Bankless - Why Prices Are Crashing & What's Next—How Mike Nadeau Called the Cycle
Episode Date: December 3, 2025Michael Nadeau called the top before the 10/10 crash. In this episode, he sits down with Ryan to explain why. They break down the onchain data that flipped him risk off, Bitcoin’s decisive break bel...ow the 50-week moving average, and why global liquidity and rate cuts may not rescue this cycle. Michael shares the price zones where Bitcoin becomes compelling again, how long-term holder behavior maps to past tops, and the framework he’s using to build a high conviction watch list for the next bull. Michael Nadeau https://x.com/JustDeauIt ------ 📣REYA | ETHEREUM FOR TRADERS https://bankless.cc/reya 🗞️ THE DEFI REPORT | SIGN-UP & SUBSCRIBE (CODE: TDRPRO30) https://thedefireport.io/sign-up https://buy.stripe.com/dRm3cv84e6FYfFzbVgebu01 ------ BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: 🔵COINBASE | ETH & BTC BACKED LOANS https://bankless.cc/coinbase-borrow 🪙FRAXNET | MINT, REDEEM, EARN https://bankless.cc/fraxnet 🦄UNISWAP | SWAP ON UNICHAIN https://bankless.cc/unichain 🛞MANTLE | MODULAR L2 NETWORK https://bankless.cc/Mantle 💤EIGHT SLEEP | IMPROVE YOUR SLEEP https://bankless.cc/eight-sleep ------ TIMESTAMPS & RESOURCES 0:00 Intro 0:48 Market Downturn Analysis 5:22 Risk-Off Position Insights 8:25 Market Structure Breakdown 9:49 October Call Reflection 11:27 November Confirmation 13:48 Market Psychology Overview 24:43 Cycling Through Market Phases 28:55 Wealth Destruction Zone 34:11 Markets KPIs 38:47 Long-Term Holder Dynamics 44:02 Cycle End Analysis 49:07 Global Liquidity Conditions 52:15 Trading Strategies Discussion 56:13 Price Points & Metrics 1:04:47 Watch List Strategy 1:07:38 Closing & Disclaimers ------ Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here: https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bagless Nation, this is Ryan, Sean Adams. I have Michael Nato here from the D5 report on the podcast today. Michael, we are fresh back from holidays, man. How were your holidays? How was Thanksgiving? Do you get any weird crypto questions from your family?
That's fantastic. Thanksgiving. I appreciate you asking. I'm actually on the road right now down in Florida. But now I had a nice little break. Talked a little bit about crypto with the family. My dad's flying high. He's actually more of a gold bug. He's pretty excited about gold right now.
Yeah, you should be. Yeah, enjoying the break. Hopefully you have as well.
Yeah, I have, definitely. And hopefully your family members were following the DeFi report,
because you made some calls that actually held up very well, and they should be pretty happy for receiving them.
There's a few things I want to talk about today on the agenda. There's definitely no sugar-coding it.
Crypto prices are down bad. At the time of recording, we are well below 3,000 on ETH price, and I don't know, are we?
85K, something like this on Bitcoin.
We're recording this on.
I think so.
Monday, December 1st.
We got to talk about that.
It feels like investors are moving towards the acceptance phase, that this is more than
a pullback that maybe the cycle is over.
So, Mike, I want to get your perspective on what happens next.
And one of the things you've done is really called this cycle better than pretty much
anyone else I'm following closely.
So I got to ask you how you saw this in advance, what data you used.
and if some of that data can be used to help us predict the way out, the next leg up.
Hopefully there's some hope here.
And most importantly, I want to find out what you are doing now when you're buying back in
and what assets you're looking at.
You've told me before, Mike, that you actually get more energized during barricles,
during the big long-term dips.
So are you feeling energized right now?
You know, there's been a lot of negativity, you know, on crypto Twitter
and I think people are a little soured by just price action out there.
I do feel energized.
And I think my sort of long-term bullish outlook for crypto
hasn't changed at all.
And I think the reason that I kind of enjoy the bear markets
is just you get a little bit more clarity,
especially for folks like me that are really focused on data and fundamentals.
It's sort of easier to sort of see what's real once some of the froth gets kind of taken
out of the markets. And so that's where a lot of the really strong sort of conviction thesis work
comes into play. And I think the nice thing about like these four-year cycles is you sort of get
a chance to kind of re-underwrite your thesis with these sort of little bare markets that we get.
So I'm looking forward to doing a lot of that work over the next, you know, three to six months or so.
You also get the benefit, Mike, of some cheap prices. And certainly we're seeing those cheap prices.
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All right, Mike, here's what we're going to do.
First, I want to take some time to recap where we are.
We had an episode over 30 days ago, I think came out on October 21st, so what transpired
since then.
