Bankless - Up or Down from Here? Bears vs. Bulls
Episode Date: April 14, 2026Has crypto already bottomed, or is more pain still ahead? Mike and Ryan break down the bull and bear case in full, from Bitcoin fair value and market structure to global liquidity, AI demand, and the ...macro risks still hanging over markets. Mike explains why he thinks the setup still looks more like a bear market than a new uptrend, even if the odds are close. It’s a sharp episode on how to navigate a market that could break either way. Michael Nadeau & The DeFi Report: https://x.com/JustDeauIt https://thedefireport.io/bankless --- 📣GALAXYONE | SOLANA STAKING https://bankless.cc/GalaxyOne --- BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: 🔮POLYMARKET | #1 PREDICTION MARKET https://bankless.cc/polymarket-podcast 🪐GALAXYONE | SOLANA STAKING https://bankless.cc/GalaxyOne 🦊 METAMASK | DOWNLOAD NOW https://go.metamask.io/BL-Pod-Download 🏅BITGET TRADFI | TRADE GOLD WITH USDT https://bankless.cc/bitget 🎯THE DEFI REPORT | ONCHAIN INSIGHTS https://thedefireport.io/bankless 🌐BRIX | EMERGING MARKET YIELD https://bankless.cc/brix --- TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 1:18 Understanding the crypto cycle 3:23 The wealth destruction phase 5:30 Defining the current market conditions 8:14 Reflecting on past market battles 11:15 The four-year cycle explained 13:19 The impact of liquidity cycles 17:12 Analyzing the S&P and market health 20:34 The bullish case for crypto 24:07 Exploring on-chain metrics 27:16 The bear case outlined 32:14 The difficulty of market navigation 44:26 Summarizing the bearish perspective 48:12 Market uncertainty 59:54 Closing & disclaimers --- Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here: https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bankless Nation, I think the most important question for cycle investors is, where is crypto gone?
Are we going up? Are we going down from here?
The market, of course, it's sort of where this battle plays out between bulls and bears.
That's how we get the market price is, you know, on a constant basis, the winner of these skirmishes, the winner of these battles.
One of the most interesting battles that's happening in the crypto cycle right now is raging now between the bulls and the bears.
The Bulls think the bottom is in.
They think we're done here.
The bears think we're still headed for more pain, more dips, more prolonged, I guess maybe despair.
We're going to lay out both cases today.
I've got Michael Nato on the podcast, and he, as you guys know, is one of my favorite cycle investors.
He's from the TDR podcast.
Mike and I usually do these episodes on the TDR podcast.
That's a whole separate feed.
We publish them on a week.
basis every Wednesday, if you're not tuned into that, go take a minute to subscribe to the TDR
podcast. The Defi report's called it's available wherever you listen to podcasts. But the bulls and the
bears, they're now fighting. It's like a almost to a standstill. I would call this maybe the
second battle. In fact, that's what you referred to it as, the second battle of this part of the
cycle. And I know, Mike, you are team bear right now. What I'm going to ask you to do, though, in
episode, particularly when we get into the bull case, is to steal man the bull argument for us.
Like, give us the absolute best version of their points. Because do you think they actually have a
point here? I do. I do. I think that, you know, we're going to get into all the details here.
But when you look at from a high-level perspective, when you look at what we've seen play out so far
in this bear market, we're at like a very interesting kind of point of contention here.
So I think what we're going to go through in this episode, and, you know, it's one of my favorite quotes from Charlie Bunger is you always want to understand the other, the opposing view as good, if not better, as their view.
And so that's some of the work that we've been doing is really understand both sides of the equation and then sort of lay out what we think the probabilities are moving forward here.
Okay, great, because I do think sometimes bears can give you the best version of the bull case by putting on a bull hat.
So I'm hopeful you do that for us here today.
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Okay, Mike, I called this the second major back.
of this part of the crypto cycle, but let's define the cycle the way maybe you define it. So
we're still in the fourth cycle. Crypto has oscillated bull and bear and there've been
booms and bust and there've been four of these so far. And I think the way you define it,
we are in the fourth cycle, but we're at the end stage of the fourth cycle. We're in the wealth
destruction phase. And that maybe wasn't obvious in, say, November of last year. But I think it's
become obvious now that we are in this wealth destruction phase with Bitcoin and other crypto assets
trading so far down from their all-time highs. Can you describe the cycle and where we are right now?
Yeah. So this is kind of a high-level sort of framing for how we think about cycles. And if we kind of
just take a look at kind of what has transpired here, going back to the beginning of the last cycle.
Typically, and this started, really, where we're saying this started was, you know, at the beginning of
2023. So kind of at the, after we saw almost a year-long bear market that had played out over
2022, eventually that flipped and we had bottomed. And so that's, that's the kind of the exercise that
we're going through today. But what tends to happen in an early bull, you know, Bitcoin went up,
120% or so in 23 and like barely anybody, you know, even noticed it at that point.
That took us to, you know, sort of the end of 2023 where we kind of went into the wealth
creation phase of the last cycle. That's when the ETFs came out. That is when you see,
you know, venture capital activity really picking up across the sector. That's when you see
Dex volumes, you know, picking up and people are coming on chain. It's my favorite part. It's the most
exciting part. Yes. Yeah. And prices are gaping up. And, you know,
You know, you can start to see the annual spirits coming back.
So that was the wealth creation phase.
That took us through really Trump's inauguration in early 2025.
And then we went through wealth distribution.
That's the part of the cycle where you want to be, you know,
leaning a little bit more risk off, you know,
looking to build cash positions, getting ready for, you know,
the next sort of phase, which is wealth destruction.
