Bankless - ROLLUP: Trump Tariff Whiplash | China Trade War | Inflation Jitters | Paul Atkins New SEC Chair | MegaETH Testnet
Episode Date: April 11, 2025This week, Haseeb Qureshi joins us to break down Trump’s explosive new tariffs that rocked global markets and triggered a full-blown trade war with China. Stocks whipsawed, recession odds spiked, an...d the world scrambled to the negotiation table — except China. Was it 3D chess or policy chaos? Plus, we explore the ripple effects on crypto markets, investor sentiment, and what this all means for the future of U.S. economic leadership. It's a jam-packed Weekly Rollup you don't want to miss.Follow Haseeb on X:https://x.com/hosseeb ------📣SPOTIFY PREMIUM RSS FEED | USE CODE: SPOTIFY24https://bankless.cc/spotify-premium------BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS:🪙FRAX | SELF SUFFICIENT DeFihttps://bankless.cc/Frax🦄UNISWAP | SWAP ON UNICHAINhttps://bankless.cc/unichain🛞MANTLE | MODULAR LAYER 2 NETWORKhttps://bankless.cc/Mantle🌐SELF | PROVE YOUR SELFhttps://bankless.cc/Self🏦INFINEX | THE CRYPTO-EVERYTHING APPhttps://bankless.cc/Infinex------TIMESTAMPS & RESOURCES0:00 Intro0:44 What has happened since Liberation Day?https://x.com/tier10k/status/1910020421870637132https://x.com/Birdyword/status/1910364014825070652https://polymarket.com/event/us-recession-in-202531:17 Inflation https://x.com/intocryptoverse/status/191031105822222758641:49 Paul Atkins confirmed as the new SEC chairhttps://x.com/Cointelegraph/status/191011796723030061345:43 ETH/BTC Ratio & Crypto VC Funding https://x.com/pet3rpan_/status/191034567328895805258:36 MegaETH released its testnethttps://x.com/megaeth_labs/status/1903099481874153880https://x.com/0xBreadguy/status/19096197444557417091:03:05 Closing & Disclosures ------Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here:https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bankless Nation, welcome to the weekly roll-up this week.
I have the pleasure of being joined one last time with Haseeb Qureshi GP over at Dragonfly.
Haseeb, once again, happy Friday.
It's an honor to have you.
Thanks for having me, man.
I know you're just waking up and processing what has happened in the world over the last 12 hours or so.
You're on the other side of the world at the moment in Singapore, so we got the world surrounded.
How are you feeling?
It was a long week, dude.
How are you doing?
I am exhausted, not just from traveling here,
but just like the sheer volume of whipsawing happening in traditional markets,
it kind of feels like everything trades like crypto now.
It's just total insanity in the traditional world.
Let me run through, we'll just speed run through the last seven days of events,
starting with Liberation Day tariffs that were announced last week on Wednesday evening.
This implemented a 10% baseline tariff on the whole planet and additionally 86 countries
that had much higher reciprocal trade tariffs in the 30 to 80% range.
staggering tariffs, levels never before seen before, which immediately sent the stock market
plummeting because the market really believed that Trump was serious about these tariffs.
So from Liberation Day peak to trough, the S&P 500 declined 16%, setting a record for one of the fastest,
quickest stock market declines in history.
Meanwhile, the next day on Monday, excuse me, April 7th, Scott Besson, the Treasury Secretary,
said that 70 countries have rushed to the negotiation table with the United States,
showing that the world was indeed ready to negotiate with the United States on resetting their trade arrangements, all except for China.
After Trump imposed a 34% reciprocal tariff on China, China announced its own 30% tariff on all United States imports that would go live in the coming days.
And this really kicked off the trade war.
A few days later, President Trump threatened an additional 50% tariff on Chinese goods,
unless China withdrew its retaliatory measures by April 8th.
April 9th came.
China did not back down and proceeded with its planned.
34% tariff increase, which actually stacked on top of previous tariffs.
So total net new tariffs that China had placed on the United States came to 84%.
That 84% number came into effect on Wednesday of this week.
Once it did, President Trump immediately increased tariffs on China to 125%
And at the same time, simultaneously, he announced a 90-day pause on all tariff hikes for the rest of the world, going back to the general import tariff at 10%.
So to clarify, China is actually at 145% because it's stacked on top of the previous 20%.
So 145% for China and then 10% for the rest of the world on it with a 90-day pause.
This was posted on Truth Social, which gave huge relief to the whole market.
The market immediately started rallying.
posted on truth, based on the lack of respect that China had shown to the world's market,
I am hereby raising the tariff charged to China by the United States, effective immediately.
It was also later revealed that Secretary Besson had actually written this post to be posted by Donald Trump.
And this is kind of the art of the deal that people are crediting Donald Trump with.
This strategy specifically left China in an escalating trade war with United States,
while the rest of the world is currently at the negotiating table with the United States,
presumably ready to give favorable terms while China is alone stuck inside of a trade war with
the United States. So that's where we are left to with today. Yesterday, we had the biggest
stock market increase in a one-day event. It was like up 10%. We have today, the day of recording
the 10th, let a lot of those gains go. So as we wrap all this up, Haseeb, netting everything
together, summing it all up, how is successful do you think Donald Trump's maneuver has been?
Was he playing 3D chess or like 1D checkers? So on that spectrum,
from where do you think he is?
I'm definitely more on the checker side than the chess side.
And I think, you know, if you just go through the overview of like the series of events
you laid out, you might have thought that like, aha, this was a very clever gambit to try
to selectively enter into a trade war with China.
Now, if you actually unwind a little bit and you go look at the play-by-play of what he did
and how he did it, it suddenly becomes very clear that a lot of the moves individually
that Trump was making did not make sense.
Okay, so let me elaborate because I think last time I was on the show, I was also talking a lot of shit about Trump's trade policy.
And I'm ready for round two for what it's worth.
I think for the most part, I think for the most part, I think for the most part my views have been vindicated.
Okay.
So the first and foremost thing, he repeatedly, he described these tariffs as reciprocal tariffs.
And what the market assumed that meant was that if you have a tariff rate of 30%, we give you a tariff rate of 30%, except, you know, divided by two, right?
That's not what the quote-unquote reciprocal tariffs were.
The reciprocal tariffs, instead of being a measure of tariffs and trade.
trade barriers, which is what he explicitly said is what he was doing. That is not how the numbers
were calculated. Okay. So, for example, we have, we, we were placing a 70% plus tariff rate
on Vietnam. Okay. We do not have, Vietnam does not have 70% tariffs on the US. Like that,
no, that's absolutely incorrect. Go look up the tariff rates in Vietnam. Nobody could possibly
come up with that number. Now, why is that number so high? Where is it, why is it there? For example,
Australia, um, we have a trade surplus with Australia.
So what ended up happening was that the policy that Trump used was that he looked at a measure of the trade deficit, not tariffs.
Tariffs are a tax on trade, right?
That's like, okay, when you want to give me something, I'm going to artificially increase your price of you trading that thing with me.
That's what a tariff is.
What Trump was measuring was not tariffs, but what was measuring was the imbalance of trade.
Basically, they're buying fewer things from us than we're buying from them.
That is what he based his tariff policy on, okay?
that does not make sense.