Then we'll get into where we are now.
We'll zoom out a little bit, look at the cycle.
And lastly, we'll talk about what's next and how to play it.
You ready?
Sounds great.
All right.
Where we left off, our last episode was right here.
It's entitled, is The Cycle Over.
And I think my hope was no.
And you were saying, yes, unfortunately, Ryan, you have to accept the truth that the cycle very well could be over.
Just to give Bankless listeners some context, you and I started doing these episodes on Bankless about six months ago.
And the goal was really to use some of your insights to look at on-chain data to make better crypto-investing decisions.
And your orientation has always been long-term, permable on crypto, but you play the cycles,
and you buy quality on the dips. So I said in the intro that you've been probably the most
correct cycle investor that I've seen. And I think part of the reason for that is something
we'll get into. I'm calling this cyclimentals, which is maybe the D5 report's unique brand
of using on-chain data to predict these cycles. So let's get into,
your calls back in October. Right now, of course, Bitcoin price looking kind of ugly,
84,000 at the time of recording. ETH price, $2,700 at the time of recording. Bitcoin is down
22% on the 30 day. Ether is down 30%. Other down market assets, of course, down to greater degrees.
So this is feeling kind of bad right now. The first indication that I received that you were
moving towards a risk off position was this email that appeared in my inbox on October 10th,
2025. And it said, portfolio update, shifting to risk off. I looked at this and I thought,
oh, shit, Mike is going risk off. Last I checked, he was like, you know, 25% cash, 75% crypto assets.
So what's he doing? What's going? What's risk off? And you gave some reasons for this.
you said, Bitcoin had some lackluster trading volumes, even had kind of this run from 108K
at the beginning of October, end of December to 125.
You felt like that was lackluster.
But mostly, I think you were seeing a lack of demand signal.
And there are a number of other things that maybe awoken you to the fact that something
was feeling off in these markets.
Something was feeling kind of end cycle.
And so you made a decision, I believe, on that Thursday to switch to a risk off
position and moved to like 60% cash from 26% cash. And then that day, that same day, later that day on
Friday, October 10th, we had the 10-10 flash crash. And it was pretty obvious that something
broke in crypto. Maybe I'll just pause there. In early October, right before the 10-10 event,
what were you seeing in the markets that caused you to send this email and switch to a risk-off mode?
Yeah, so I think at the time, and again, always just kind of trying to play the probabilities,
what we're looking at is really market structure for Bitcoin.
And we look at a lot of these sort of holder cohorts to understand what the market structure looks like.
And Bitcoin, you know, had basically traded at an average price of about 102K over the last year from like October to October.
And so all of the sort of new money that came into Bitcoin at the time coming in at that
sort of elevated price range.
And we could see that the sort of more longer term holders were exudating the market while
that was taking place.
So that the market structure was tilting more towards sort of like newer money, possibly weaker hands,
sort of sitting at the top, while at the same time we were starting to get nervous about
the sort of the amount of leverage that was in the system at the time. And so you kind of have
this like kind of lopsided market structure set up with lots of leverage building. And then
we were starting to get nervous that the liquidity conditions in the market were starting to
sort of turn over. We're starting to see some tension in the repo markets, a lack of liquidity
in the banking sector. And that sort of lined up with our view that like on the on the margin
fiscal spend was sort of winding down and you have tariffs also pulling liquidity out of the markets.
And so when we kind of added all of these things up, we started to feel like, okay,
the probability is actually pointing to a risk off stance.
That was the call that we made.
We were sort of confident that every stage that we would expect to see play out in a cryptocicle
had essentially played out even though you didn't have sort of that euphoric period at the
kind of like October peak, which I think was around like October 6th or so.
That's right.
So that was kind of the summary.
And it's really kind of adding all of these things up to kind of land out like,
okay, the probability points to risk off.
We've had a good cycle.
You know, we were buying at the lows.
And so it's kind of time to take risk off.
And so that's what we did.
And that's how we're playing these cycles.
And now it's kind of pivoting towards, you know,
where is fair value potentially going to come in for BTC if we are,
in fact, you know, heading into like a longer term bear market set up here.
So that's exactly right.
So not only did you make this call in early October and interpret these indicators correctly,
but you also did it with conviction.
And I will say this was definitely a contrarian call in crypto circles.
Like long-term bulls like me, I mean, we don't want to believe it that the cycle's over
because the indicators had not been hit at the time.
And so you came on the podcast.
this was our monthly October podcast or like into November October 21st.
And you were saying likely the cycle is over.
At the time, though, this was even after the 10-10 event, it felt like a flash crash.
Markets had partially recovered.
And you were saying, hey, it's more than fair odds.
My base case is that the cycle is over, unfortunately.