So we peaked out, you know, October of last year.
And we're now six months into this kind of bear market cycle.
And we've been in this wealth destruction zone going back.
Really, we didn't have wealth destruction confirmed until really kind of earlier this year.
So that was, you mentioned there's been these kind of like phases where we've had bulls and bears battling.
The first, you know, phase of that was really December of last year into early part of
of this year when we were kind of ranging between 84k or so up to about 97. And then we broke that
channel. That's kind of when everybody decided, okay, we are clearly in a bull market or sorry,
a bear market now. And we've been in this structure now where we're trading between low 60s and
mid-70s or so for about two and a half months. And so really the exercise that we're in now is to say,
you know, yes, we're in wealth destruction. You should be more bullish now for sure.
than you were back in the wealth distribution phase.
And we want to be leading bullish.
We also are trying to assess where this could ultimately bottom.
It's possible we have bottom.
We'll go through that case today.
But this to me is the sort of like the big picture.
What we see now is not what we would expect to see during like a sort of an up phase, right?
We're seeing venture capital activity very, very diminished out there.
We're going to get into sort of some of the current conditions of what we're seeing out
there to get people an idea of if we are in sort of a new regime shift here.
But this is kind of the high level.
We're very clearly in wealth destruction.
The question is have we bottomed during this phase?
Okay.
So just to orient us and to maybe summarize that, we are in the fourth of these early bull to
wealth destruction cycles, the fourth time this has happened in,
crypto and we have, you know, various years. This fourth time has played out from January,
2023, up until now. And we are in the wealth destruction phase. That's been pretty much confirmed
as of, say, January and February this year, although some of the bulls in the last battle were
reluctant to capitulate on that. Now I think they have. Now I think the market has admitted that we
are in some form of a wealth destruction phase. And the battle lines are now, you know, how long will
this last or is this the end, have we bottomed yet? But can you bring us back to, if we're in the
second battle of the fourth cycle in the wealth destruction phase, all right? Can you bring us back to
the first battle when this wasn't obvious? So I know you were calling for, hey, this is wealth destruction.
You were saying that back in October and you were sort of one of few who was actually saying that.
Everyone else was saying, this is just a dip. Bring us back to the battle in December and January.
January of course of this year, what were the bull saying and what was their rationale and the
reasoning and what were people like you saying on the bearish side?
Yeah, I think if you go back to that period, it was a lot of, I think probably a lot of the
same voices that we're saying maybe, you know, this idea of a four-year cycle is going to
come to an end at some point. A lot of people thought that was the case, you know, going back to
Q4 last year. So when we kind of had dipped down into the low or the mid-80,
or so. I think a lot of people were viewing that as like, this is the buying opportunity.
And, you know, there was just a lot of narratives surrounding. I think a lot of people still thought
the four-year cycle was basically not a thing. And we're in, you know, 84K is a good, good buying
opportunity. What I was mostly paying attention to, you know, at that stage of the cycle was just,
you know, I was of the view that if you look at this kind of a big picture here, you know, we've
never had a period where we've kind of gone through what I would what I would conclude is like a
very clean cycle structure where you didn't go into a sort of reset mode and so I was really just
anchoring to the fact that the market structure was lopsided you had all this new money that had come in
over the last year or so and you know if everybody's if all the money is in the market and the
the sentiment is still on the side of we're not going into a bear market that's a pretty
interesting indicator to tell you that everybody's deployed, right?
Everybody, if someone's saying that we're going higher, they're in the market, right?
They've already deployed.
And so you can kind of get a feel for like kind of where the structure of the market is.
And so we've seen since that time, things have started to reset.
So we've seen a lot of that sort of new hot money that came in during kind of the wealth
distribution phase.
We're starting to see that turnover.
We've done a lot of work on Bitcoin market structure.
cost basis, you know, holdings, things like that across different cohorts to understand where
we're at in that sort of like, you know, top buyers rotating coins to sort of long-term, you know,
stronger hands. And that's, you know, we've seen some of that play out. This typically takes
about a year to play out where we're six months into it. There's no law that says it has to take a
year. But that's really, you know, that's what I was anchoring to at that time. And now
the key question is just have we bought up? And are we actually,
potentially in the early bull phase of the next cycle.
For some of the non-believers out there in the cycle of which I am no longer one of them,
but can you just make the case?
Why is the four-year cycle still undefeated, Mike?
Some people just don't understand.
They just say, you're going back and you're saying history is going to repeat.
But what's the underlying reason?
What's the rationale?
Why does it have to be this way?
some structure here to the four-year cycle. Are you just saying, hey, it's always
happened like this, so we're just going to use history to extrapolate? Because for the non-believer,
that's not enough. Yeah, to me, it shows up in the data. It shows up in what you see in
market conditions. And, you know, this is very similar to what we see in traditional finance as
well. You tend to have four to five-year cycles in the traditional markets. They tend to align
with what you see in the formation of a business cycle, right?
Interest rates tend to come down.
That tends to create demand for loans.
People want to access, you know, credit.
And so you get liquidity conditions starting to improve.
And then that leads to the asset allocation cycle
and people rotating from cash into, you know, risk assets.
And we saw basically everything of what you would expect to see in a normal business cycle
play out in TradFi, that same structure works in crypto. It's slightly different, right? In crypto,
you're looking more at on-chain activity. You're looking at demand for loans in Defi. You're looking at
defy yields typically rising during these periods. And so this, there's like a reflexivity to all of
this that then kicks into sentiment and risk on appetite and all of these things. And there's just seasons.
there's just seasons to this.