Why does that not make sense?
It doesn't make sense because, first of all,
it's not an indication that they're doing anything bad to you.
They may have no agency at all, such as, for example,
take Vietnam.
Vietnam is a very poor country.
There is no way that they could possibly buy more things from us
than we could buy from them
because they do not have a consumer economy.
They don't have a middle class with which to buy our stuff.
We build high value items and services.
That's what we export as a country.
Vietnam is too poor to be able to afford those things,
but we can buy cheap goods from Vietnam.
So what you ended up seeing was that very poor countries
were overwhelmingly slapped with very high tariffs
because of the way in which Trump calculated this thing.
He applied the tariffs to every single country
regardless of whether or not they even had a trade deficit.
So, for example, Australia was despite the fact
that we are a net exporter to Australia.
Australia was hit with the tariffs.
And the weirdest part was that Trump just started accusing countries
of just doing random things.
So for example, he said that Japan
was a currency manipulator,
which if you know anything
about the monetary policy of Japan
makes absolutely no sense.
So Trump clearly just doesn't,
he didn't really understand
what he was saying.
He didn't really have a strong grasp
of who exactly do we even have
tariff disputes with.
And so what ended up happening
was that he obviously had
these extremely high tariffs
set across the entire globe
and Trump was just not backing down.
The communication he was giving to the market
was that
This is pain we have to undergo.
This is going to bring jobs back to America.
This is good for manufacturing.
It's good for investment.
And what you saw was that over the period of time between Liberation Day and when Trump backed off the tariffs, you saw measures of investment in the U.S.
plummeting.
You saw all sorts of companies saying, we're going to pause all investment in the U.S.
Why were they saying that?
They were saying that because they had no idea what was going to happen with these tariffs.
And they were correct to think that, that they could not trust the word of the U.S. government.
because the U.S. government, as we've seen, backed off their word within a week.
So we went from the biggest tax hike in history, which is this massive imposition of tariffs
on almost every country in the world that trades in the U.S., with the exception of Russia and Belarus,
which is like, okay, interesting, to then having those tariffs completely unwound within a week,
which tells you, okay, you cannot trust the word coming out of the Trump administration.
Ultimately, businesses need predictability.
It's okay to raise taxes.
A tax like is manageable by companies.
But what they cannot handle is just, I'm going to decide one thing tomorrow, it's another thing the next week, and there's no clear communication going on from the administration.
You saw what Bessent was saying, what Ludnik was saying, what Greer was saying, all of them were diverging.
None of them were telling you the same story as what Trump is saying.
Trump was contradicting his own trade people within the same day.
All this stuff was sending markets into a tailspin.
Okay.
So then cut to a few days ago.
You had, at a certain point, you basically had a revolt within the financial class, which largely had been staying quiet, within Congress, which now suddenly you had Republicans going on the other side of the fence and saying, these tariffs are bad.
This is nonsensical policy, and this is going to tank Republicans in the midterms.
Right?
We, like, we just do not, there's no popular support for these things.
If you look at the polling that's been done in the last week, overwhelmingly negative on Trump's tariffs, even among Republicans.
Nobody thinks this is a good idea.
Okay. So then you see Bill Ackman, who was a big supporter of Trump and a big donor to Trump's campaign,
Bill Ackman came out and said, Mr. Trump, I think you've made a great mistake.
I think I made a mistake in backing this administration and believing that they understood what they were doing on trade policy.
Clearly what's happening is a total, you know, own goal.
But here's how he could salvage it.
Trump could announce that he's walking everything back and taking a 90-day pause.
And I think his words were, you know,
markets would see the wisdom of Trump's strategy, and it would all be great in the end.
And what ends up happening a couple days later, boom, Trump announces with the exact same terms
that Bill Ackman had advocated for a 90-day pause.
And what you see in the storytelling by the Wall Street Journal, which reported very well on this,
is that apparently Bessent flew down to Mara Lago, where Trump was, and basically just locked him
in a room and convinced him at basically like, look, if you don't do this, the country's
going to fall apart and we're going to completely lose our economic mandate.
And that was what led Trump to ultimately publicly backpedal.
And then again, you see this story that, oh, you know, Trump was supposedly he keeps saying
he wasn't paying attention to markets.
He doesn't really care what's happening in markets.
And yet, the reporting is that he absolutely was paying attention to markets.
He really cared what Jamie Diamond and what Bill Ackman said.
And then yesterday he said, oh, yeah, did you see what happened to the market?
You know, our trade policy is amazing.
And then today he said, oh,
He was asked by a reporter, oh, the market's down.
You know, what do you think about it?
He said, oh, I haven't even looked.
I've been so busy today.
I don't know what the market's doing.
Yeah, exactly.
So what you see is just they're clearly playing from behind.
This looks 100% to me like, you know, Herbert Hoover,
just kind of, you know, vibes-based economics,
massive, massive, just indigestion from everything that he's doing in the market.
And the problem is that, look, the market rewarded him so much yesterday
for being able to claim, aha, I knew it all.
along. This was all big grand strategy. Of course we're not going to a world of massive tariffs on
everybody in the world. That would be so stupid. You guys fell for it. This was all just a ploy.
Okay. If that's what you're saying, then why is it today that he's saying, well, you know,
the tariffs might come back, you know, oh, you know, we still are going to do these massive tariffs.
Oh, I'm still going to add tariffs on pharmaceuticals, which the market's fucking hate because
they're like, oh, no, you're not done. You're not done. You got your temporary win, but you still
have not backed off from the fact that the whole world is telling you this is an enormously
stupid policy, and you yourself don't even clearly articulate what your goals are. They're still
not saying, is the goal to have zero tariffs and free trade agreements with other countries,
is that the goal? Or is the goal to raise revenue and punish people for being unfair to America?
Right. And at different times, they've said two different things, which are, to be clear,
opposite policy goals. If the goal is we're abolishing the IRS and we're going to make all of our
money from tariffs, then these tariffs are going to be high forever. If the other hand, the goal is
we are going to have free trade and zero trade policy or zero tariffs with all these countries and
have beautiful trade deals.
Okay, then say that.
Say that clearly.
That's the goal.
And then there's not going to be an ERS.
There's not going to be this long-term reliance on tariffs.
But the market doesn't know.
It doesn't know what Trump fundamentally wants.
And to be clear, it's not clear that he knows.
There's already been plenty of signals from people around just executive leadership across country,
companies in the United States about everyone's saying, like, we can't.
cannot make plans in the United States. We cannot make investment in the United States.
Just because this administration wants us to bring manufacturing home, we have no long-term
assurances that we can actually build these factories, these manufacturing centers in the United States,
because we don't know what four years is going to be like because we don't even know what four days is
going to be like with Donald Trump. And I'm definitely partial to that. It takes years to build a factory,
right? This is not something like, oh, you know, Trump raised tariffs. So therefore, let's go do like a six,
seven-year investment plan on the basis of these tariffs, right? If the next,
administration, I mean, if Trump can create these tariffs, then clearly the next administration can
remove them, right? I mean, that's, goes without saying given that he's trying to do all this
through executive order, which, by the way, is also potentially, you know, legally dubious.
