Bankless - Should I Buy ETH Treasuries? Early Stage Greed Cycle? | Michael Nadeau’s DeFi Report #4
Episode Date: August 5, 2025Public companies are racing to lock ETH onto their balance sheets, but is this the spark for a late-cycle greed run or a setup for a painful reversal? Mike Nadeau from The DeFi Report joins Ryan to... unpack the ETH treasury boom, explain how staking yield and convertible debt amplify reflexivity, and show why onchain signals place us around 9 p.m. on the market clock. We examine surging DEX volumes, record stablecoin supply, and the alt-season gauges that could send ETH to new highs. Finally, we outline the risks of leverage, premium flips, and the exit strategy smart investors are already planning. Michael Nadeau & The DeFi Report: https://x.com/JustDeauIt https://thedefireport.io ------ 📣BIT DIGITAL ($BTBT) | ETH-FIRST PUBLIC COMPANY http://bit-digital.com ------ BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: 🪙FRAX | SELF SUFFICIENT DeFi https://bankless.cc/Frax 🦄UNISWAP | SWAP ON UNICHAIN https://bankless.cc/unichain 🛞MANTLE | MODULAR LAYER 2 NETWORK https://bankless.cc/Mantle ------ TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 0:48 Bullish on ETH Treasury Companies 4:47 The Tom Lee Effect 11:48 Why ETH Outperforms Bitcoin 17:50 The Impact of ETH on DeFi 19:15 DeFi Summer 2.0? 24:53 Evaluating ETH Treasury Companies 28:25 Picking the Right Treasury Company 32:30 Navigating Risks in the Market 35:07 Signs of Market Overheating 38:03 Indicators of Market Sentiment 42:07 Analyzing Active Loans in DeFi 45:56 Assessing the Current Market Cycle 48:43 The Launch of TDR Pro 51:48 Closing & Disclaimers ------ Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here: https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bagless Nation, welcome to our monthly fundamentals podcast. I'm joined by Mike Nato. How are you doing, Mike?
I'm doing great, Ryan. Good to see you. Good to see you too. Even more energy in ETH since we last had this podcast. We've got some ETH Treasury companies that have launched some big energy from All Street in the Space.
Heath's still 25% below all-time high. You wrote a post we're going to get into talking about ETH Treasury companies. And it's sort of a bold case for that. I want to talk about that with you. I also want to talk about what
where we are in the cycle as of right now.
So it's starting to feel like maybe early greed stage,
and I believe that was a title of your post,
maybe the alt-coin season rotation.
So how do we position for this?
And what should we keep an eye on?
But in general, Mike, are you bullish or how are you feeling
as we enter August, I guess,
and start to conclude the summer?
Yeah, I think, you know, the fact that the top,
you know, something we're going to get into here
is East Treasury companies.
it's kind of a sign of the times, I would say,
and sort of where we're at in this cycle.
We've made, you know, we're in year three.
I think I think the way people should think about this,
it's always helpful to sort of step back, zoom out.
You know, we are in year three of a bull market cycle.
These tend to be the biggest years,
and we're moving towards the end of that.
So we've already seen, you know,
pretty significant moves from Bitcoin and other coins.
We've seen a number of metas develop.
And so we are sort of late stage,
but I'm still bullish, you know, within that structure.
It was so funny.
There were some selling over the weekend, right?
And some people were, you know, crypto Twitter, of course, saying, oh, it's over, you know.
But now we're back, and it's only been two days of, you know, a dip down.
And it seems like we're back to where we were at the end of last week.
And how do on-chain fundamentals look to you?
It's like now a time to buy?
It could be.
It could be.
You know, we were, I think the last time we recorded, we mentioned that we were buying
ETH at, you know, between 2,200, 2,500 or so.
For us, like, we follow a pretty, like, pretty systematic process to identify when we think
it's the right time to buy.
And I think it depends on what, what you're looking at.
You know, there's a lot of sort of ETH beta plays, I think, that are sort of interesting.
And that's kind of why we talked about this ETH treasury, all these ETH treasury companies
and starting to analyze those.
I think there could be opportunities in sort of the more highly speculative kind of
a beta play type stuff and I think we can get into some of that in this episode.
But in general, I would say the on-chain data, some of the stuff that we're looking at
is like, you know, what's happening on hyperliquid. It's happening on Solana.
You know, are we seeing, you know, dex volumes, you know, jumping up. We actually came up
with a new metric recently that looks at D-Gen versus non-Dgen, you know, dex volumes on
Solana. Just try to kind of understand like where are the animal spirits sort of like coming
back on chain and what does that mean. So I would say we're, we are definitely in like a,
you know, more greed than fear stage of the market right now, but not at like a sort of
peak euphoria. We're still, I would say, in terms of greed in the market, still under where we
were in Q4 of last year and even Q1 of last year. So very interesting. So as a reminder,
these monthly Crypto Fundamentals podcast, we're going to go for about 45 minutes.
It's going to be one or two themes, major ideas that are backed by on-chain.
data. That's what Mike here specializes in. I'm going to ask him at the end what calls he's made,
what changes he's made to his portfolio as a result of this. And speaking of the treasury company,
which we should mention our friends and sponsors over at Bit Digital. The ticker is BTBT. This is a public
company. They just went all in on Ethereum. They sold their Bitcoin. They used to be a Bitcoin
mining company and added a $172 million to a raise. And they now hold over $100,000
ETH. They're staking it, institutional grade validators, and they are one of the top, top five, maybe top
three ETH treasury companies at the time of recording. You can learn more about them at bit hyphen digital.com.
