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To: SI Brad who wrote (1146)12/4/2010 11:59:24 PM
From: Carolyn   of 1187
 
Now I can relate to that! Children, particularly one's own, are prone to deflating egos!

Glad to see you checking in on SI now and again.

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To: SI Brad who wrote (1146)12/5/2010 12:01:36 AM
From: Cheeky Kid   of 1187
 
Nice to hear from you. How is Jill?

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From: Cheeky Kid12/17/2010 2:41:51 PM
   of 1187
 
Hard to believe 10 years, Year 2000 SI logo:


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From: Cheeky Kid12/17/2010 3:01:47 PM
   of 1187
 
SI screen-shot of SI's home page around 1999:


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To: Cheeky Kid who wrote (1150)12/17/2010 8:03:40 PM
From: S. maltophilia   of 1187
 
Well, the Nasdaq's held pretty steady since then<g>.

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To: SI Brad who wrote (1146)1/22/2011 5:35:56 PM
From: Urlman   of 1187
 
Good to see one of the SI founders still posting here!

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From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell3/6/2011 2:12:36 AM
7 Recommendations   of 1187
 
Vanity Fair
Excerpt
Betting on the Blind Side

Michael Burry always saw the world differently—due, he believed, to the childhood loss of one eye. So when the 32-year-old investor spotted the huge bubble in the subprime-mortgage bond market, in 2004, then created a way to bet against it, he wasn’t surprised that no one understood what he was doing. In an excerpt from his new book, The Big Short, the author charts Burry’s oddball maneuvers, his almost comical dealings with Goldman Sachs and other banks as the market collapsed, and the true reason for his visionary obsession.






Dr. Michael Burry in his home office, in Silicon Valley. “My nature is not to have friends,” Burry concluded years ago. “I’m happy in my own head.”

Excerpted from The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine, by Michael Lewis, to be published this month by W. W. Norton; © 2010 by the author.

...

Late one night in November 1996, while on a cardiology rotation at Saint Thomas Hospital, in Nashville, Tennessee, he logged on to a hospital computer and went to a message board called techstocks.com. There he created a thread called “value investing.” Having read everything there was to read about investing, he decided to learn a bit more about “investing in the real world.” A mania for Internet stocks gripped the market. A site for the Silicon Valley investor, circa 1996, was not a natural home for a sober-minded value investor. Still, many came, all with opinions. A few people grumbled about the very idea of a doctor having anything useful to say about investments, but over time he came to dominate the discussion. Dr. Mike Burry—as he always signed himself—sensed that other people on the thread were taking his advice and making money with it.

Read More vanityfair.com 

=====

Michael Burry's SI Profile
SI's Value Investing Board

- Jeff

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To: Urlman who wrote (1152)3/10/2011 12:17:32 AM
From: Praveena   of 1187
 
Yes

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From: Lahcim Leinad7/1/2011 3:53:25 AM
3 Recommendations   of 1187
 
What goes around, comes around. SI is in Brad's hands, again:

Message 27466660

WOOHOO!!! YEEHAAA! YIPPIE KI-YAY!!!

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To: Lahcim Leinad who wrote (1155)7/3/2011 6:40:34 PM
From: Lahcim Leinad2 Recommendations   of 1187
 
More:

Message 27470411

Message 27470464

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