But if that, if that is the story, then nobody's going to make a four-year investment on the
basis of that, well, obviously, we're now going to be able to move all of our factories from
Mexico or from, you know, from Latin America or from Vietnam. No company's going to do that.
they're just going to sit it out and they're going to wait until they get clarity because it's such a massive decision and such a huge investment timeline to actually get your payback on a factory that might become totally worthless if tariff policy reverses in four years.
So Hesib, I'm hearing this from you and I'm partial to your point of view.
At the same time, on Twitter, there's a bit of a tale of two cities right now because there are plenty of people out there who are like, no, man, this was this was the art of the deal.
Look at what he did.
Like China's just misaligned versus the rest of the world.
This was all a part of the plan.
It was masterfully, masterfully executed Mr. Besant.
Why is there such a gap between, I mean, I guess it's just partisan lines.
So I'm not sure what I should expect.
But there is just a huge difference in interpretation.
Totally.
Okay.
So the first thing is that we've seen how many mistakes they have made in this process.
Right.
So how many unforced errors there were with respect to diplomacy, with respect to how they've spooked markets,
with respect to how they failed to really rally excitement around
investment, right? What companies need to see, it could well be that, and I think it's actually a very
reasonable thing to do for the U.S. to say, look, we have let go of too much of our strategically
important manufacturing capacity. We need to bring some back home. And to be clear, that was also
the justification for the Chips Act under the Biden administration, was it was also industrial
policy on the basis of, hey, we need to make sure that we can actually build semiconductors here
in case something happens to Taiwan and relations with China sour, right? Very, very sensible,
Very strategic. I think that's absolutely the right thing to do.
To create more energy production domestically, absolutely the right thing to do.
Now, how you do it, there are many different ways to get there.
One way to get there could be through tariff policy.
Another way to get there can be through stimulation and basically creating a lot of grants
for companies to do this domestically in the U.S.
There are two sides of the same coin effectively.
But the worst way to do it is to make your allies very angry and think that you're an unreliable partner.
What that's going to do is, one, it's going to push them into the arms of China.
China because China can show them.
So, you know, we saw for the first time this claim that there's going to be coordination now increasingly between China, Japan, and Korea.
Okay?
I saw that with the EU as well.
Yes.
If you don't know your history, these are three countries that fucking hate each other's guts, right?
This should not be happening that China and Japan are working together.
But the only one way that you could possibly make that happen and potentially introduce the possibility that the U.S. dollar might further
weaken in its global hegemony is by pushing people into the arms of the R&B.
And by China being able to take the position, you know what, we are the reliable free trade
partner. We're not going to freak out. We're not going to have tantrums. We're not going to
claim everything is the fault of, you know, foreigners and globalists taking advantage of us.
And that kind of stability in a trading partner, regardless of whether or not you agree
with the policies of the, you know, the CCP, other countries, they need reliable
trading partners because, of course, they cannot manufacture everything themselves. They have to
import from somebody. And if they're not going to import from the U.S., they're going to import more
from China. And so you're already seeing that starting to happen. The other thing is that, you know,
we've learned from Trump's commentary. And there's been a lot of reporting now on trying to understand
why does Trump believe this so strongly? There was some, a lot of people were posting this stuff from
Gary Cohn, who was, you know, leading trade in the first Trump administration. And Gary Cohn
was trying to understand why does Trump believe so strongly that we're getting ripped
off by everybody in the world.
So he's said things like this, basically since the 80s.
He's constantly said that he thinks that other countries are scamming the U.S.,
they're ripping us off, that trade is somehow intrinsically bad.
And what is specifically bad about trade?
In his answer, the answer is trade deficits.
He thinks a trade deficit means that another country is ripping you off.
The trade deficit, just a reiterate, what does that mean?
That means that you are buying more from another country than you are selling to them.
He thinks when you're doing that, you are getting ripped off.
He thinks the person who is selling more things is making more money.
Okay.
This is like a seventh grader's understanding of economics.
Yeah.
Do you think it's as simple as, oh, I'm giving them money.
I'm getting less money in return.
Therefore, that's bad.
And it's like that left curve 70 IQ businessman understanding of, oh, money is leaving
the United States and we're not getting any money in return.
And that's the complete calculus.
I'm not reading his mind.
This is literally what he said.
He said, I want.
these trade deficits reversed.
He said, look, I'm only willing to drop the tariffs on China
if they can get us a trade surplus.
Why?
Why is it important to have trade surpluses with every country?
Right.
Like, what is the inverse of a trade deficit?
It's a capital surplus.
It means they're sending you money, right?
You're getting in more investment into your country.
That's good.
We like that.
That's a big part of the reason why.
America takes the world's savings in.
All of the countries in the world,
they want to send money into the U.S. stock market,
into the U.S. economy.
That's wonderful.
This was the institution since 2008,
is like we would print money.
Absolutely.
We would buy goods from the world.
The goods would come into America.
It would subsidize our way of living.
The money would flow out to the countries,
and then they would buy our bonds.
Totally, totally.
And now what you're seeing, again,
as a result of Trump's brilliant trade policy,
So what many people were saying was, aha, what he's really doing, what he's really doing, this is the best master plan, is that they're pushing down the tenure because they have all this debt to refinance.
They're pushing down the tenure.
And that's going to make it so that, oh, my God, look at this brilliant move, 10 years all the way down to below 4%.
It peaked at 3.9 something.
86, yeah.
3.86, yeah.
So there was like, wow, this is the master plan.
They're using this to refinance the debt.
Trump was even retweeting this.
He was retweeting this to make people believe that he's intentionally.
crashing the stock market in order to refinance the debt at a better rate.
Okay, that was the claim.
All right.
Well, what happened when they actually did the treasury auctions?
You can see the second part of that chart right there is that everything lagged way back up.
And so you had both stocks going down and yields on treasuries going up, meaning that there's fewer demands, fewer demand on treasuries.
This was in large part because apparently the basis trade was unwinding in a really, really brutal way.
And so all of this ended up worse.
Yields are now higher.
Yields are higher and the stock market is lower than Liberation Day.
So Liberation Day net, I think we're down about 10% on the stock market.
That's right.
And yields are worse.
So somehow we have the worst of both worlds.
Yeah, this is what this tweet says from Mike Bird.
The miserable triple whammy begins again.
Stocks down, 10-year bond yields up, like you said.
Also the dollar down.
So what I'm seeing from this is the capital center of the world.
the United States Wall Street, where, again, just like I said, money flows out to the world
because we get the world's goods and then the world reinvest in our stock market, our businesses,
our bonds.
That is going out in two ways.
The stocks are down, so it's going out in that way.
The 10-year yield is up means bonds are being sold.
And so the capital center, which is United States strength is gone.
And then also the dollar is down.
And so I think like the big question that everyone is asking is like, okay, well, even if we just look at the S&P 500, the,
the stock price. We gave a lot of the gains that we got back yesterday. We just gave it back away.
So we're down 4% from yesterday. We're up about 10% off of the bottom. But even before Liberation
Day, we are just like you said, we are down 8 or 9%. And so there's scarring. There are wounds
in the current American economy and the stock market and trust in America. And I think that's
what people are currently contending with. Like when the stock market opens up tomorrow and then next
week. This is the dust needs to settle. And it's not, this is a before and after moment, I think,
for the United States economy and its center as a trust, trustful place to do trade and commerce and
invest. And we're going to have to contend with that now. Just as you said, like there's a new
equilibrium of a capital center. And I don't think it's as strongly in the United States anymore
because Donald Trump is just so goddamn chaotic. Yeah, completely agreed. I mean, this is this is the
fiscal policy of a third world country, right?
