On Valentine’s Day 2000, I went to work for a dot com. I was given stock options at $24 for a company that had not gone public yet. The company went public 3rd March 2000. The stock peaked at $69 that day. By 10th March 2000, the day NASDAQ peaked during the dot com bubble, it was at $109. It reached its high a few days later at $116. One year later, it was below $6.
My brother cashed out his stock options a few days after the peak in 2000. Instant millionaire, early retirement. Two years later he went back to work — still rich, but bored out of his mind. Happily working (and even richer) today. But then, the company he’d been at is still around today, as well. Not all dot coms were scams.
BE THIS GUY over 1 year ago
On Valentine’s Day 2000, I went to work for a dot com. I was given stock options at $24 for a company that had not gone public yet. The company went public 3rd March 2000. The stock peaked at $69 that day. By 10th March 2000, the day NASDAQ peaked during the dot com bubble, it was at $109. It reached its high a few days later at $116. One year later, it was below $6.
SHIVA over 1 year ago
Looks like Zipper in disguise!!
droosan Premium Member over 1 year ago
I have beat a hasty exit from every company that has tried this with me.
Not one of them ever later actually went public.
snsurone76 over 1 year ago
Why doesn’t Trent just quit and get a REAL job??
snsurone76 over 1 year ago
I wonder how many people went broke when given shares in Trumpty-Dumpty’s companies.
Especially the ones that eventually went bankrupt!!
dwdl21 over 1 year ago
Mikes a rino? lol
mindjob over 1 year ago
Before stock options, companies would promise profit sharing. There were usually no profits, and no sharing
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member over 1 year ago
I’ve been doing the 401k for a while. Apparently, I have some stock. For all that, I still have to pay the mortgage with real money.
pshapley Premium Member over 1 year ago
My brother cashed out his stock options a few days after the peak in 2000. Instant millionaire, early retirement. Two years later he went back to work — still rich, but bored out of his mind. Happily working (and even richer) today. But then, the company he’d been at is still around today, as well. Not all dot coms were scams.
Dean over 1 year ago
Stock options can make a delicious soup.
kaffekup over 1 year ago
So they’ve had the IPO since yesterday? Otherwise, how would he have stock to share? Obviously, they aren’t deep in debt from paying salaries.
Maybe they need to devise a product, not a feature.