Okay, let's talk a little bit about this guy, Tom Lee, the Wall Street legend, and he now owns
just a month in. He now owns the largest share of ETH in any publicly traded entity, maybe in any
any entity that actually exists.
This is a record of Bitmine immersion technologies and some of the buys.
Just this morning, Mike, on August 3rd, August 4th, I should say, another 200,000 in
Heath was purchased by Bitcoin immersion technologies.
That's Tom Lee's company.
So they now hold 833,000 Heath.
And Tom Lee has said that he intends to purchase 5% of total Eath supply.
He's about 15% of the way there.
All that in a month.
You wrote a post about ETH Treasury Companies,
and you compare them to Bitcoin Treasury Companies.
And it seems as we're entering kind of maybe the greed stage of this cycle,
ETH Treasury Companies will have a major role to play.
So let's unpack that a little bit.
ETH Treasury companies.
First of all, where does the premium come in?
And when I say premium, I think bank, bank,
listeners know, of course, these ETH treasury companies, even Bitcoin treasury companies,
they have a core asset, either Bitcoin in the Bitcoin case or ETH in the ETH case. And then the publicly
traded company around that trades at a premium. So its market cap is overvalued, generally,
the amount of ETH that it holds in reserve. And that premium is called MNAV. And it's always
been above, I guess in Microstrategy's case, there are times it traded below,
tell us about this premium. How should we think of it? And why does a premium even exist? Shouldn't it just
be like just valued based on the asset that you have? And why is there a premium in the first place?
Yeah, it's a great, great question. I think, you know, micro strategy has traded at a premium for most of its life.
It did dip below, like in the 22 bear market. And there are a lot of schools of thought out there with
these things. I think there's a lot of smart people that think, you know, micro strategy is kind of like a Ponzi scheme, right?
like why does it have this this this premium and you know if you're going to start to look at the
eth treasury companies i think it's absolutely critical and you understand why you know micro strategy
trades at a premium and then we can start to think about some of the differences with with the
each treasury companies but to me like this is uh this is all about like attention as kind of the first
element of this i almost think of like michael sailor as like in micro strategy as like a meme coin
like on top of bitcoin um so like that's number one is like there's just a lot of
of attention. Michael Saylor is everywhere. He's a really good evangelist for Bitcoin itself,
not just micro strategy, but he's out there evangelizing Bitcoin, which then gets the Bitcoin
community behind him. And so that is a very important element of this, just like you have
somebody who can be a spokesperson for the company and the asset at the same time and sort of get
the community behind them. So that's one. Did you have anything that you wanted to mention on that?
It's interesting. So I guess you're saying attention, the Michael Saylor effect adds to the MNAV premium of micro strategy itself. It's just more eyes on the stock because more eyes on Michael Saylor. Yeah. Yeah. And I think you see this also with things like with Kathy Wood and some of her products as well with Arc. And, you know, some of those products, you know, they are sort of mocked a lot, you know, in the industry for just being sort of like these non-reveget new generating companies, Frontier type.
businesses. But she is always getting inflows into those products because Kathy Wood is out there
and she's out there on CNBC and in the media. So I think that that just absolutely matters.
The other piece of this is the leverage element. So like why coming back to like where's this
premium coming from? What's what's fascinating is that, you know, Sailor has done a really good job
of being able to tap the debt markets. And there's an interesting thing here related to convertible
debt and that the value of that convertible debt goes up with the volatility of the underlying
asset related to that.
And so it's become fairly easy for Michael Saylor to tap into the convertible debt markets
when the price of Bitcoin is rising.
And he's able to do that at very low, you know, sometimes zero percent interest.
Why is that?
They're just a set of buyers that are, what, are they long volatility in some way?
They're long volatility. These are like hedge funds, arbitrages, that want to own that sort of convertible debt because they're trading that in the market and it becomes more valuable with more volatility.
And so that sort of opens up the capital markets. You know, as Bitcoin is running, as it's in the media, Michael's able to go out and, you know, basically get a bunch of capital at zero or interest, sometimes a little bit, a little bit above zero.
and then go out and buy Bitcoin, make his announcements about Bitcoin,
go on TV and talk about it,
and sort of you start to see how this reflexivity builds within this structure.
And so that's like number two is you're actually putting leverage on the asset.
And most people, you know, you're doing that.
You're getting access to that in your brokerage account.
You're not actually dealing in the perps markets.
You're not managing keys or wallets or any of that complexity,
but you're getting no leverage to play.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that's number two.
And we talked a little bit about the volatility that's kind of embedded in there.
That's a big element of that.
And then I just think it's access, like we just mentioned.
You know, people view micro strategy as sort of this like reflexive beta play on Bitcoin itself.
And if that's the perception in the market and there's really only one way to get that type of product and it's through a brokerage account and that tends to be able to access larger pools of capital, you can kind of see why it's historical.
why it's historically traded at a premium.
I think it's trading at a roughly, you know,
1.7 right now.
If you go back and just look at the returns
of micro strategy compared to Bitcoin,
just from the beginning of the,
sort of this bull market
and beginning of 2023,
micro strategy is up almost 15x.
Bitcoin's up, you know, 6,7X.
Wow.
So it's just wildly outperformed.
And you can look at that almost over any time period.
You could go from the peak of the,
the peak of the 21 cycle and then look at the performance.
You could look at a bunch of different timelines,
and it outperforms across every single timeline.
So it's a fascinating thing.
To me, this is mostly about reflexivity.
And I think the way you can think about that on the upside
is that Bitcoin, you know, tends to rise.
And that gets the media talking about the asset.
That sort of opens up the capital markets for sale.
as that volatility comes in,
he's able to raise capital.