And I just, I almost think it's like biology or, you know, the way to see.
I live in the Northeast.
We have seasons.
It would be very odd to go through winter and then, you know, not have a spring, right?
So I sort of view it as like, this is just the way markets work.
And there's data that we follow to track this.
And then you can tie in the reflexivity, the sentiment, all of that.
So to me, this is somewhat of like a law of nature.
When someone says the cycle doesn't exist, you're kind of saying like there's this, we're
breaking some law of nature. Okay, so it's some combination of liquidity, of credit cycles happening
in these patterns, and also just investor psychology in human psychology, which doesn't change
and tends to repeat. That said, while we may have four seasons, sometimes wintertime can be
milder, right? I mean, you live in kind of the Boston area. Sometimes you guys get some mild winters.
Other times it hits you like a blizzard. So that's what we're trying to figure out.
is what's the winter going to be like and there's a bullish and bear side. Let's check in on some of the
KPIs around Bitcoin right now and compare them to previous wintertime. So we've got, you know,
the second cycle, which is the 2018 cycle here and the 2022 cycle and now the 26 low cycle. Where are we
on some of the on-chain fair value KPIs that you prioritize? Yeah. So when we were back,
If we go back to sort of when the market was peaking, we were kind of starting to say that, you know, it's time to kind of go risk off.
We were targeting roughly 65K for Bitcoin.
And we were arriving at that number based on where we thought some of these important KPI levels would get to.
This is just a small snapshot of some things that we look at.
But you can see, you know, looking at the 2026 KPI low, we've got to some levels that are pretty, you know,
pretty close to that fair value zone.
The price did drop into what we would say is our fair value zone.
And so if you're bullish and you're saying the bottom is in, you would look at this and say,
well, we got very close to the realized price for Bitcoin, which is kind of a proxy for the kind
of cost basis of the network.
And those KPI lows were printed in early February.
This is before the war started when we had kind of a capitulation on February.
fifth, that's when these lows were printed.
So we got very close to realize price.
If you look at the MVRVZ score, that's looking, that's, that's just another measure of
Bitcoin in relation to its realized price.
And, you know, we said we got close, but this is, you know, the low in 2026 was 1.14, whereas
the low in 2022 was 0.76 in 2018, 0.70.
wouldn't we, shouldn't we expect getting close to be below one at least on this?
That's what I expect.
And this is kind of, you know, we'll get into sort of the bearish view of this.
We sort of came into fair value very briefly.
And then we've come out of this.
And so the question is, you know, are we going to end up capitulating lower?
And I think, you know, this is really the million dollar question right now.
but you can see we got we got to levels that you could you could form an argument that maybe
that's the cycle low but if you look at the history here especially just looking at the
2022 cycle we didn't we haven't got to like where we would expect there would be like
this sort of deep value opportunities that tend to come in bare markets okay so then the
bulls are basically assuming that this is the mildest winter we've ever had in crypto by a lot
But there is some precedent to that in that each cycle does have a milder winter, doesn't it?
But this would just be incredibly mild, I suppose, when you look at the fair value KPIs.
How about the S&P?
Where does that factor in?
That indicates like global risk onness versus risk offness.
And how does that shape the view?
This is, well, this is another big question in the markets right now where the S&P is currently trading, you know, almost.
almost near all-time highs.
And we've seen a period where the VIX was elevated and there's more uncertainty in the markets.
We haven't had like a, what I would say is like a true correction and the traditional markets just yet.
There's been quite a bit of dispersion within sectors, within individual assets.
We haven't actually seen these indices, you know, come down.
And this is this is the other sort of thing we're looking at just to broadly understand the structure of kind of the,
the broader markets here.
And this chart is just showing,
you know,
we're just going back to the last bare market
just to show that
the 200-day moving average,
like there's a famous quote,
Paul Tudor Jones,
nothing good happens under the 200-day moving average.
You know, when you break that,
it's usually not a great sign.
We broke it in mid-March
on the S&P 500, also on the NASDAQ.
We tend to make a retracement move,
sometimes multiple retracement moves
when you're in a correction or in a bear market.
And so we broke it.
We've made that retracement move last week.
That was during the ceasefire negotiations.
And the markets sort of kind of from a positioning perspective,
it looks like a lot of people took off their hedges.
And the markets are back into what I would say is like maybe a little bit more of a complacent zone.
We've been looking at other indicators like sort of the surveys,
Bulls versus Bears.
survey is a good survey to look at for sort of contrarian positioning to understand, you know,
where most people are. Again, if everyone's bearish, then that kind of indicates to you that
they're out of the market and the likelihood starts to shift towards, you know, you're probably
going to go up. We haven't seen any extreme indicators in terms of people being extremely
bearish or extremely euphoric. So we're kind of in a middle zone in terms of Bulls-Barr's
surveys on the traditional markets. And this is the big, this is just the big question. Is the market
complacent right now after these recent negotiations? Or are we just sort of like making that initial
retracement move before we make another leg down? I mean, even if you look at this chart, Mike,
like so we dip below the 200 day moving average during the tariff scare in April of 2025,
but then we quickly rebounded, right? Just like months after. And we're on a fantastic
track. So the question is, is what's going on right now with Iran and some of the energy crisis
surrounding that? Is that more like 2025 tariff scare? Or is it more like the chart in 2022 where we had
kind of a, you know, a dip and then a recovery back to the 200 day and then another dip and then
somewhat of a recovery and then another dip? But the trend was lower each time. That's the big question,
isn't it? That's the big question. That's precisely where we're at in this phase right now.