Of like in a single week, whipsawing on, oh, we're going to do this, we're going to do that,
we're going to make all of our money through tariffs, never mind, we're going back to normal.
And, you know, if Liberation Day, like, remember, when initially in Liberation Day,
when Trump unveiled the tariffs, there was initial reporting by the Wall Street Journal that he was doing a 10% universal tariff.
And markets jumped.
Markets jumped like 3, 4% when this is an after-hours trading.
So it's not necessarily going to show up here.
And that was the best case scenario.
That was like, oh, wow, these are less
than we thought it was going to be.
Trump is being reasonable.
Like, that's where we should be right now.
We should, we, like, what you're seeing in this market
of why we're down 10%,
and more than 10% relative to where we were,
the moment that the market thought
that what Trump was doing was imposing universal 10% tariffs
is that this is the cost of instability.
This is the cost of being an unreliable partner.
This is the cost of people saying,
I can't trust what comes out of this government
until things stabilize.
and who knows when they're going to stabilize.
Being a financial center,
meaning having good rule of law,
being very predictable and being very stable.
That is the strength of the U.S. government.
We're one of the longest continuously running governments in the world.
And we've been the financial superpower
for coming on 100 years now.
But the way that you lose that status
is by doing stuff like this.
It's hard to lose.
But if you want it to do it, this is how you do it.
Right.
Like if what you really cared about was bringing manufacturing back to America,
and that's the thing that ultimately is most lamentable about this,
is that what Trump is doing clearly is not accomplishing that goal, right?
So one, if you want, like, you know, Trump is saying,
oh, you know, foreigners are going to pay these taxes.
They're not.
Guarantee you that they're not.
The reason why they are not is that the U.S. doesn't have the manufacturing capacity
to produce all the things that it imports, right?
We just don't.
Even with 10% tariffs across the board,
you will buy things foreign because the America just will not be able to get them produced in time
to be able to outcompete even foreign producers with a 10% surcharge.
So what that means is that the cost of everything is going to go up.
Now, if you charge individual countries, right, let's say we only had a trade war on particular goods, right?
Well, then you can have some substitutability, meaning that, okay, well, you know, margin is more expensive,
so we're going to buy butter or whatever, you know, this kind of thing.
But if you tariff everything, 10% universally, then there's no substitute ability.
Nothing can come in and say, oh, we're going to shift consumption from here to here and punish these bad trading partners.
Right.
So, like, even if that's your goal, if your goal is to punish people, a 10% universal tariff does not do that.
It is simply a tax on trade.
And why do you want to tax trade?
Trade is what made the West rich.
Trade is why Western Europe ended up becoming the center of the world.
Like trade is what – trade is the real.
reason why our world is so wealthy compared to where it was 50 years ago, 100 years ago.
So taxing that and saying, you know what, instead of trade, trade is terrible. We should not do
trade. We should do other things. It's just like, why? Where did you get this belief?
Well, okay. So, Haseeb, I feel like I'm at a loss for what to do as an investor in crypto and
in like the equities market. I'm just like kind of holding on to my chair and just like kind of going
along for the ride just like trying to be at peace with it. But like, so when we resume the markets
tomorrow on Friday, the day of the day that listeners are going to listen to this, but then also
next week, like, what are you doing? Like, what are you looking for? What signals are you looking at?
Like, how are you trying to like navigate this over the next like weeks and months?
I mean, so look, as I've said before, I'm not a trader. Certainly not a macro trader.
So for the most part, like, you know, I'm long. I'm riding out this market. I obviously,
wish I wasn't because I do think that things are, things are going to be rocky for a while.
Things will remain extremely volatile as long as Trump doesn't make up his mind about what he's doing.
And it's very clear that the next 90 days, the 90 days is the period of time through which these
reciprocal tariffs have been paused in favor of the 10% tariffs that they've said is a floor,
meaning that they could be higher than 10%.
He's not signaled whether or not there's the opportunity to do zero zero, which is, of course,
what markets really want.
Markets really want renegotiated trade that's going to be zero zero.
Now, to be clear, in the beginning, this wasn't a problem.
Markets were like, oh, my God, tariffs are so high.
We've got to fix that.
But, okay, maybe some of these non-tariff trade barriers are significant.
There's some stuff around IP that I think can be renegotiated more effectively.
You know, some of the digital market stuff in Europe and the EU, I think that's real.
That's worth negotiating over.
So I certainly would not claim that there's no reason in coming to the negotiating table with some of these trading partners.
So I think that's what markets are going to be looking out for is, are we going to see,
constructive deals actually being put together.
Now, the reality is that if you remember how long it took, for example, USMCA in Trump
term one or TPP or all these like massive trade deals, they're extremely complicated.
They take a really long time to create and to, you know, put into law and enforce.
So the idea that Trump's going to do that for like 50 plus countries in 90 days is kind of
beggars belief, right?
Probably there's going to have to be some really janky kind of fast and loose form of
of trade agreements in lieu of actually getting like the full fully fledged, you know, idealized
forms of these agreements. But long short, I think the next 90 days are going to be really
volatile. I do suspect that by the end of this year, things will stabilize, we'll know what the new
regime is, markets will be able to calm down a little, and probably the better angels within the
Republicans, the Republican Party are going to push Trump toward more sanity and more stability.
I think Trump realized that he had a small, a short window in which to do this.
Because, of course, he knows that he's very vulnerable in the midterms.
And right now, of course, all this stuff that's happening, I mean, the one thing that he
had a mandate for was the economy.
If he triggers a recession, right now, polymarket is pricing in 50% probability of a recession,
even after the Trump, the tariffs getting walked back.
Before that, it was like 66%.
So right now, it's still even money that a recession comes on in 2025.
It looks like we're up to 60% now.
So, yeah, this means that things are still very likely to be bad, right?
What causes this recession?
Companies getting scared.
People pausing investment and no longer wanting to hire new people because they don't know whether or not this tariff environment is going to remain stable.
And this is, again, purely self-imposed.
If we see this, the Republicans are going to get trounced in the midterms.
And so I think when you go into Q4, Q1 of next year,
Trump is out of rope.
He has to be stimulative.
He has to be good to the market in order to make sure that they don't lose the midterms.
I think it's kind of doomed at this point.
But of course, they want to hold on to as much as they can.
Otherwise, you know, Trump is just going to be basically unable to get anything done in the second half of his administration.
There are a couple optimistic spots in the blue sky that I see that I don't want to get your opinion on.
Midterms is one.
Stimulation going into the midterms.
I totally see that.
I like that.
That's a possibility.
Another one is that, well, once this debt rolls over, then we can forget about it.
And I think that that rolls over in six months or nine months, which is also leading up to
approaching the zone of midterms being very topical.
And so once we can get this debt load that they are just super worried about, Treasury Secretary
Scott Bessent is just trying to get the yields down on bonds so that when this debt rolls over,
we don't have to pay it at a high of a rate.