He's able to go out and buy Bitcoin.
He's on TV.
He's sort of a meme coin.
And so all of this starts to feed on itself.
You get a premium.
And it just kind of feeds on itself.
So I think that's what's happening.
Eventually, the market starts front-running him
because they know he raised the capital.
And so now the price is rising.
He's getting on TV even more.
So to me, this is really all about, like,
access to this levered bet.
on Bitcoin that you can only get in a brokerage account,
and then really all the attention
that comes with Michael Saylor.
And importantly, I mean, he started in 2020,
so some track record here,
and the track record is overperforming Bitcoin
at all those junctures.
And you said maybe micro strategies like 1.75 or something now,
maybe 1.75 MNAV premium to like two, something like that.
It was, it's gotten as high as almost four.
So 3.89.
That was in November.
of last year. So there's definitely some premiums on these things. And reflexivity is the name of the
game here. Okay. So that gets us to these ETH treasury companies that have sprung up over the last
two months. And, you know, back to Tom Lee, who has the biggest ETH treasury company in existence.
I think it's number three now in terms of crypto treasury companies, something like $3 billion in
assets under management. That's all ETH assets, of course. And you wrote this. We think ETH is a
superior asset to Bitcoin when it comes to the Treasury company strategy. Why? Why is ETH a superior
asset to Bitcoin? Two main reasons here. So number one is ETH has the yield, right? So you get the
staking yield with ETH. Most of these companies are telling the market that that's part of their plans
here. They're going to buy their ETH. They're going to move it into staking contracts. They're
potentially going to move it into restaking contracts. There's DeFi yield. You know, I'm not saying
these are advocating for taking extra risk like this.
But if your shareholders are demanding that yield,
you do have the optionality for some of these companies to do this.
And I think this is sort of what's going to differentiate some of the various players in the market right now,
which ones have the skill expertise do this in a safe and secure manner.
So that's number one is you can actually grow the ETH per share based on staking yield and access to DFI.
And then ETH is actually a higher-vol asset.
So over the last 12 months, East falls about 59% compared to about 40% for Bitcoin.
And so you just have a more volatility that like we talked about earlier,
that increases the value of the sort of the embedded option of these convertible shares.
And you potentially have a situation where, and I would be curious to see what, you know,
Saylor thinks about all these ETH Treasury companies.
but this is potentially going to create competition for him within these convertible debt markets as well.
It could potentially make it harder for him to tap these markets.
So we'll see how that plays out.
But those are the two main reasons, I think, that ETH is a superior asset compared to Bitcoin for this strategy.
And therefore, you have to start to think, like maybe there's potentially a higher premium that these things are actually going to trade out in the
market. Yeah, that's fascinating. Those two elements. And from a volatility perspective,
you write that ETH has about 40% higher volatility than Bitcoin. So ETH's annualized volatility
of 59%. So it could make a bid, these ETH Treasury companies, could make a bid for some of those
long-vall kind of debt instruments and those seeking that. Ethereum's layer two universe is
exploding with choices. But if you're looking for the best place to park and move your tokens,
make your next stop unichain. First, look,
Unichain hosts the most liquid uniswap V4 deployment on any layer two, giving you deeper pools for flagship pairs like ETHUSDC.
More liquidity means better prices, less slippage, and smoother swaps, exactly what traders crave.
The numbers back it up.
Unichane leads all layer twos in total value locked for Uniswap V4, and it's not just deep.
It's fast and fully transparent.
Purpose built to be the home base for defy and cross-chain liquidity.
When it comes to costs, Unichane is a no-brainer.
Transaction fees come in about 95% cheaper than Ethereum-Mainnet, slashing the price of
creating or accessing liquidity.
Want to stay in the loop on Unichain?
Visit Unichane.org or follow at Unichane on X for all the updates.
Imagine a world where traditional finance meets the power of blockchain seamlessly.
That's what Mantle is pioneering with blockchain for banking,
a revolutionary new category at the intersection of Tradfai and Web3.
At the heart is you are, the world's first money app built fully on chain.
It gives you a Swiss iBan account, blending fiat currencies like the Euro, the Swiss franc,
the United States dollar, or the Rimini, with crypto, all in one place.
Enjoy real world usability and blockchain.
trust and programmability. Transactions
post directly to the blockchain, compatible
with Tradfai Rails, and packed with
integrated defy futures. U.R. transforms
mantle network into the ultimate platform
for on-chain financial services, unifying
payments, trading, and assets like the
MI4, the M-Eath protocol, and
functions FBT, backed by
developer grants, ecosystem incentives,
and top distribution through the U.R.
app, reward stations, and by-bit launch
pool. For M&T holders, every economic
activity in U.R drives value
back to you, embodying the entire
stack and future growth of this super app ecosystem.
Follow Mantle on X at Mantle underscore official for the latest updates on blockchain for banking.
That's X.com slash mantle underscore official.
In the wild west of Defi, stability and innovation are everything, which is why you should
check out Frax Finance.
The protocol revolutionizing stable coins, defy, and Rolex.
The core of Frax Finance is FraxUSD, which is backed by BlackRock's institutional
biddle fund.
Frax designed FRAXUSD for besting class yields across DFI, T-bills, and carry trade
returns all in one.
So head to Frax.com, then stake it to earn some of the best yields in Defy.
Want even more?
Bridge your FraxUSD over to the Fraxtal Layer 2 for the same yield plus Fractyl points
and explore Fractyl's diverse layer 2 ecosystem with protocols like curve, convex, and more,
all rewarding early adopters.
Frax isn't just a protocol.