But the time of recording, Bitcoin was 110K and Eath was 3,900.
So people kind of hated the episode, to be honest, Mike, right?
And that's how you know you're at least in a contrarian place.
Turned out that call has been contrarian right.
And we'll talk about maybe that was your October call.
And let's talk about November, because November was, I think, the market scratching its head and waiting for a confirmation.
This is probably you looking at some of the data and waiting for a confirmation as well.
So you had this November 5th report on the defy report website.
and the title was, has the bear market arrived?
At the time, you were like 75% cash, I think.
So you had already placed your bets that basically it looked like it.
But you were open to alternative data, and you said this,
the bull market structure hasn't technically broken yet.
We're looking for weekly closes below the 50-week moving average at the time.
That would be about 103K Bitcoin.
You're waiting for that, the 50-week moving average,
two closes below for confirmation.
But you said your base case is the cycle is over.
and you're open to data proving otherwise.
Let me just ask, this chart, the 50-week moving average,
this is, folks are looking at the chart,
this is from early November,
have we broken those weekly closes
of 50-week moving average for Bitcoin,
being below the 50-week moving average?
Has that now happened yet?
Do you have the confirmation you were looking for in early November?
We do, yeah.
So we do have this confirmation.
The 50-week moving average is around the,
100K mark. And so that has served as in the last few cycles, that has served as bull market support.
We can see that in the kind of the green arrows there. We've kind of been balancing off of it
whenever Bitcoin has a little bull market correction. We now have broken through that. So now,
and we've had multiple weekly closes on that. And I think, you know, the market sold off
pretty hard last night. And, you know, we had a big sort of monthly close.
at, you know, Sunday 8 p.m. last night came in kind of lower than I think the market was hoping for.
So it looks like some of these critical resistance points are turning into resistance and not support.
What I would have been looking for to potentially change my mind, which would be that, okay, maybe we reclaim that and it starts to serve as support.
Then you can start to turn bullish.
But seeing it get rejected and then the market reaction to that with a pretty hard sell-off last night tells me that.
that this is deteriorating further,
and the probabilities of sort of a longer-term bear market
are starting to be confirmed for me.
Okay, so this November was definitely confirmation.
And by the way, this 50-week moving average,
why is that important?
My understanding is that the past cycles in crypto,
every time we've had at least two weekly closes,
multiple weekly closes below, for Bitcoin as below the 50-week moving average in the fourth year
of the cycle, it's been over. The cycle's been over. And then we see kind of a more prolonged
bare period of time or prices dip. And we get kind of, you know, very negative sentiment for,
you know, 12 months or so. So that has always been the case in previous cycles. And you're just
saying now we have that confirmation here. And you're saying that's like, it's always been the case
previously, so why wouldn't it be the case now?
Yes, I think so, but it's also, I think, important for people to maybe, you know, it's one
indicator.
And, you know, we're looking at a number of data points here.
But this, if we want to sort of go under the hood and think about this one indicator and why
it tends to, tends to work, I think it comes back to the market structure and what we talk
about in terms of the sort of holder base and how that has sort of gotten lopside.
So if you think of the width of the 50 week, that's about a year's worth of
moving average. And we just, I was mentioning earlier, the, um, over the last year, the average price
is about 102K or so. So all of the new money that came in is coming in at that, that higher level.
And now we're sort of breaking off of that. So those, that, that holder cohort is now, uh, has a,
has an unrealized loss. Uh, they're setting on losses. And what tends to happen is when the,
when we break down from that, we will see some bear market rallies. And what I'm looking for is,
When you get those bear market rallies, are these people that came in, like as tourists over the last year, are they selling as we got the bare market rally because they just want to get out as close to break even as possible?
I think that's the sort of market structure that sits underneath, you know, that indicator of the 50-week moving average.
Okay, so that's what you mean by market structure.
So it's not just one particular, like, technical analysis indicator and a moving average indicator.
this gets into kind of maybe your brand of fundamentals, what I called earlier in the episode,
you know, the TDR cyclimentals, which is you're using some of this on-chain data to kind
of predict the stage of the cycle, right? That's the cyclimental. And something that has come
across in all of your work like this post that you wrote in mid-November, the question of
the Bitcoin market structure, you said the Bitcoin market structure is broken. When you say
market structure, you're really talking about this long-term holder activity. I know that's just
one data point among many, yet your work seems to focus on long-term holder activity and in general
holder activity more than I think any other cycle analyst I've seen in the space. Why? Why is
on-chain holder activity so important to you? And is that the key data set that you used basically
to make these calls in earlier October?
I think so, yeah.
So I view this data.
This is like a gift that, you know, we get with on-chain data.