We look at global liquidity indicators, things like this, and we think global liquidity has
topped and is now in a process of rolling over. Before you get there, though, before you get there,
because I know that's kind of the bearish take that you've been sharing on the TDR in our weekly
episodes. I would like for you to steal man as aptly as you can. As aptly as you can,
the bullish perspective on this at this point in the market.
You've got a number of different points here.
Let's start with the first.
The bulls right now are saying the worst of the war in Iran, like the impact on oil prices,
all of this, it's already known by the market.
And therefore, it's already priced in.
And furthermore, if you look at Bitcoin, even if you look at Bitcoin versus something
like gold, it's been up since the war started.
And markets in general haven't been that affected.
I mean, you yourself have talked about this in our weekly episodes that, like, well, you know,
there's somewhat of a surprise that markets haven't been harder fit. So, or harder hit. So Bulls are saying
the worst of the war in Iran is over. Can you steal man that? Yeah, this is, uh, this is the big
question. And, um, we've seen most of the fear, I would say that was getting baked in with people
putting on hedges. The VIX was really kind of like almost like in an uptrend, almost looking like a, you know,
a stock for a little while.
And the question here is like, is this more like tariffs last year where we had a significant,
we haven't even had a significant correction like we had during tariffs.
But once the sort of pressure was off and we and Trump started to negotiate and the market
started to get comfortable that there were going to be some deals struck, that was it.
You know, we were kind of off to the races.
And this has been a little bit harder to, I think,
navigate because it's not as much of a unilateral decision coming from the Trump administration.
There's obviously another player here. There's many other players involved in the Iran conflict.
And I think markets have to price in, you know, how long is this going to take to actually be
resolved with some sort of certainty that the markets can look at? And what is the, you know,
disruption going to be to oil prices? And, you know, my,
it is very difficult to tell what's going on.
The news changes every 24 hours it seems like
and everyone's really just reacting to Trump tweets.
I've been of the mind that like this is a pretty complicated setup over there.
There's quite a bit of, you know,
different incentives of different countries
that are located closer to the action
versus what the U.S. is doing.
And I've just kind of been of the mind that this is complicated
and it's probably going to take longer to resolve.
I know you are.
Give me the bull case.
Yeah.
Well, the bull case is just saying this is over.
It's priced in.
Oil prices are over 100.
The market's comfortable with it.
You know, kind of thinks that inflation may rise.
The Fed will look through it.
The Fed's going to cut.
And the markets can handle this.
I think that's the view if you're bullish and you're kind of looking at this.
It doesn't matter.
Like, the markets are just going to look through this geopolitical conflict.
Oil prices can remain elevated, but it will eventually get solved.
And, you know, this is a buying opportunity.
So the whole case is just like tariffs.
Yeah.
From last year, right?
And including Trump's reaction to it.
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How about some of the on-chain bull case metrics?
So somebody might look at the numbers we just looked at and they might say from the bullish perspective,
Bitcoin has already hit the full, the fair range value.
You yourself have purchased Bitcoin during this bear market, recognizing the fair value range.
We've already seen massive fear in the markets.
In fact, the fear and greed has been at bare market lows that we haven't seen since 2022.
I mean, you look around sentiment in crypto right now is pretty bad and was particularly bad
in February and March of this year.
Crypto VCs in full reset mode, right?
Capital's drying up.
It feels kind of capitulation.
Zoni, I mean, how much worse could it get?
Talk about that.
I mean, you put your steel, steel man, that argument.
Yeah, to me, that's what I would typically expect to see in a bare market conditions.
VCs likely having trouble raising fresh capital from investors at this stage of the cycle.
The strongest VCs getting access to the best deals in the market.
I think that's really kind of the structure we're seeing right now.
And that, that's typical for a bare market.
and the question is just like what's different here from what we would typically see in a past
bear market.
One thing that's very different is micro strategy has been in the market as a large buyer of Bitcoin.
So this is something we did not see in the last bare market.
And over, you know, $7.6 billion of purchases so far in 26.
And this is mostly related to their ability to raise capital.
through this new STRC product.
And so, you know, is that going to help us, you know, you mentioned like this,
it would be sort of unusual to have this muted of a bare market cycle and this fast,
you know, is that something that we should really be putting a lot of focus on
because maybe that is shifting the market structure a little bit.
I think if you're a bull, you're pointing at that as one of the main sort of catalyst to say,
this is not a normal bare market.
It's going to be quick.
And there's just more confidence from investors
because we know micro strategies is in the market buying up the supply.
That is what I hear the bull saying.
They're saying, okay, this time it is different.
And they're pointing to actual data where it is different.
I mean, we've never had a micro strategy buyer,
you know, purchasing $7 billion during the depths of a bear market.
That's going to make the winter more mild.
It has to.
I mean, this additional demand in this structure.
as well as ETFs, they've been holding up quite well.
So you mentioned on the bulkcase, the AUM is down just 5%.
So the institutional hands do seem kind of diamond-handed.
And let's maybe talk about the S&P because there's some points here on the risk on side,
which is basically that AI is just getting started.
And you could see that in some of the analysts projecting earnings growths.
I think that's maybe the strongest case that I'm seeing on the,
bull perspective coming to the S&P is we've got a 19.2% earning growth potential in Q2.
And so PE ratios are coming down.
Is that the case?
Because profits are so good.
P.E. ratios are coming down at the same time as analysts are re-rating earnings higher,
which is if you're a bull, it's sort of a contrarian bull signal to say, like, look at this.
These corporations are strong.
they're projecting even stronger growth,
and the market's sort of resetting right now,
that's a buy signal if you're bullish right now.
And I think that's fair based on what we're seeing.