It's a digital nation, powered by the FXS token and governed by its global community.
Acquire FXS through Frax.com or your go-to decks, stake it and help shape Frax Nation's future.
Ready to join the forefront of Defi?
frax.com now to start earning with FraxUSD and staked fraxUSD. And for bankless listeners,
you can use frax.com slash r slash bankless when bridging to fraxil for exclusive
fractal perks and boosted rewards. You also mentioned that the narrative here that could be
forming of defy yield in public markets. So it does seem pretty obvious that many of these
ETH treasury companies are going to deploy this ETH into the Ethereum economy, the broader
defy economy. Of course, staking is sort of the real.
risk-free, eth-rate for that? Of course, there are some staking-type risks, but many of these
are protocol risks. And then you can go out on the risk curve a bit more, maybe the next
layer out is something like Ave, but you can go further and further out, and you could generate
yield that way. Of course, there's a point at which, you know, you get into risk territory
where there's, you know, smart contract bugs, hacks, all sorts of bad things could happen,
but that option exists with eth, where it doesn't exist with Bitcoin. Do you think this will
have a broader impact. Let's say we get, you know, right now I think we're hovering about
1% of all ETH is locked in these public treasury vehicles. So that's one percent. Let's say that
1% gets deployed. I don't know. It's six, six billion something, I don't know,
six to 10 billion dollars in ETH. That gets deployed and it starts seeking yield. Of course,
we'll see the amount of ETH stake probably rise as a result. But does this have a broader impact
on the defy economy? And is there a way to front run that in your mind?
I do. I do think this is going to have an impact. And this is sort of the second order thinking
on kind of the differences in reflexivity for Bitcoin versus ethier. And part of why not only is
either a better asset from sort of the yield and the volatility perspective, but I actually think
it's going to have more reflexivity as well. And this is part of that reflexive story where if these
companies are, you know, sort of doing the same thing that Sailor's doing in terms of being able
to tap the credit markets, go out, you know, buy ETH, go on CNBC, sort of become the sort of
meme, you know, that Sailor has for their strategy. Then they're moving those assets into
defy. That is like improving the fundamentals of, you know, on-chain fundamentals within
the Ethereum network. It's sparking on-chain activity. It's sparking more transaction fees. It's
sparking TVL growing into
defy.
This is all sort of like
more reflexivity on top of what you're
getting with Bitcoin.
And so I do think like, you know,
you're going to see, you know,
it'll be interesting to see how much of this actually
flows into something like Obit, how much of it goes
into something like an eigen layer,
you know, how much of it goes into
staking contracts.
And what does that mean for actually the yield?
If you spark on-chain activity,
there's going to be more, you know,
more fees, right? There's going to be more users coming in. And we tend to see this in, you know,
in crypto markets where the price moves first, that sparks people going on chain, doing more
things in defy, more activity on chain, sparks more fees, fundamentals improve, price, then price
starts to go up. So it has this reflexive feedback. And I think these East Treasury companies are
sparking this. And it's going to be interesting to see this play out here. You talk about those
sparks leading potentially to a DeFi summer 2.0. And I'm not sure if this will happen during the
waning months of the summer here or if this bleeds into the fall. But this does seem like a pretty
clear second order effect, at least for crypto natives out there, which is just, is it this simple,
basically? So we've already talked about all of the stable coins coming on chain. That's a dearth of
liquidity. We'll get to some charts later. But, you know, $250 billion worth of stable coins and
growing, that could hit a trillion at some point. So we got liquidity there. But now we also have
ETH liquidity that is going to be looking for some defy yields. And so is it just as simple as
looking at defy yield assets that have strong cash flow, good growth, maybe have some sort of
better token economics, some sort of ability to pass those cash flows and revenues back to
token holders, and it does seem, by the way, with, you know, the SEC's project crypto, that
that opportunity set is going to open up.
Maybe the simple thing to do right now is, of course, you could look at ETH, you could look
at ETH Treasury companies, we'll come back to that.
But maybe the wise crypto investors should just like front run all of that and get the defy
tokens that are going to benefit from this type of activity.
What do you think about that?
And are there any defy tokens you have in mind?
Yeah, this is the big question, I think. And if you're sort of crypto-native, that's probably where you're most comfortable is sort of just analyzing the Aves, the morpho, like which of these sort of defy protocols are going to pick up TVL and improve their fundamentals, improve their fees. That's one way to think of it. And then the other way is, you know, where is the largest pools of capital going to go? My view personally is that the largest pools of capital going to go.
my view personally is that the largest pools of capital are probably going to go more towards
the ETH Treasury companies just because you can access those in your brokerage account
and there's just more capital I can go there.
At the same time, you have to think that this idea, these second order effects that
we just went through, lots of people are thinking about this, right?
And so there's a chance that there's a catch-up trade that's going to come once,
once these ETH Treasury vehicles really start buying and moving assets on chain.
So I think it's up, it's a personal preference.
For me, we've been, we've been sort of trying to identify the ETH treasury company,
we think is going to potentially be the winner because I think that's part of the conversation
here is there's probably one of these that significantly outperforms all the others.
And so we're trying to identify that and then park some capital there as an ETH beta play.
Oh, very interesting.
Okay, so we'll get to that in a minute.
The way my brain, I haven't done the analysis for this, but these defy yield type of opportunities,
it seems like you should really put yourself in the position of somebody who works at a publicly traded ETH treasury company.
What would they do with ETH?
They're probably not going to go farm points in a brand new protocol that has not been tested and put that ETH at smart contract risk.
What are they probably going to do?
It'll probably be the next layer of safe, quote unquote, defy yield opportunities for ETH that are adjacent to ETH staking, right?
