There's an interesting realization I just had about Elon Musk and how he handles business "wounds." Years ago, Musk was ousted from PayPal — a decision that seemed like a failure at the time. But now, instead of just blaming, he's actively building a potential competitor capable of "disrupting" that entire payment platform.



The clever part is that Musk understands one thing — his influence extends far beyond PayPal. He doesn't just have X (, formerly Twitter), with hundreds of millions of users, but also a massive financial and technological backbone behind it. Musk's X Money is launching with a very specific strategy: offering high interest rates up to 6% to attract users from traditional platforms.

From a market perspective, this isn't a direct, classic battle with PayPal. Instead, it's a strategic move — Musk is building a financial ecosystem on X, where PayPal may no longer be the only option. With a 6% interest rate and direct integration into a platform used daily by millions, X Money is creating quite a strong appeal.

What's most interesting? Elon Musk has turned a business failure into motivation to build something that could change the entire landscape of digital payments. That's why I keep following his moves — not out of love or hate, but because he continuously pushes the boundaries of what can happen.
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