I will just say that those analysts estimates
are really more focused on the companies themselves,
looking at the financials of the company,
looking at margins and product growth,
and maybe a little bit less focused on the macroeconomic setup,
oil prices, all of those other things.
So just keep that in mind.
Totally.
The other thing to keep in mind, too,
is some of these earnings are driven from strong demand for compute in the form of
AI.
And we are seeing daily, if not, like weekly and daily miracles coming from the AI sector.
I don't know if you've seen Anthropics revenue curves.
It's just absolutely insane.
Their rate of growth recently.
And this is actual real revenue from companies'
outside of AI actually paying Anthropic, presumably, because they're getting some value from it.
Like, I don't know what my daily spend in tokens is, but I mean, I'm using AI tools in my daily life
and, like, quite a bit. And I imagine many others are as well. So we're kind of seeing that.
The AI demand could be just getting started if they continue to make these breakthroughs.
Yeah, agreed. And the demand is there. And it's, there's almost no supply for,
compute right now. So this
is kind of strengthening, I think, the
AI case right now.
Last week we saw like almost a
further capitulation from kind of
the SaaS sector
in the market. So, you know, there's
plenty to be bullish here. I think that's kind of
the point here of laying out these
bullet points is there are
a few things that are different this cycle.
We talked about micro strategy. We talked
about the ETFs. Those things
are different. We have
you know, strong earnings
projections coming. We have this AI story that doesn't seem to be losing steam. So there's plenty
here, I think, if you're of the mind that, like, we bottomed that you could anchor to.
All right. Now I'm going to let you go full bear mode on us, Mike. And maybe lay this out. You
probably want to start with the global liquidity story because I think that's one of the anchors
of the bear thesis right now. Tell us about that. Yeah. So this is following the work that Michael
Howell does, you know, we don't track this stuff internally. We use a lot of the indexes
that he puts out. I think this has been the highest signal indicator for global liquidity
that I've come across. And it's factoring in everything that the major central banks are doing.
It's factoring in treasury liquidity, which is increasingly impacting financial markets.
It's factoring in bond market volatility, all of these things. And it looks like we've peaked.
and we're now kind of in what looks like a, you know, somewhat of a secular decline, these declines or just really the marginal growth stalling tends to, you know, take about a year or so to play out. And we're about 1% off the peak. The, when you think about sort of what's the catalyst for this to potentially, you know, just go back up, you know, I think you would have to have a view that the Fed is going to be, you know,
easing potentially aggressively, or there's going to be some sort of fiscal support.
We're not really seeing anything on the fiscal side that's making us think that there's any type
of regime shift. And then you look at the other major central banks and you're starting to see
hikes get priced in in the UK, in the Eurozone. And so, you know, this framework to me is
pointing towards liquidity has peaked.
And there tends to be about a six-month lag in terms of how that impacts the traditional markets.
There's a closer lag with Bitcoin.
Bitcoin is much more sensitive to liquidity.
So we've already seen this really impact Bitcoin, I believe.
And six-month lag for the traditional markets,
we're coming into that zone where you would expect it to potentially start to impact the crypto markets.
On the next chart down here, we just have a little bit more on what we're seeing,
just how this typically plays out with Bitcoin,
historically Bitcoin peaks before these liquidity cycles peak.
And we've seen that.
We saw that this cycle.
We saw it in the past two cycles as well.
And it's taken about a year or so for the liquidity cycle to play out.
Bitcoin then tends to bottom, sort of at the bottom of the trough of that.
And so the question here is just, is this view correct that liquidity has peaked,
you know, oil prices?
I think you have to have a view that the Fed is not going to be able to cut rates.
oil prices are, you know, hurting consumption in the market, and that's hurting liquidity.
It's inflation is rising. And then when you look at the major central banks around the world,
we don't see like a sort of forecast that we can project in rate cuts and more liquidity,
not seeing like a ton of demand for loans, you know, from the banking sector as well.
And so that's kind of the view is like if this has peaked over and this is correct,
then this should take a little bit of time to play out. And this should impact financial markets.
And there's some stacking cycle faith here, right? Michael Howell's framework is based on what like five to six year cycles, global liquidity cycles. And in fact, that might be the underlying driver of what we're seeing in crypto, you know, to begin with. So you got to rank that with some importance in the model here.
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This is not investment advice.
Some exciting news.
We are launching a new podcast to help people figure out the crypto cycle, how to navigate it.
The best crypto cycle investor I know, his name is Michael Nato. He runs the Defi Report. This is the guy that sent me a sell alert before the 1010 price drop happened. His cycle analysis has been absolutely on point. I've been following him for years. And this year, we started recording weekly podcast episodes. Each one we get into his portfolio, what he's holding, the market structure, entry targets, fair market value of Bitcoin and Ether. And where we are in the cycle, there's new episodes that are released every Wednesday. They're 30 minutes. They're short. They're punchy. I think this crypto cycle is hard.
to navigate than most. So let's do it together. Go subscribe to this podcast. Search the
Defi Report wherever you get your podcast, YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or find a link in the show
notes. There's a new episode waiting for you now. How about the fiscal story? Yeah, this is just
focusing on fiscal in the U.S. This is through applied MMT, which does some good work here. And we've
done a decent amount of work on kind of just understanding MMT and how that impacts market. It's not
from a kind of political, philosophical framework, but just how does fiscal impact markets?