So once you stake, what's next?
And it does seem like there is some blue chip type of protocols, maybe the a vase of the world, but maybe increasingly like the morphos or even, you know, Dex's like fluid, which have been around for a while, that might receive some of that benefit.
So that's something for bankless listeners to go look into of, you know, a defy summer type of, you know,
portfolio. But let's get back to the ETH Treasury entities themselves, because now there's a lot
to pick from. Okay? We could go on the ETH Strategic Reserve, and we could take a look at, of course,
there's BitMine Immersion Tech, which is Tom Lee, there's Sharplink Gaming, which is Joe Lubin,
there's the Ether Machine, which is Andrew Keys, Bit Digital, of course, BTCS. What's your take on how to
allocate among ETH Treasury companies, if, you,
and investors is looking for that
ETH beta and essentially to replicate
you have to be fundamentally bullish on ETH
once you get that, then the question is how do you get beta
on just buying ETH?
And the answer could be these ETH treasury companies.
But what sort of criteria
should an investor look at for the best
ETH treasury company to invest in?
Yeah, I think first of all, if you are bullish on ETH,
you should probably own mostly ETH, right?
So that's, then you know, you know you're going to do well there.
These sort of high beta plays are a smaller allocation.
I would just sort of caution that because the, probably the worst, you know,
scenario for an investor is to get the thesis, right, and see the setup and get all that
correct, but then just pick the wrong asset to express that view.
And so, you know, some people will do this, right?
This will happen with these treasury companies.
If you're in the wrong one, you got everything right, but you missed the,
the final piece of it, and that's all that matters.
So I would just caution against that a little bit.
But in terms of like the views on kind of how this plays out,
I do think that you're going to get one of these that is sort of a runaway,
kind of like what happened with micro strategy.
I kind of view it as like a sprint for a number of things.
So a sprint to tap the capital markets, right?
And so you need to have a good network of people.
you need to be trusted.
You need to be able to sort of generate attention.
So I think those are important things to be looking for.
Speed is absolutely critical here.
So the first one that can get out and raise the capital,
buy lots of ETH, really bold strategy can go out and sort of capture this narrative.
And I think this is where the reflexivity kind of kicks in
where if you're just seeing one sort of person who's kind of driving,
this narrative, I don't think Wall Street's going to be like trying to figure out, like,
oh, there's a little bit of ups.
We can go to this, like, the one that's 10th down on the list to sort of express our view here.
I think it's just going to be like a sort of a follow-on trade type set setup.
That's just my opinion on how this kind of plays out.
So those are the things I'm looking for initially here.
It's just like who is getting out of the gate fast, who looks like they're the most organized.
because all of these,
it's important to realize
all of these things
are like small companies, right?
These are like mostly companies
that were doing other things.
Some of them were Bitcoin miners,
you know,
Bitmine,
the one that Tom Lee is involved with,
is like,
you know,
sort of Bitcoin mining,
cooling technology.
A lot of these are sort of pivots
from Bitcoin mining,
you know,
something related to the Bitcoin mining business.
And they're small teams,
right?
they've all been spun up fairly recently.
So you have to imagine that there's a lot going on behind the scenes.
You're just trying to look for ones that look like they're the most organized,
like they have a plan, they've got connections on Wall Street,
they've got a flywheel, they've got a vision.
And that's kind of how I'm approaching the analysis of this.
There are some different KPIs and different things that I think investors should be thinking about.
And we can talk about that as well if you'd like.
So have you picked one, Mike,
if you're evaluating based on attention, based on speed, based on the connections they have,
the access to capital, based on the execution, I mean, it does seem like there are, unlike Michael
Saylor and Micro Strategy, he was basically doing this just one company for years before anyone else
kind of joined them. With ETH Treasuries, there do seem to be some pretty strong companies,
and they've started relatively, like at the same time, they've all started this summer, right?
Do you have one?
You're like, this is the one?
Are you kind of playing a portfolio right now?
I've only invested in one of these.
I can't give the ticker away.
We do have our TDR Pro, so I have to protect the value of that for people.
So I apologize.
But we have picked one, and it's sort of, like I said,
it's a smaller investment relative to our ETH investment.
But we have picked one, and we've been sort of dollar cost averaging into that.
what what factor the other criteria that I look at is the MNAF of course because you could be you're like buying a winner but you might be buying the winner at an overvalued price right I mean there was a point in time earlier where Sbat was trading at just like insane multiples just like on a week after launch or so and it came crashing down from like you know price of 40 or something all the way back down to like nine and like there's clearly something that invest but if you if you
bought S-Bet at 40, you're not feeling great about like where it is right now. So how do you,
how do you evaluate the, the M-N-Av multiple on these things and, you know, what you should pay?
Are they all collapsing towards something similar? Yeah. So there's a, there's the top of the top five,
two of them are actually trading at a discount. So BT-B-T-S is actually trading on a discount right now.
And then the Ether machine, I believe, DYNX, also trading out a discount.
And this is like the challenge, I think, for investors is understanding sort of the capital structure.
Because if you look at the charts of like GESBET and BNR, what tends to happen is like these companies come out.
They make their announcements that they're going to be whatever they're signaling to the market.
People get excited.
They go out and buy the stock.
And you've seen both of those like sort of re-rate initially very early.
very early in that process.
And then they come out and they, you know, dilute,
they raise capital and they dilute the shares, right?
If they're not getting all,
if they're not raising all that capital through converts,
then they're diluting shareholders.
And then you see the stock, you know,
completely sell off.
So this is like the challenge.