And that will be in the rear view mirror in like six to nine months about that time frame.
And then also maybe just like more loosely, I hope Trump just gets bored and just moves on from and just is done with this subject and just wants to focus on something else.
So like maybe talk about any of those three that comes to mind for you.
I mean, look, the the treasury auctions that just took place, which was the first instance of rolling over significant amounts of U.S. government debt, did not go well.
It went better than expected because we were basically in the throes of a, of a, you know, what was bordering on a financial crisis.
So doing that within like, you know, the historic levels of volatility.
We had not seen that level of a three-day drawdown since COVID.
Or sorry, that day of a one-day drawdown since COVID and not that much of a three-day drawdown since I believe 2008.
So this is like crazy amounts of volatility.
And in that, we managed to clear treasury auctions with not too much slippage.
But this was at, you know, 4.3, 4.4 rates, which are, to be clear, terrible.
that was not the goal.
We failed.
If you wanted to roll over the debt at a lower rate,
that did not succeed.
Okay.
So we have this debt now at a very high load,
very high debt load,
and that's going to continue.
So anybody who was like,
yeah, great, we got out of the woods,
we rolled over our debt successfully.
This was not a success story
of rolling over the debt.
So we're going to maintain a very high debt burden
in the U.S.
And if we're going to be lowering
treasury rates,
or sorry,
if we're going to be lowering yields,
it has to be coming from the Fed
at this point,
because fiscal policy
is not going to get us there.
Well, that'll bring us to the inflation print
that got reported just today, actually.
So the actual inflation was measured at 2.4%,
where the estimated was 2.5%.
So we are actually coming in with a cold CPI print,
which is good,
because that means that there is room
for the Federal Reserve to cut rates.
We all, as investors, as risk asset holders,
like the idea of cutting rates.
When this print came in,
the bond market yields did not respond.
It didn't. They went up, actually.
Which is not great. This is probably
downstream of all of the chaos that we've been talking about for the last
30 minutes. So integrate
this into this conversation for us to see
this. The other thing is that, of course,
this is March, right? This is before
any of this insanity started.
Right. So it was before the
tariffs came on,
before Liberation Day. And
ultimately, what happened in March
is a whole fucking universe
away from where we're living today, right?
Doesn't matter what happened in March.
we have no idea what this is going to do to prices,
but we already see egg prices are spiking,
which has been the center of a lot of controversy
so far in this administration.
Egg prices are spiking again,
despite the fact that the bird flu stuff is over.
Egg prices were back down.
So now egg prices are spiking again.
What does that tell you?
It's probably tariffs.
It's probably not the birds now, yeah.
It's probably not the birds.
So we don't, again, we don't know yet.
We don't have a clear picture.
But what markers are telling you here
is that I don't care.
This is totally irrelevant
to what I'm worried.
What I'm worried about is that, of course, inflation will increase.
The Fed has said this.
Any financial observer will tell you this, is that tariffs are inflationary.
And when people stop trading with you, we just put massive, massive tariffs on one of our
largest trading partners, China.
And China is one of the trading partners for whom it's very difficult to substitute a lot
of what we import from China, right?
So we're now at the point where, you know, with 145% tariffs on China, which basically
is very close to a trade embargo, right?
Meaning that, you know, if you tariff somebody 1,000 percent, okay, that's the same as an embargo.
It basically says you are not allowed to import anything from this country because it's
un-economical to do so.
Nobody would ever do it.
It doesn't make any sense.
Even somebody who costs five times as much to produce the same thing, it's better to import it from them than they import it from this person.
So that's basically a trade embargo.
145% is so high that markets are now telling you that if Trump continues increasing the rate
of tariffs on China, it doesn't matter.
Because we're basically at the point
where trade with China is shut off
at 145% tariffs.
So we're now
in this very precarious position
that is almost certainly going to show up
in the inflation numbers.
And of course, inflation is very
reflexive. So when people expect
inflation to increase,
that accelerates its increase and makes it stickier.
And what we've seen is that consumer inflation
expectations have gone up massively
in the last couple of weeks, which again,
very rational response to what they're seeing
in terms of trade policy.
Yeah, yeah. Is there any semblance of how this impacts crypto in any unique way? Or are we just along for the ride? Because I think more or less, crypto's just a long for the ride. And until there's some sort of internal catalysts out of crypto that we have not seen since the Bitcoin ETF or Pump. Fun. We are just along for the ride here.
Yeah, that's the answer. Like for the most part, crypto is orthogonal to all of this happening, except maybe Bitcoin.
Bitcoin has been behaving very strangely.
Sometimes it's acting like gold.
Sometimes it's acting like a NASDAQ kind of derivative.
Other times it's doing something totally uncorrelated to both them.
So Bitcoin has kind of been this very strange dark horse.
But Bitcoin has actually held up relatively well.
Alts have just been getting decimated alongside the NASDAQ.
Yeah.
And so you're seeing ALTS basically trading like risk assets or like tech stocks.
And I think you should expect that to continue is that that's going to be the story for ALTS.
that being said, you know, the one thing about alts and about crypto is that the place where you should see these things untethering from each other is that although crypto is very tied to risk appetite, it is not at all tied to corporate earnings, right?
So corporate earnings might go down quite a bit when this stuff really starts to snake its way through the economy, through the real economy.
But crypto is immune to that.
Crypto doesn't really care, right?
And of course, a lot of the demand for crypto is international.
It's not just in the U.S.
So it has a kind of globalized demand base that doesn't depend as much on the, you know,
U.S. consumer having a strong balance sheet.
So even if U.S. consumers are hurt, crypto can be somewhat mollified in the impact on it.
And second, the crypto, I think, is very much tied to global liquidity.
And so if you see the Fed start to cut or you start to see some kind of emergency liquidity
injection if we see a financial crisis or some other reason why the Fed suddenly has to step in
and create another, you know, four-letter program in order to take.
buoy markets, then what you may well see is that crypto ends up rebounding in a really dramatic way
just simply because of the liquidity dynamics that are introduced by, you know, the monetary
stimulus. So there's a lot of ways this can go from here. But I would guess that there's no way
things are going to be sideways. That you can be sure. Okay. So are you with all of that
summated, are you optimistic, pessimistic? Well, I guess you can't be neutral because you just said it's not
going sideways.
Yeah.
So which one are you?
I'm very optimistic about crypto.
I think there's almost no way
that things are going to remain
this bad by the end of the year.
I think both sides,
both the monetary policy side
and the fiscal side,
are probably going to be stimulative
going into the end of the year.
And I think crypto is going to
probably benefit more
than the stock market.
I think the stock market
is going to have a real drag
from the effect on the real economy
that all this stuff is forcing
and the lack of investment.