By MMT, you're talking about modern monetary theory, which is basically like, you know,
massive fiscal deficits to kind of juice spending in the economy, right? It's just big government
spending. Correct, correct. It's sort of, I think a lot of people sort of frame that as a
economic philosophy or a political philosophy. I've sort of focused on this more just to understand
how fiscal spending, how government finance impacts, you know, financial markets. And so, you know,
as you can see in the chart here, the red more smooth line is a moving average of the fiscal impulse
and kind of the change year over year. And then the blue line is Bitcoin change year over year.
And we can see like there's a pretty interesting correlation between, you know, what's happening
with the Treasury, how much money is coming.
out and being pushed into markets through the government. And we've been talking about this,
even going back to when we were turning risk off back in September, October of last year,
that we didn't see, you know, we thought fiscal was sort of, you know, we're still running large
deficits. We're not saying that we're like balancing the budget, but just on the margin,
we're seeing that kind of roll over. And this chart, I think, visualizes that really well.
you know, what would it take for this to sort of shift into a new regime? We do have some
catalysts for that. And that's really the war in Iran. And I think I saw the Trump administration
has already requested a $1.5 trillion military budget for FY27. So, you know, that kind of aligns
with our view that this conflict in Iran is going to take much longer. It looks like the Trump
administration is preparing for that, requesting lots of capital. So if we did see, like, more
volatility in the markets, I would expect, like, a massive spending package to come out if the war
escalates. And that would be probably a really good buying opportunity because it's telling you
that they're going to start printing money again. We think the Fed is going to be able to cut at some point
as well. And that's kind of the potential setup. But what we're looking at right now is just this is,
there's really no impulse coming from the fiscal side.
So fiscal spending growth is down, and particularly it's down relative to the 2021 period in time.
And there would have to be some catalyst to propel that up, which you maybe can see in the horizon, something like the Iran War might be part of that.
What about the current market conditions that you're seeing?
Yes.
Yeah.
So we can just kind of probably go through these pretty quickly.
but, you know, even last week, just I'm starting to see, just on the time I know, crypto Twitter,
I'm seeing tweets, you know, telling people get ready for a meltup, you know,
the type of stuff that you would see in the early bull period, or sorry, the maybe even the
wealth creation period.
Yeah.
And so I think that's a little premature based on what I'm seeing, you know, in the on-chain data.
This is a chart of just showing spot volumes.
And we can see, you know, on the right side there, this is a 30-day moving average, but there is very little activity on the Bitcoin blockchain right now.
Transactions are very, very low.
Spot volumes, even on centralized exchanges are very, very low.
We're back to levels that we saw deep into the last bare market.
And volatility tends to pick up later in these cycles.
We can see, you know, massive spike involved.
volatility in the middle of the chart there, that was when Bitcoin started to, you know, capitulate
into, you know, the 20 to 30K range is when we saw volatility really increase. And so that to me,
we mentioned we're about six months into this. Volatility started to really pick up about
six months into the last bear market. That could be to the upside as well. It doesn't have to be,
you know, to the downside. But to me, like, I'm just not seeing any signs of just like lots of, you know,
trading volumes, anything that would indicate that there's some sort of regime shift here.
And, you know, if we look at the perpetual funding rates,
this is another way to just assess, you know, the sentiment amongst traders
and who's putting on leverage.
We don't see any signs of, you know, people trying to really go long in the perps markets
right now.
What I am seeing is that funding rates on positive days so far this year have been lower
than funding rates on positive days in 2022,
which just kind of confirms to me like,
this is a bare market structure that I'm seeing,
you know, in some of these indicators
I'm not seeing like this pent up demand
and that people are confident the bottoms in
and they're going long.
This, yeah, this one is just, again, on-chain indicator.
Solana was where sort of fast defy
was playing out in the last
cycle.
And again, looking at just like,
is there signs of life on chain?
Is there, does it look like there's demand to get on to dexes and get active loans going and all that?
I'm just not,
I'm really not seeing that that indicator looks like it's at levels last seen in 20203.
And then, you know, if you wanted to look at the kind of animal spirits,
kind of a mean coin sector, this is Solana bonding curve revenue.
So this is the launch paths and the amount of tokens, you know, coming off of those.
And then the trading activity of those tokens, again, not really seeing any uptick here.
It's kind of been in a steady downtrend similar to levels we saw, you know, back in 24.
So how would you summarize the bearish perspective then?
Like give us the full Michael Nato bear case.
And when I say bear, by the way, recognizing that, you know, maybe folks are new to some of your work, you're not a perma bear.
you are long-term incredibly bullish the entire crypto asset class.
You're just playing the cycle.
So long-term, I think I've heard you say, you know, Bitcoin to a million, right?
Long-term.
But in the short run, if you're playing these cycles, you're still bearish.
So give us the reason if you were to summarize all this.
Yeah, and I don't want people the takeaway to be that I'm like super bearish here.
I want to be clear that we are in the stage of the cycle that you want to be buying.
you don't want to be selling at this part of the cycle.
So I don't want, what I'm trying to do is assess, you know, are we going lower is really
kind of where I'm at.
And so if you're to take the perspective that we haven't bottomed, I think what you
would be looking at is that we looked at some of those kind of cycle to cycle metrics.
And while we have, you know, the price did come into the fair value zone.
We have not hit any of the sort of what you would expect to see from a deep value metric
perspective. So that's that's one thing. Realized price, 200 week moving average, those types of
indicators have not hit what we would typically see in a bare market. The other thing that we spend
a lot of time on is market structure and really paying attention to like the amount of coins that
get bought up, you know, at the later stages of the bull market. And then we're monitoring those
wallet cohorts to try to understand, you know, the, you know, how much of that has received.
set. And we haven't seen a full reset of that. I think part of this is there's a, you know,
just the length of the cycle. It takes time for that to play out. We're about six months in.