These things are not as easy to do the analysis
and kind of understand there's not as much transparency,
I would say, compared to on-chain data.
So investors should understand this.
and understand sort of who the sponsor is,
who sort of formed this thing.
What are they getting versus what you're getting?
Are they being diluted at the same rate
that you're going to be diluted as they issue shares
to buy the ETH?
So I think there's a lot of complexity with analyzing these,
which also, you know, kind of feeds into what I was saying about,
like they're being one winner.
That company is going to be the best at communicating with the market as well.
And I think that's an important element of this that we didn't talk about earlier.
It's like the winner is going to be the most trusted.
They're going to have the most connections.
They're going to move the fastest.
And they're going to create trust with the market by communicating clearly with the market.
And that's kind of how I'm thinking about this.
That's fascinating.
And where were some of this data available where you're getting kind of like the MNAV type data?
So I see, and this is maybe like August 1st or something, kind of like a, a,
market analysis as of August for us, but first, the premium to nav, the MNAV premium for
S-BET was like 1.15, BMNR was like 1.67%. Some of these other things like BTBT was, you know,
2.07. D-YNX, which is Andrew Keyes, the ether machine, I don't even think that's accurate.
Like, I don't even think that's right. There's something missing in the data set for that number
because it's only 0.14.
But where do you compile all of this?
It's like it's more difficult to do
than non-chain data, right?
Because you're screening through SEC filings?
It's tricky.
You're going through exactly.
You're looking at what they're putting out in the market.
There's, you know, strategic ether reserve,
which I think you've opened up here on this pod.
They're compiling a lot of that information for you.
But this is like more trusted data, right?
Like this is not just going on chain
and seeing what's going on there.
So to me, this is tricky, and it kind of highlights, like, if you're less experienced and you don't want to go through all this complexity just to get, like, a little extra beta, probably you should just stick with, with ETH is probably what I would caution for people.
Yeah.
Or maybe you should subscribe to the DeFi Report Pro and see what, see what Mike is doing.
Okay, let me ask you this.
So I am a buyer of these treasuries and these ether treasuries for a beta play on ETH.
I'm bullish on ETH, so I hit that criterion, so beta plan ETH.
But not forever, okay?
And this is where I ask the question about risks for all of this, because reflexive up,
also reflexive down.
And I've read some things interesting, like recently, about how this could unwind.
There are some lessons maybe we could even learn from the 1920s.
And there were these things set up called like investment trusts.
all of these investment vehicles basically to democratize access to stocks in the U.S.
And so these investment trusts would be put together basically grouping of blue chip stocks.
And in a time, the 1920s is very difficult to buy stocks for the average retail, middle-class type of investor.
And so these investment trust vehicles made them very accessible, democratized for mainstream.
In a similar way, like it's still difficult for a lot of people to buy vanilla ether.
right now or vanilla Bitcoin right now. They have to go on exchange, create a new account,
doesn't work in their 401k. Then you have something like micro strategy. You have something
like strategy or you have something like S-Bet. It's very easy to do. What happened, of course,
at the end of the 1920s, was after a massive boom and reflexive up, you got a reversal all of this.
And all of these investment trusts basically multiplied downside as they had to sell
all of their stock assets.
And it turned into the Great Depression.
And we got a lot of SEC rules as a result of that.
So I don't think we're quite there when it comes to treasuries, which is why I'm bullish.
But let me ask you the question about risks.
And like are there are there some signs that we're getting closer to the end?
We have a light coin treasury.
We have Athena treasury right now.
We have a hyper-liquid treasury.
We have almost a new ETH treasury every week.
And that's something to say about the Bitcoin treasuries that are all popping up everywhere.
At what point do you start to get worried that the market's overheated and we could be headed
for a correction and a reflexive down?
And what happens in that scenario?
Do these things go bust like the stock investment trust in the 1920s?
Possibly, possibly.
I think that's definitely a risk for the longer tail of the assets that I think the Bitcoin
and ETH ones are probably in pretty good shape, to the extent that there's 15, 20.
of them for ETH, you know, I think the ones that are on the longer end of the curve are
going to be potentially the ones that are that are riskier vehicles. And I think this is all,
I think you're bringing up some really good points here because there's a lot of risks to
consider here. The first is like you need to be bullish on ETH, right? So if the ETH price doesn't
go up, like there's no ambiguity there, right? If ETH does not go up, these treasure vehicles are
most likely not going to go up. And then I think you're sort of like hinting at this like potential
for like a doom loop where basically the, you know, East starts to trade down and maybe you have
some activist investors that are trying to push it below that, the premium line. And so they're
trying to get it into a discount because they want to get that thing into a discount because then
the Treasury company might have to sell assets to try to get it back to par. And then that's just
creating more reflexivity on the downside there. And so you can kind of see the setup for that type
a doom loop, I think that is going to potentially play out with somebody smaller.
And what you just mentioned there's like there's some longer tail assets now that are getting
these treasury or these treasury strategies behind them.
And to me, it's a sign of yes, greed is back in the market.
Speculative activity is back in capital almost always is going to flow to where it's
easiest to sort of raise the money and sort of make a trade.
I think a lot of these issues,
the people that are sort of spinning these up
are viewing them as like a trade.
And so if they're viewing it as a trade,
then if you're buying that thing,
you better be viewing that as a trade.
And so I think we're in the,
I don't think we're at like the froth,
you know,
we may be at the frost stage of like
the formation of these things.
But I don't think that this has sort of like
made its way out into the actual markets just yet.