But crypto doesn't really
require investment.
investment, right? And of course, it's not affected by tariffs. Crypto doesn't import or export anything,
right? This is all global from the beginning. And so I think crypto is going to be relatively
unperturbed by the realities of tariffs, but it's going to be affected by the risk appetite,
the monetary policy, and the fiscal stimulus. The monetary policy and the fiscal stimulus, I think,
is now garnering a newfound attention from everyone in just all investors. Because now,
now I think we're going back down and popping open the hood of the Fed repo rates. We are, we are
looking for cracks in very low levels of the financial side of the economy. And there are a few
from the macro commentators who are far smarter than me. There are a few cracks poking up that people
are watching without any sort of conviction about anything materially breaking. But to me,
that's kind of a sign of the times is like people are looking at the lowest levels of the
financial markets, like the Fed overnight funds rates, the repo markets, just to see like,
yo, are there cracks showing up? And there are things to be to be noticed without
anything breaking. And so I think that's maybe just kind of a summary of where things are in this
present moment. Yeah. It's a good guess that if something breaks, it's going to end up being
very bullish for crypto. Yeah. Because that's what happened in COVID. That's right. That's right.
And it's happened many times before. Like, you know, previously in the, what was called the taper tantrum
when, you know, before COVID, when the Fed was trying to raise rates and market started out.
Yeah. 2019. Yeah. It was 18, 19. I've, you know, something around there. You saw the same thing,
was that, okay, Fed immediately brought rates back down to zero. And, you know,
injected a bunch of liquidity. So I think it's not unlikely that we see something like that happen
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Let's transition into some actual crypto-native subjects because some good news came in this week.
Pro-Crypto Paul Atkins has now been confirmed as the new SEC chair.
So this is the new Gary Gensler.
We have a new Gary Gensler.
He looks nothing like and talks nothing like the former Gary Gensler.
He is very pro-crypto, believed to be.
expected to be very pro-crypto. This is a Donald Trump appointee, of course. And I think everyone is
very optimistic. This is not at all like how Gary Gensler came in and everyone's like, oh, he is
so aware and informed about crypto. Let's be optimistic about this man. And then he just did a 180 on
us. Paul Atkins is explicitly has given out pro-crypto statements, is very pro-markets.
What's your take about Paul Atkins as the individual? And what's your take about the final? This is not a
surprise. We saw this coming for months now. He's just finally working his way through Congress.
He now he's been approved. What's your take? That's right. I mean, I think everybody knew more or less
that Paul Atkins is going to get confirmed. Very uncontroversial pick. Very stalwart guy. Obviously,
served in the Bush administration. He very clearly has his bona fides about crypto specifically.
So he was, I believe he was on the board of the digital chamber, which is like a crypto lobbying group.
he was an advisor to reserve protocol,
which if you're familiar with them,
they're like a decentralized stablecoin.
So he's in the arena.
He understands crypto very well.
He's a libertarian.
I've heard him on some podcast where he's like,
he's in a valid libertarian.
He's basically from the Hester Perth school.
Hester Perth is actually worked under him,
under his jurisdiction at the SEC in the Bush administration.
So this is exactly the guy that you want.
Very smart, capable, open-minded, experienced.
I think an excellent page.
and just clearly somebody who's going to be, you know, continuing the current charge of the SEC under Hester Persis leadership in the, what's it called, the crypto.
Task Force.
What's the agency?
Task Force.
The crypto task force.
I think my expectation is that probably the SEC is likely going to delegate to her and let her drive a lot of the policy stuff, given how deep she's been in the space and how much trust she's garnered with the industry.
And given the fact that her and Paul Atkins have such a long working relationship, my assumption is going to be.
that he's going to trust her to run point on it.
But on the whole, my expectation is that he will be supportive
and the SEC is going to be a much more steady hand
in this administration.
Yeah. I think this really just locks in the progress
and the current state of the SEC as it stands
because I actually don't know how the SEC could be any better
than how it is operating with the crypto industry
under the leadership of Hester Purse.
It is doing as an organization everything that we need it to
to elevate our industry, get the regulatory clarity, get everything that we need out of the SEC.
So, you know, even though it's great to have, like, what is the inverse of Gary Gensler step into the SEC chair seat,
it's actually already in a perfectly fine position.
So it's not really, it's hard to be any more bullish than we already were.
That's at least my take.
Yeah, completely agreed.
I mean, this is a big part of the reason why, again, I'm very bullish on crypto going into this year.
So the fundamentals of crypto actually look fantastic, you know, like just seeing the complete regulatory.
reversal, the positive policy noises coming out of the administration, just seeing the normalization
of everything in this industry and more and more companies being able to engage with the space,
the growth in stable coins, the on-chain adoption looks really strong. Everything kind of looks
great. It's just this kind of backdrop of macro craziness that's pulling everything down.
And of course, it's not just crypto. But this is a big part of the reason seeing what's happening
with this new SEC, which was really, you know, public enemy number one over the last four years.
They were sort of the world's most aggressive regulator on crypto.
And they were single-handedly pulling the entire industry back.
And now it's just a complete 180, which is great to see.
Hissib, you said everything looks great in crypto.
Well, I'm going to pull up the ETH-BTC chart, which looks like dog shit.
We are down below 0.02.
And I want to give a take to you.
I want to connect a few points of data.
So we have this ETH-BTC ratio, which everyone knows, has just been terrible.
down, even in an accelerating fashion. I have to actually go out to like one day candles to really put all
of the downness. We got almost a thousand days, a thousand days of down in the ETHBTC ratio.
In a second chart I'm going to pull up is this one that Peter Pan tweeted out, which is monthly
crypto VC funding. And I believe this is funding into crypto VC's. So this is LP investment into
VCs and it had, of course, a massive gargantuan spike in the 22-1. I don't think that's correct.
I think this is deals of, like, money up the door and deals.
Oh, buy VCs into Portoilag Companies?
Yeah, because they, that's very difficult to measure.
Okay.
That's very easy to measure.
It's very, okay, well, it's down.
It's down very bigly.
The investment from VCs into companies is as bad as it was in the middle of 2020,
when RUKripto really started to just poke its head back out of the 2018-2019 bear market.
And the two things that have done very well over the last two years is a Bitcoin
and stable coins.
And there are now some gargantuan
stable coin deals
that everyone will see
if they're not already seeing it
on their timeline,
we'll continue to see
massive stable coin deals
in the timeline.
And so I'm connecting those two things.
It's like barbell of crypto,
Bitcoin, digital gold,
21 million units,
the OG of crypto,
and then on one side of the barbell.
And then we have stable coins
on the other side of the barbell.
And we have this ETH-BTC ratio,
which to me represents just a thinning out
of the crypto-mortymed.
maximalists, the blockchain maximus. We're like, we're going to do everything on-chain.
We're going to have all of these on-chain apps. We're going to have a DAP store.
We're going to live our lives. We have digital identities. And we're going to fill out,
we're going to fill out what it means to be in the middle of the crypto economy. And that thesis
seems to be just slowly dissipating over the years, over the last two years. And now we are
just left with these two very strong theses, which is Bitcoin and Stable Coins. And institutions
love stablecoins. And that's why institutions are so hot on crypto right now.
And then also they also love Bitcoin because it's a non-sovereign store of value.
It's a digital gold.
It's an alternative investment.
De-coupled and coupled in these weird ways.
It's fun to play with.
It's fun to sell and package up into ETS and sell to customers.
But the middle of crypto where VCs invest in and get returns from is hollowing out.
It's thinning out.
And you can just see this in sentiment on crypto Twitter because while Pump Fun has been creating
a fantastic casino meme coin merry go round for those who like to play in that.
that arena, people's jobs come from that middle of the market. It comes from the all-coin market.