This process typically takes about a year to play out. So we haven't seen a full turnover there.
We talked about just from the broad, you know, kind of liquidity perspective. We don't see the
catalyst here for, you know, monetary impulse or fiscal impulse. And we know that we do have an ongoing
in conflict in Iran, that it could end tomorrow, it could escalate further. We don't know what's
going to happen there. So you have that uncertainty still sitting out there. We talked about just
the, you know, kind of the broad business cycle, asset allocation cycle. Like, my view is that we are
late stage from the traditional finance perspective of that cycle. I know some people are pointing at the
ISM, which has been above 50 now for three straight months and saying, oh, this looks like it's
actually the start of a new business cycle.
I think if you look at under the hood of some of that data, it's much less bullish than
you would think.
And I'm mostly looking at just the actual employment data within the manufacturing sector,
which within the services sector.
We haven't seen that inflect.
And there's, I won't get into all the details of that, but I'm sort of fading this
idea that the ISM's telling us we're going into a new,
a new business cycle.
We know inflation, the inflation data wasn't great last week.
That's making it hard for the Fed to come in and, you know,
cut rates.
We talked about the BC cycle.
That's a reset mode.
BCs are starting to allocate,
but it's not,
it's just typically what you would see kind of at the bottom,
you know, what you think is, you know,
bare market conditions.
And then of course, you know, there's there's also other concerns within the private credit markets.
You know, we've seen, you know, LPs trying to get out of funds, getting gated, trying to get out of funds.
And so there's still, there's still a decent amount of uncertainty out there.
We don't see these impulses to tell us that we're, where we've bottomed and that like there's, we're going to go into a new regime shift here.
and we know that, you know, this typically takes about a year or so to play out.
We're about six months into it.
So that's kind of the, I guess, the offset to the bull case.
And I mean, I think if you hear both sides, it's a very, you know, you can see why we're saying this is a battle between bulls and bears right now.
Yeah, I can totally see that.
Say more about your response to the bullish perspective on the war in Iran.
So the bullish perspective, just to remind our audience is basically the worst of the war is over.
It's already been reflected in market price.
Look, by the way, Bitcoin is up since the war started.
The market's already absorbed that, factored it in.
It's already baked into the model.
What's your bare response to that?
The bare response to that is that oil prices, so Bloomberg has done some work on this
in terms of just like the impact that higher oil prices have on consumption in the economy.
And about a $10 increase in the oil price equates to about a 30 basis point decline in consumption.
And so if you have a $100 oil or so and it just kind of stays at that level for a long enough period of time,
that's likely to pull about 1% of GDP out of the consumption economy.
So I think that's something to pay attention to.
The offset of that is that, you know, we've seen some of these, what it looks like is a lot of the oil tankers, you know, in Asian markets, other parts of the world are now rerouting and coming to the U.S.
And heading towards the Texas area to fill up their tanks.
And that's good for the kind of like, you know, Main Street economy and the oil sector, industrial sector in the U.S.
So you're kind of, you know, maybe you're hurting the consumer in the U.S. and consumption, but we're sort of boosting, you know, kind of the real economy. And so that's, that can be a bit of an offset there. But I think, you know, to me, it's really about how long does this go on? Does it escalate? And how does that bleed into inflation?
But address that piece, because I think that the bold perspective is like Trump kind of wants out of this war, just like the tariffs, there's going to be it back down.
you can totally tell he's trying to get out.
We do have a two-week, I guess, peace.
I don't know what's going to be negotiated.
But the idea that the Trump doesn't want this, he's going to back out, he's pretty good with, you know, not being swayed too much by sunk cost fallacy.
You know, he's not going to just stay there for the sake of staying there.
He's just going to go move on, maybe pretend it didn't happen, something.
He's going to find a way out.
That's been how he operates, is what the bull would say.
and that's what we saw with tariffs.
Why do you think that that wouldn't be the case here?
Well, partly because it's not a unilateral decision from him.
And I think what I'm starting to pay more attention to is just how, what are these other countries starting to do as we're starting to see, you know, how is NATO getting involved right now?
Are they going to start blocking the straight with us?
Is that an escalation?
How do markets perceive that?
we're seeing moves from, you know, people that may want to support Iranian, Iran's position, you know, China supplying weapons to Iran, to Iran. We've seen Trump come out and tweet. If they give them up with weapons, we're going to, you know, start tariffing 50% on China. So that's an escalation now of the trade war, which is still ongoing, you know, in the background here. So to me, that's, you know,
I was pretty bearish on sort of the setup of the economy before this conflict started.
So like I'm paying less attention to this.
I think if this is like your, if you think the war is the only thing that matters,
then you're missing like that what the structure of the economy was before the war started
and we've done more damage to it.
And so, you know, I'm not putting as much emphasis on like, oh, if the war is over,
then we're just going to go into a bull market.
There is still the thing I think you have to contend with.
you know, being more bearish, which is the AI miracle.
And we did talk on the bull case about this massive demand for AI, you know,
Anthropic with its mythos model, which is so powerful, can't even release it.
Just the revenue climb of these AI companies has been spectacular.
Big tech companies still have pretty strong balance sheets,
and they're deploying it into what looks to be a revolutionary technology.
maybe the one thing to look at is just AI.
And Ron doesn't matter.
All these other things don't matter for the market
just because AI is so strong.
What's your counter to that?
I think the AI sector can do well.
What's fascinating about this
is that the MAG7 has been weak
while this is going on.