We're still kind of like at the stage
where they're being the sponsors are
coming in, people are pitching these things, and like, Wall Street's probably six to eight
weeks, you know, behind on that. That's kind of where I think we are with this. And definitely
keeping an eye on just like, what is the sentiment out there? Like, because we know things can get
pretty wacky in crypto. And I'm kind of expecting that, you know, probably in the next, you know,
three to three to six months or so. Yeah. Yeah. I wonder if you resonate with this. So like my just like
rough heuristic analysis here is like if the doomsday clock you know 12 hours in the
doom say clock we're about 9 p.m. Okay. So there's still some time. We got like maybe three hours
of time. But where there is leverage, there are shenanigans. This happens in any financial market
with this crypto or otherwise. What I'm kind of worried about are the systemic things that none of us
actually see. But the things that later we will point to and say, oh, that was the thing. Remember
three hours capital with the GBDC trade.
That wasn't obvious to anyone that that was going on behind the scenes, but we all got a sense
that things were getting a little wacky, things were getting a little overinflated.
I'm not there yet with respect to these treasury vehicles, but I think that's the direction
of travel, which means maybe we're in for a greed season, which brings us to some of the on-chain
metrics that indicate that.
And let's talk about that, because you wrote a post about the greed season.
that we may be entering the early phase of.
Other people call this alt-coin season.
You've called it that in the past.
Can we talk about some indicators
as to where we are in the market today
and what you're looking at in terms of fundamentals here?
Yeah, I think that's a good way to frame it up
as like, yeah, it's nine o'clock.
We've got a few hours to go here.
And people should just be cautious
that everybody thinks they can get out of the market
before their neighbor, right?
So just keep that.
keep that in mind. We all sort of fall prey to that. So yeah, where are we at right now?
You know, as I mentioned at the beginning of the episode, like things have gone up a lot.
We've been in a bull market structure for we're in towards the end of the year three here.
And so what I tend to look for at this stage of the cycle is just like what is going on with
global liquidity conditions. This is an updated chart from Capital Wars. As you can see, like there's
been some bumps in the road there throughout this, these last few years.
years of the bull market and each time we've kind of come down, markets have sold off each time.
We just experienced the last one when global liquidity conditions started to fall off in Q4.
And people probably remember there were plenty of people putting charts up in Q4 saying,
hey guys, like liquidity is starting to come out of the market.
We were very euphoric at that time.
And so people were kind of looking past that.
Eventually it did catch up in Q1.
and then you can see that the conditions improved actually.
So basically there's a lag here with the crypto markets catching up to liquidity from Q4 dropping off in Q1.
Liquidity came back actually in Q1 and then the crypto markets came back in Q2.
So that kind of takes us to where we're at now.
You can see that that line hasn't really started to turn over just yet when it does.
You can sort of expect there to be a lag with the crypto markets at some point.
And it looks like kind of looks like it's setting up for the classic like sort of
Q4, you know, peak zone, I would say. That's kind of my base case.
Where does that global liquidity come from? Is it like fiscal deficits? Is it like a Fed policy?
Just in general, what is the, what are the mechanisms that pump those liquidity numbers up?
Yeah. So the chart we're just looking at is looking at all the major central banks.
And so it's factoring all of that, all of that in. It's also factoring in, you know, this, we're looking at a chart here of treasury spending.
So this is through June, and we have a deficit of over $1.3 trillion just through the first nine months of the year because the fiscal year ends at 930 for the U.S. government.
And so, yes, there's quite a bit of treasury spending, you know, happening out there.
We just passed the big, beautiful bill, which is supposed to increase the budget deficits up to 7%.
And a lot of people are concerned about that.
Yeah.
that's that's sort of like something I think the markets are trying to process right now is sort of what what are the key takeaways from the big beautiful bill and then we've had an opportunity to see some of Trump's deals on tariffs and so I think the markets are processing that as well and trying to figure out is this going to cause structural inflation the Fed is still still waiting to see what they're going to do but we know there's global liquidity conditions are good treasury spending
looks good. We have a lot of bullish elements of the big beautiful bill that I think are
interesting as well. And so, you know, when I kind of zoom out on more of the macro stuff,
to me, I don't see any like major, major warning signals right now.
So what are the signals that we're seeing on chain? This is one of them. This is the active
loans. And the number is going up. These are active loans on Ave, Morpho, Spark, Fluid, Oil,
are some of the big DFI protocols of which we were speaking of. And you got to assume if that
ETH is going to be deployed inside of the defy economy, these numbers will continue to rise.
But they're now at all time highs, Mike. And this looks like a similar assent that we saw from,
you know, 2021 to 2022 in the top of the last bull cycle. What do you take from these active loan
numbers? And will this continue going up? And at what point should we be worried?
Yeah. So to me, it's just,
again, like you said, where it's, it's nine o'clock. You know, it's getting late. And you can see that
here. It's pretty obvious where we're at in the cycle. There's plenty of, there's plenty of demand for people
to sort of lever up their assets and do looping and access capital in defy. So to me, this is just
kind of a signal like, okay, this is looking good. I think there's more coming here. But is that,
you know, how much farther is that going to go before it actually rolls over? I think we
should be expecting that, you know, at some point. But I think it's actually going to go up before we
get there. What are Bitcoin holders doing, the long-term holders right now? Yeah, so we always take a
look at this. Just as a reminder, this is not including like the ETFs, not including assets on
exchanges, but we've always found some signal when we look at sort of wallet holder cohorts.
And this is some glass node data. So long-term holders have started to take some profits. That's the
takeaway here. Over the last few months, over the last few weeks,
we've seen the long-term holder count drop about 1.3%.
So that's a small percentage in terms of like, you know, what we saw Q4 of last year,
even Q1 of last year.
