Not missing a beat, I manipulate the air screen, showcasing real-time data from the stock market.
It's a jaw-dropping moment: Eisen's numbers are in freefall. I can practically hear the collective gasps as people in the Grand Hall fumble with their devices, rushing to unload Eisen shares before they plummet into oblivion.
It's a cascade, a financial avalanche. One person sells, triggering another to do the same, each hoping to get out before the plummeting value traps them in financial ruin. The ticker continues its downward spiral, and the room feels like it's filled with the collective breaths of people holding their life savings on the edge of a knife.