imagine how he felt going to work the next day.
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What’s that, you don’t think anything could beat $225 million of damage?
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Sweet summer child, we’re not even close to the level of economic damage humans can
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cause and have caused.
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Imagine being a visionary designer, convinced you’ve dreamed up the perfect car that the
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masses will flock to buy.
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Only to find that, in fact, nobody gave a damn.
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Let’s go back to 1958…
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Ford launched a new line of cars named the Edsel, a large family car.
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Supposedly, they’d proven consumer demand through a series of customer surveys.
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But at the time Ford had a bad reputation for basing their data collection on false
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assumptions, giving them results that would stroke their egos rather than grow their business.
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Nobody cared very much about the release of the Ford Edsel.
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As if making a car nobody wanted wasn’t bad enough, they ended up launching it in
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an environment where nobody could have afforded it even if they did want it.
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Just as the model was released to the public, the stock market declined, spooking consumers
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and putting them off making any big purchasing decisions.
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It’s estimated that the car manufacturer lost around $250 million due to their poor
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research and timing.
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Ouch.
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But now it’s time to take things up a notch.
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Before Alaska was a US state, it was owned by Russia.
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But in 1867, the nation decided the territory was more of a resource drain than a gold mine,
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and decided to sell instead.
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So, Russia struck a deal with the US, and agreed to sell them Alaska for $7.2 million.
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Little did they know how profitable Alaska would turn out to be.
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Russia thought they’d already exhausted the gold reserves of the region, but there
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turned out to be vast amounts of rich gold and oil sources still there.
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So much so that the US made a profit of $700 million from buying its 49th state, meaning
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Russia lost the same amount.
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Come on, Russia.
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I don’t condone colonization, but if you’re going to do it, then at least be smart about
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it.
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You might have thought that sounded like a big loss, but until now we’ve been talking
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baby money.
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Now it’s time to talk about those nine figure numbers.
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The Northrop B-2 Spirit, also known as the Stealth Bomber, is the most expensive plane
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in the US Air Force, worth a ridiculous $1.4 billion.
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So expensive that the government could only afford to make 21 of them.
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You’d think we’d handle something that valuable incredibly carefully, right?
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But you’d be wrong.
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One day, a pilot was on a test flight in Guam when the plane began to stall during take-off,
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crashing straightaway.
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Yep, that’s right – the plane was completely destroyed.
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All because there was moisture in the engines and a technique to remove it properly got
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lost in translation, resulting in water entering a sensor and making it faulty.
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You’d think they might have given the job of maintaining a plane worth $1 billion to
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a world-class expert, not the intern.
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Luckily the two pilots escaped carefully, and their lives were priceless, of course.
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You might think you could never be in the running to lose so much money as long as you
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stay away from machinery and business, but billions have also been lost at the hands
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of man’s oldest enemy: lust.
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After Tiger Wood’s infamous cheating scandal, the golfer is estimated to have lost $12 billion.
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That might seem like a crazy amount considering he was never actually worth that much in the
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first place, but the estimate includes value lost by shareholders of his former sponsors
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as a result of the affairs, as well as the sports star’s substantial personal loss.
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Would it have really been that hard to have kept it in your pants, Tiger?
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Do you think we can triple the size of that mistake?
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You bet we can.
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Everyone has heard of Steve Jobs, and if you’re a real Apple enthusiast you might have heard
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of Steve Wozniak.
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But what about Ron Wayne?
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He’s the third founder of Apple, but he decided to sell his equity back in 1976.
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Why would he make such a crazy decision?
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Wayne joined Jobs and Wozniak as an old hand with more experience and expertise.
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And it was precisely because he was at a different stage of his life that Wayne wasn’t prepared
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to take the financial risks involved in pursuing a project like Apple.
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Whereas Jobs and Wozniak were young men – aged 21 and 23 – with nothing to lose, Wayne
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had assets and became terrified of losing everything he had.
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So, he decided to sell his shares back to the co-founders.
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Wayne once held 10% of the shares for Apple, and guess how much he sold them for?
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$800.
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If only he’d decided to wait until 2013, his share would have been worth $35 billion.
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There’s no two ways about it – that’s a massive loss.
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But now think even bigger.
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You might have heard of the Dot Com bubble, a huge speculative bubble that built up at
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the start of the millennium.
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Investors had begun to suspect the internet and technology would be big, but they weren’t
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quite sure what form that would take or which companies would make it.
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Basically, lots of people got overexcited and started making some pretty big gambles.
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Two companies pitted as future successes were Time Warner and AOL.
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The two media companies merged together in 2000 at the height of the bubble – it was
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believed to be a genius move that would revolutionize the industry.
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Hey, stop laughing!
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Time Warner’s cable network and content would merge with the online presence of AOL,
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making them unbeatable together.
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At least, that was the theory.
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It couldn’t have been further from the truth…
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Firstly, the workplace cultures of the two firms didn’t exactly merge together smoothly.
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Then, things went from bad to worse.
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The bubble finally burst, plunging the economy into a recession and harming the merger.
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AOL was hit hard and forced to take a write-off of almost $100 billion by 2002, taking its
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stock value from a whopping $226 billion to a measly $20 billion.
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Ouch.
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By 2009, Time Warner left AOL with a valuation of $36 billion, leaving AOL with a value of
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just $2.5 billion.
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All in all, the whole thing resulted in a total loss of $146 billion.
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Well, if that doesn’t make you feel better about every stupid way you’ve wasted money
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then I don’t know what will.
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Check out our videos about the most expensive works of art destroyed by tourists and how
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the US lost a $1.4 billion aircraft.