It comes from startups raising from VCs and launching products that are enjoyed by the market.
That part is being hollowed out. So I'm just kind of connecting the decreasing ETH-BTC ratio to the
lowered VC funding to this like just terrible sentiment that you see on crypto Twitter.
Am I hallucinating? Do you see what I see? And like, what's your take?
I see why you see what you see. But I would dispute the story.
So first thing is that when you're looking at the ETHBTC ratio, you have to normalize for BTC dominance.
Because BGC dominance has been going up relative to everything, not just Ethereum.
And so if you look at, you know, XRP or B&B or Sala, that obviously those things are also depreciating relative to Bitcoin.
But that's mostly because of what's happening in macro.
That like that's a, you know, risk off kind of sentiment that's going on right now.
But because it's happening for every single asset, the ETHBGC ratio, it's,
bad, but everything has that ratio to BTC, and it's not because things aren't working
and for some of these other networks that are actually doing relatively well.
So it's still bad for Ethereum, and I think that requires its own unique set of explanations.
There's something idiosyncratically weak about Ethereum.
But the other thing, looking at the venture chart that you showed, I believe actually,
if you scroll down in the comment section, there's another chart that somebody else showed
that actually there's right there with the Defy Lama chart.
that actually shows that there's a spike right there on the right side of like,
oh, venture funding is suddenly increasing significantly again.
And I think this is actually correct.
You can see that after Trump got – so the first thing is that there's a lag with respect to when venture investing gets reported.
Right, exactly.
Because you fund a startup, and then, you know, they don't want to necessarily announce the week that they get funded.
They wait until they've got some announcement to make.
So it's usually like three, four month lag on average of when funding happens to when announcement takes place.
So Trump got elected about four months ago.
And so you're now starting to see all of the optimism and the increased amount of venture funding that took place right after the Trump bump manifesting itself into companies now announcing their venture funding rounds.
So now I'm not implying that we're back to where we were in 2021.
We are probably never going back to where we were in 2021.
To be clear, that's also true of regular VC.
That's not a crypto thing.
That's a ZERP thing.
That's a, oh yeah, there was way too much money sloshing around, chasing cheap.
returns and there was over investment and malinvestment into crypto. And where did that go? That was
not, oh, people are funding all these layer ones. That was like metaverse stuff. That was,
you know, Yuga Labs and OpenC and all, you know, all this stuff. Like that's where all the money was
going. So, you know, if if you're worried of like, oh, my God, nobody has jobs anymore, how are people
going to work, you know, who's going to build the next, you know, Monad or MegaEath or Barrechain or
whatever, I actually don't think that's the problem. And I don't think that's what, that's
the story that this thing is telling you. It's certainly true that crypto assets, especially VC
back coins, are down a lot. That is true of everything. That is true of, you know, of stocks in the
stock market, you know, any kind of tech company, it's down really, really bad. You saw a lot of
companies drawing down like 20% in a single day in the stock market when you saw the really,
really steep declines around tariffs. So all that is to say, I agree. I agree.
with you, the picture's bad. But I think what you will see is that this is not really about
crypto. None of what's happening right now is about crypto. Crypto is not immune to what's
happening in the broader market. But like you said earlier, we're long for the ride. And in
crypto, we feel that especially because everybody's in the market. Everybody owns these assets.
But go talk to people who work at fan companies. And they will tell you the same thing,
is that they're feeling really down bad. Their stock value is significantly down from where it was
before, you know, the Mag 7's gotten killed in everything that's happening in recent markets.
So I think it's a more nuanced picture than that, but I hear you that it hurts and people are
feeling the pain. What about the idea that the crypto industry has started to coalesce on Bitcoin
and stablecoins as like a barbell of utility? And I was giving the same take that I gave you to
another prominent investor in the space, one of your competitors at Dragonfly. And he said,
the industry probably should...
One of our competitors.
Excuse me.
You know, fellow investors,
co-investors in the space.
And they said,
the industry probably should feel
somewhat existential
about what else of usefulness
has been built
outside of stablecoins
and Bitcoin.
So what do you think about
that specific framing
about like it's really just
Bitcoin, stablecoin,
maybe Dexes too,
but that's about it.
Yeah, okay.
If you add defy to that list,
then I'd say, sure.
Then I'd say, yeah,
I agree with that story.
If it's like,
okay, well, Bitcoin
is stablecoin.
and nothing else of value,
then I would totally dispute that.
Because, of course, a lot of what's happening,
where are these stable coins getting used?
The answer is they're getting used on chain.
You know, where is all these people paying each other with Tron?
They're paying each other on the blockchain
using non-custodial wallets.
That's how all this stuff is happening.
You look at the growth of on-chain treasuries, right?
Like, we're now over $5 billion of treasuries,
$15 billion of RWAs from a relatively low base
at the beginning of 2024.
All of that is happening on-chain.
So, now, to be clear,
Yes, these two things are the biggest bright spots by far,
and I expect they'll continue to grow as being the outsized success stories.
And I think the core of it, to my mind, is that crypto is about money and finance.
And the two biggest success stories are, yeah, gold and dollars.
Yes, those are the two biggest financial assets in existence, period.
Probably number three is treasuries.
And so you see the growth of on-chain treasuries on-chain.
Yes, okay, totally agreed.
Is it true that there's nothing else of value that's been created?
No, absolutely not.
There's much more that's getting created that is financially interesting.
Is it at the scale of stable coins or Bitcoin?
No, but it doesn't need to be.
There's probably not any more $3 trillion assets that we're going to create in crypto.
Bitcoin is going to be a $3 trillion asset, almost certainly.
I don't think we're going to create anything else that's $3 trillion.
But are we going to create things that are worth tens of billions of dollars?
Absolutely.
One of the take from a frequent take that I hear from Ben Cowan,
is the ETH-BTC ratio is actually a indicator of hard money and quantitative tightening
from the Fed.
And everyone who's been clamoring for ETHBTC to reverse, which is the signal for an alt-coin
market, an alt-season, we actually need the Federal Reserve to stop doing QT and actually
start doing QE or at least starting to be much looser on the purse strings with regards
to monetary policy.
And once we can get rates to be cut, make.
Maybe QE, if something starts to break in the repo markets that we were talking about earlier, then we'll actually see a reversal of liquidity, kind of as you alluded to.
And you'll actually see that show up in the ETH-PTC ratio.
How does that take land with you?
Well, there's clearly something idiosyncratically weak about ETHPTC, right?
I mean, you've been talking about a non-stop on bank.
But it's also already been expressed, as in like it has been weak.
It can't be that much more weak for that much longer.
It absolutely can.
Okay.
It can because it's a little bit like the tariffs, right?
Like the tariffs came off.
Tariff policy did not change yesterday, but yet markets are down massively.
Why?
The reason why markets are down is that Trump did not nail the landing of, yeah, yeah, yeah, we're not doing the tariff craziness anymore.
Right.
With Eith, what do people want to hear from Ethereum?
They want to hear from Ethereum that we're not on autopilot.
We are actually going to change our strategy.
We're going to be more muscular in storytelling, in D.C., in supporting entrepreneurs.
in supporting Defi, and we're going to scale the L1, right?
That's what people want to hear.