And what you tend to see is like long-term holders,
Bitcoin price rises, long-term holders start to, you know,
sell coins into the market.
And then short-term holders are the ones that tend to step into the market by those assets.
And we're seeing that just start as well.
So you can see that,
that move we just had is pretty small relative to the one in Q4 and also in Q1.
And so we're expected, we think we're early in this sort of distribution process right now.
But we can see that it is starting to, it's just starting to play out.
Stable coin supply as well.
We're at all time high is here.
To what extent is that an indicator for you?
Yeah.
So this is a good sign.
So there is a correlation between USDT, Tether.
Bitcoin price, and it tends to come on a lag.
So USDTs up 11% over the last 90 days.
You can see USDC did sort of like level off a little bit there.
But what you tend to see is more on chain liquidity.
There's sort of a lag to this.
But there's like a 0.8 correlation between tether growth,
Bitcoin price, over a 180 day sort of lag there.
So if you're seeing growth, we've been seeing growth in tether, you know,
over the last 90 days, even going.
back to the last 180 days, that's giving you an idea of like where the direction of travel
for Bitcoin, you know, further out. So it's a good setup, I think, for for Bitcoin and
the crypto markets, generally speaking, when you see stable coin supply rising like this.
Well, let's look at these remaining charts and kind of summarize this for folks. So one is the
MVRVs, the Z score basically, which is kind of the cost basis of Bitcoin holders on chain.
The other is the Altcoin Season Index.
And we also have a Bitcoin Fear and Greed Index.
And then we have some ETH features open interest numbers going up and ETH perp rate funding rates going up.
If you take all of these things in summary and you kind of aggregate them together, where does this put us in terms of the bull cycle?
Is this like early stage, you know, alt season, early stage greed season?
and like how close, you know, how much further is this going to go?
What are your indicators saying?
So I would say early stage, like sort of peak, peak euphoric greed, greed levels.
You know, we've, like I said, going back to the beginning of show, we've been in a
bull market structure for a while.
If you're coming into the markets right now, you're late to the party.
But there's still, like, I do think there's another thrust coming.
And this is looking at the alt season index.
you know, we've kind of had a mini-alt season play out over the last couple months as
ETH has helped out-perform Bitcoin.
And we've seen a number of other alts do quite well.
Bitcoin dominance has dropped a little bit.
That is now sort of correcting a little bit.
We're in the month of August, which tends to be a slower month.
You know, people are on vacations and at the beach, there's tends to be less liquidity,
less trading volumes, things like that.
So I'm kind of looking at this.
Like we'll see if, you know, we had a little bit of a scare over the weekend and like markets are kind of rebounding now.
So we'll see if it just kind of rebounds.
But we may see some, a little bit of weakness, you know, through, you know, let's call it, like Labor Day or so.
So all that said, if you're not trading like Arthur Hayes, by the way, I saw a tweet from him over the weekend, which said he was, he was trading some of this in August, basically.
He was, you know, selling some the beginning of August on that kind of dip before that dip, hopefully for him.
And then he was planning to rebuy at the end of all.
August, right? But if you're not trading these monthly cycles, okay, in the month-to-month basis,
if you're more of a buy-and-hold crypto fundamentals, but you're doing some things within the cycle,
you should really think about how you're positioning right now. And that leads me to ask the
question, how are you positioning right now, Mike? Like, what do you think fundamentals investors
should be looking at at this point in August? Yeah. So typically I have a large
percentage of my portfolio in Bitcoin.
So I would say that I'm more, you know, further out the risk curve, I would say, because
the view here is that Bitcoin dominance has likely peaked.
And so you're likely going to see ETH continue to outperform Bitcoin.
That's kind of my base case here.
When that happens, that's typically good for the rest of the sort of all coin space as
well.
I think this cycle is unique because we have a lot of things happening in the public markets.
And so you have to be really careful.
One thing that I'm looking at is just like, I want to be closer to more assets that I think are publicly traded that have, there's just some bigger, a larger investor base that's likely to allocate there.
That's something I'm factoring in here.
But in general, you know, growing the non-BTC portion of the portfolio for this stage of the cycle.
Okay.
Rotating out of Bitcoin and into some of the.
these Bitcoin alternatives into ether and down market as well. That seems to be what you're doing.
And by the way, Mike, you just launched a pro version of the DeFi report. So previously,
everything that you've written and still to a large extent, most of what you write on the
DeFi report has been free. There's also a pro version that folks can upgrade to.
And I think they can see exactly what you're doing on a week-to-week basis with a peek inside of
the portfolio. What sort of goodies do you have, you have?
up for our defy pro subscribers.
Yeah, so this is super exciting.
So it's been like four years in the making to roll this out.
And we polled our readers and trying to understand like what is the thing that we can do for
you that's just going to add more value.
And so people enjoy the research.
They enjoy a lot of our thesis-driven fundamental-based work.
But what this is is really tying all that together and saying this is how we're actually
making trades in the market.
So we share a report with our pro members each Wednesday.
And we go through our views on the market and also any changes that have been made to the portfolio.
We provide a link.
People can see what the changes were week to week and can tag along with us as we do that.
And yeah, super excited to have that.
And people can access that on our website if they're interested in joining TDR Pro.
Very cool.
I'm a subscriber of TDR Pro.
So I'm right there with you guys.
And you can find out more at the defyreport.io.
Got to leave it there.
Of course, you guys know none of this has been financial advice.
Crypto is risky.
You could lose to what you put in, but we are headed west.
This is the frontier, not for everyone, but we're glad you're with us on the bankless journey.
Thanks a lot.