So to me, like that can be true
and you can still have asset prices coming down,
Like it doesn't, it doesn't, just because we're seeing that demand doesn't tell them, doesn't, doesn't mean that the liquidity cycle is going to inflect and some of these other important factors in the market are going to support that.
So, yeah, I mean, I think it's, I think it's really good that we're seeing that.
But it doesn't, it's not just like a, you know, a green light to me to say, okay, the economy's healthy.
You know, it's time to, it's time to be, you know, be full on risk mode, risk on mode.
And like I'm saying, you know, we, to me, this is like a time where you should be leaning towards being in the market versus out of the market.
What I'm trying to do is align my portfolio with what I think the probabilities are that we've sort of gone to what, you know, I think is potentially deep value zone for Bitcoin and some of these other crypto assets that we're tracking.
But yeah, it's, I mean, this is a, this is probably the most difficult episode that we've presented.
produced together because I think it's it's it's it's it's you could probably see even the way I'm
answering all of these questions it is a very uh difficult market to navigate right now and um yeah
it's it's it's it's it's it's it's we're very divided I would say and one thing that I
would say just to add on to this is like as if the if we're seeing like this can people
becoming more and more convinced that the bottom is in and I still have you know fairly
strong views on some of these other things we've talked about,
that's an important piece of information that everybody has bought in.
Right.
So now, you know, if the structure and what you're seeing in sentiment is at the bottom
is in, but the price hasn't actually like come too far off the lows that it's telling
you everybody's allocated.
And then if Bitcoin, let's say Bitcoin goes up to 80K or so, which is very possible,
right?
I don't have strong views on what can happen in the short term.
But if we do see Bitcoin start to creep back up,
that sentiment will get even stronger that the bottom was in.
That's as, that's, and if I still have strong views that we haven't actually,
the market structure hasn't, you know, rotated from weak hands to strong hands
and what we expect to see throughout a bare market hasn't actually played out.
And everyone's sort of going all in again.
It kind of, that's the setup that takes you back to like Q4 of,
last year, where everyone's in expecting to go higher.
So, Mike, what's your probability that, you know, we'll get another dip versus the bottom
is in?
So I guess the probability that we've seen the bottom already and the bottom's in versus
we haven't seen the bottom yet.
We're going to dip further still.
How would you wait the probability there?
I think it's really close.
I've been trying to align my portfolio with my view on that.
and I'm still of the mind that the probability still points towards that that Bitcoin hasn't
actually hit its cycle low.
It would be odd for me, for me, for Bitcoin to hit that low as fast as it did as early
in a cycle as it has.
And also without being able to have any conviction on like a shift in the liquidity, you know,
structure out there, it would just be, it would be a bit of an anomaly for,
for me to...
So is that like 6040 to you, or is it more like 80-20 in terms of probability?
More like 60-40. More like 60-40. So you really are on kind of the cusp of not being
quite sure where we are in this market. Yeah. Yeah. And at some point, like at some point we will
have hit the blow. And, you know, that's it. It's in. And you got to start to be more in a risk
on stance. And like we don't know if we've hit that. And I just don't think we have.
And the more people that disagree with me, you know, that gives me like more conviction that we probably haven't hit the low because everything else that I would look for hasn't really played out.
Is it harder to time the highs or the lows or the lows?
Like, and like I guess do you even have to decide?
What's a sensible way to play this if you're 6040?
A sensible way to play this, I think for the average person out there is just to be, you know, scaling it.
Like have a list of what we do is we have a list of things that we want to buy.
we have targets on what we think are fair value and deep value ranges for those
and start to scale in when you think the probability of one year, two, year, three year,
returns is in your favor.
So, I mean, we spend a lot of time on this.
So I'm probably being more cute than the average investor should try to be.
And probably should just be, you know, scaling in, just averaging into the things that you think are the best place.
for the next cycle, I'm sort of trying to hit the home run.
And we've got a little bit more of like a Warren Buffett approach.
Like I want to buy capitulation.
Like we were buying in early February because the market was capitulating.
And that's when I want to be buying.
I don't want to be buying when I, you know, everyone's starting to turn bullish.
And like I still think that there's more time for this to kind of play out.
So bankless listeners, if you want to hear the scaling in journey, as I said, Mike and I,
publish weekly episodes every Wednesday. The next one's going to come out on this Wednesday.
To get that, go subscribe to the Defi Report as well. Spotify, YouTube, Apple, wherever you consume
podcasts. You can find that. What's coming up this Wednesday on the Defi Report? What report
you drop in? Yeah. So every Wednesday, that's our TDR Pro report, where we go through market structure
and we go through just kind of like how we assess the probability of like deep value and stuff. So one thing that
we track is a lot of these important KPIs and we track what the one, two, three year forward-looking
returns could look like based on historical analysis. And we've done some analysis on tracking
as we kind of came down in the bear market as we hit those levels. Okay, this is what your
forward-looking returns look like. The other way to do that analysis is to actually assume that
you're coming out of the trough and you're hitting those KPIs now.
So what is that, what are those forward looking returns look like if you're actually
inflecting into a bull market stage?
So we'll have some analysis on that.
And yeah, just always, always anchored to data, market structure, and a lot of this cycle
type of analysis that we put out.
I can't wait to do that with you on Wednesday.
I guess that's the, we get to see the ROI, the numbers for being patient.
And what are the rewards to an investor for buying in fair value and deep value territory?
Mike, thanks so much for joining us today.
This has been great.
Bankless listeners, got to let you know.
Of course, we don't truly know where the market is headed.
None of this has been financial advice.
You could lose what you put in.
But we are headed west.
This is the frontier.
It's not for everyone.
But we're glad you're with us on the bankless journey.
Thanks a lot.