Very clearly, everyone's telling you.
It's not even a secret.
This is not like me reading the minds of what I think might be somewhere out there in the charts.
This is what everybody is saying.
So the longer that Ethereum takes to clearly say we are doing that, the more ETHBTC is going to be punished.
Right?
That is my base case, is that the longer it takes for Ethereum to clearly say that, signal it,
incredibly show it, the more the asset's going to get punished.
You may have already heard about Infinex.
Infinex has, in my opinion, the nicest cross-chain swap and bridge feature that you will find
anywhere.
It is called Swidge, Swap and Bridge, and we're going to show you what it looks like.
First, we're going to log into my Infinex account with a pass key.
Now, there's no seed phrases in Infinex.
This is just a one-click set up with biometric pass keys.
But in addition to that, my Infinex account is fully non-custodial.
So bam, I just logged in.
It was two clicks, and I'm already into my Infinex account.
So let's go make a switch.
I'm going to go swidge my USDC that is on base.
And I'm going to buy Barra chain, which is a completely different chain.
So we're going to switch this.
I'm going to press that button.
And then Infinex is going to execute this order, this cross-chain order for me.
And now it is done.
But actually, I'm not really feeling bearish anymore.
So I'm going to go from Barra to Penguins.
I'm going to buy a penguin on Salana.
So I'm going from the Barra chain to Solana.
See, no transaction signing, no gas to worry about.
You just switch across whatever chain that you want with Infinex.
That was so easy.
Go check out Infinex and try your first switch today.
Uniswap is your gateway to a more efficient DFI experience.
With uniswap swapping and bridging across 13 chains,
is simple, fast, and cost effective,
helping you move value wherever, whenever.
Thanks to deep liquidity on the uniswap protocol,
you'll enjoy minimal price impact on every trade,
and now Uniswap V4 takes it even further.
Swappers benefit from gas savings on multi-hop swaps
and ETH trading pairs,
while liquidity providers can create new pools at 99% lower costs.
The best part you don't have to do anything extra,
trade is automatically routed through uniswap x v2 v3 and v4 so you get the most efficient swap without even thinking about it whether you're swapping on ramping off ramping or bridging uniswops web app and wallet gives you the tools to unlock defi's full potential on ethereum base arbitram unit chain and more use uniswiswap's web app and wallet for a more efficient way to use defy i i seeb let's turn to one of your portfolio companies one of the projects that i think people have the most excitement about which is the mega-eath test net public test net went out this week
So I think everyone's pretty excited about that.
There's just a shoo-yao in Mega-Eath with the Mega Mafia.
It's done an incredible job actually building out some pretty dope applications that people are just waiting to try.
I am not an investor in Mega-Eath, so I'm not pumping my bags here.
You are.
You are an investor in Mega-Eath, so congratulations.
And so talk to me about just like where we are in the arc of Mega-Eath with this public test net and just what you're excited about.
And maybe if there's any cool apps that you're excited to get your hands on or really anything.
that comes to mind about mega-eath.
Yeah. So mega-eath, so for those of you who are not familiar,
Mega-Eath is basically a super high-performance layer two.
The idea is simply just more, more, bigger, faster, stronger, everything.
And just jumping as hard as you can on this trend of,
we are going to make an extremely high-performance L2 at the expense of,
yeah, this thing is not going to be super decentralized,
but that's okay because we just want to be pure performance maxis.
That's the Mega-Eath division.
mega eth their claim to fame is that they have 10 millisecond latency and it's basically streaming
like you think about oh what's the streaming blockchain yeah a streaming blockchain right exactly
so the idea is that instead of sitting around and waiting for okay one second later or 500
milliseconds later we're going to get a new update of what the state is as soon as a transaction
comes in there's a new state which is basically like you know that's like a video game right
that's like a that's like a your computer is like that so they want to create a blockchain that has
this property. And that really changes a lot of the way that we think about what blockchains are,
the way we think about latency and MEV and the way that batch clearing and all this kind of stuff
that normally ends up becoming a problem in blockchains, you just very, very different
properties for something like, for like Mega-Eath in that regard. So to be clear, this is,
you know, test net, it's new. There's almost certainly going to be bugs and things that got to be
worked out, but that's why it's there. A lot of applications that people are getting excited about,
like GTE, guest. Best.
We have a project that we're investing into on MegaEath as well that is still under wraps.
Euphoria.
Euphoria is the one?
Euphoria, that's right.
So there's a lot of people trying these new kind of consumer applications that require very high
throughput, low latency, instantaneous feedback type trading applications, which is kind
of a perfect use case for something like Mega-Eath.
So the other thing is that they have really, really fast Oracle.
So I think, what is it, Redstone that just launched on Mega-Eath.
And Redstone, they have basically 10 millisecond latency for their Oracle because it comes out every single, I think they're called microblocks on Mega-Eath.
And so you basically have instantaneous real-time pricing on anything that you can get an Oracle for, which, again, very different than what you see on, even on something like Solana, where you have, okay, you know, you have this off-chain, you have this off-chain Oracle that's streaming, but you're, you have.
You ultimately have to post the price on chain with 500 millisecond latency.
I've been enjoying Bred's tweets about how all of the previously available infrastructure
just doesn't make sense on mega-eth.
Because imagine ether scan on a blockchain that is streaming.
And it really just changes what an infrastructure provider needs to look like around
mega-eth.
Brett, he was actually going to be on the episode today for the weekly roll-up,
but we bumped into next week just because Brett was like,
yo, I don't know how to talk about tariffs and like much respect.
So we had to tap his evening.
And I can just rant unlimitedly.
And I thoroughly appreciate your rants about.
I'm sure I'm going to get a lot of hate for it.
So I'm excited for that.
Well, we're going to hear from Fred next week and we're going to peek a little bit more into the
mega-eath test net because like you said, there are a bunch of cool apps on the scene.
And that's pretty exciting.
Mega-Eath is definitely one of the hottest project, I think, in Ethereum land.
And it's kind of going right at the heart of like the crux of Ethereum's issues,
which is like it's actually just so disconnected from Ethereum itself.
Because it doesn't even consume Ethereum DA, it just settles on Ethereum.
And that's going straight to the heart of like some of the big conversations in Ethereum land.
But nonetheless, Mega-Eath is exactly what the rollo-centric roadmap was trying to produce in the first place.
And so I'm pretty excited to see what happens.
So congrats to the Mega-Eath team to get the TestNet out, just a test net.
TPD on when a main net comes.
Haseeb, I really appreciate you tapping in.
This is going to be the last time that I bring you in for the roll-up,
because like I said, bread comes next week.
And then after that, I will let the listeners guess as to who comes back after bread next week.
Does the weekly roll-up.
So, Haseeb, thank you.
You've done it three times.
I really appreciate all your takes, my man.
A wealth of knowledge.
Like I said, the amount of knowledge per second that comes out of this man's brain, I think, is the highest there is in crypto.
So you make a fantastic guess.
And I really appreciate you coming on to Bankless and help me go through the news.
Thanks for having me.
Bankless Nation, you guys know the deal.
Crypto is risky.
You can lose what you put in.
But nonetheless, this is the frontier.
It's not for everyone, but we're glad you're with us on the bankless journey.
Thanks a lot.