And I was actually sort of having a conversation
with some family members over Thanksgiving about,
you know, imagine if you could tell
what the sort of holder base of the gold market looks like right now.
Yeah, your dad doesn't have that, right?
He doesn't have that insight.
So this is like, you know,
this is kind of like a little cheat code that we have
if you have access to this data
to be able to see,
actual market structure, you know, there's plenty of analysis that we're also doing on,
you know, looking at the macro setup and looking at the business cycle and looking at all these other
things. But then we can come back to this and say, well, if we don't feel really strongly about
the macro setup, the liquidity setup, and we know that the sort of the market structure has
shifted to this sort of like lopsided, top heavy structure, then it just adds to that
conviction. I think that's what allows us to kind of make those bets that maybe seem to be really
bold, contrarian views. But for us, it's just, hey, this is what the data is telling me.
But why is it? So we have this data. It's a gift that we have in crypto where we can track holders
over time and how long they're holding kind of their sort of a proxy for cost basis of the
cost at which they acquired the assets, whether it's Bitcoin or Ether or some other crypto
assets. So we have that data. We don't have that in other markets. You don't. You
don't have that in equities, you certainly don't have that with commodities or gold. We have that
in crypto. But what's the intuition as to why it should be the case that long-term holder activity
and whether they are accumulating or whether they're selling? Why should it be the case that that actually
dictates the cycles here? Well, it doesn't have to. It certainly doesn't have to. And I think the way that
I would think about this is like if we know that historically long-term holders tend to come in,
then sort of set the bottom of markets. They tend to sort of, you know, exit markets when,
when there's a separation between their cost basis and kind of the market price. I think, you know,
if we know that that's sort of the probabilities, we could say, well, wait a minute, you know,
how could we be wrong on this? What would it look like if we're actually wrong about this?
And I think that that's where you have to have some clear catalyst for a new wave of money or there's
new money. There's a new buyer. Something happened, whether it's,
in the, you know, regulatory or that you feel confident that there's a new buyer that's,
that's happy to buy Bitcoin at 100K or so. And we couldn't really find that, that catalyst.
You know, sailors, you know, kind of tapped out. Most of the debt buying, you know,
had sort of played out, you know, over the summer months. And so I think, I think that was,
the factor where it was like, okay, we could be wrong about this, but what is the catalyst?
You have to replace what typically is the market participant that sets the bottom,
who is going to do it?
We didn't have clarity on that.
Okay, so you didn't identify a source of demand.
But it does seem to be the case that Bitcoin assets and maybe crypto assets more generally
because Bitcoin kind of moves the liquidity of the entire crypto market right now.
It seems that it happens in these like accumulation adoption types of waves
with different cohorts across each cycle.
And maybe that's just a structure of the market.
Maybe that's the market structure.
So first you have like weird crypto anarchists and early believers.
And maybe then at some point they kind of exit some of their assets to sort of the early hedge funds and early VCs.
And they sort of exit to the next.
And now we have, it seems to be the case that we have some larger institutions, not maybe the largest institutions at the world.
We still don't have kind of the sovereign funds maybe have not entered in size, but we do have
the black rocks of the world.
And that demand source has now exhausted, but kind of the earlier adopters have sold into
that net new demand source.
And now the demand source is exhausted, and we kind of roll into another cycle.
That's essentially maybe the narrative story for why this on-chain data actually matters
for you?
Yeah, I think so.
I think that lays it out pretty nicely.
And something that we should also mention here is that this is constantly evolving, right?
So we are looking at, when we look at this glass, no data here, you know, and really the holder cohorts,
this is on chain only.
So there is a growing part of the market now that's as Bitcoin gets more financialized,
you have the UTF products about, you know, 6% of the supply is now held held in those ETF products.
And so this is, you know, getting, eventually getting more challenging as we go, as we go,
Bitcoin becomes more financialized and almost like some of this, these KPI has become a little bit
more off-chain. So that's not something I'm looking forward to as an analyst because, you know,
this is, this is fantastic data for us. But it's something we do factor in and we've actually
been doing some work which actually try to understand what's the sort of average cost basis of the
ETF holders as well. But yeah, I think, I think just kind of the way you're laying this out,
is correct. And I just view this as like it's out there, it's available. This is unique.
data and you can't get this type of data in the traditional markets. And I find it like really,
really helpful, even though it's not perfect either. Like, these are sort of proxies for what we think
the cost basis is and what we think sort of the setup is with different holder cohorts. But it does
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All right.
So that's a recap of where we are now.
Let's zoom out on the cycle for a minute.
And you wanted me to include this slide, the classic psychology of a market slide
where hopefully everyone is seeing this on screen on YouTube or Spotify video.
But this is the classic disbelief, hope, optimism, belief, thrill, euphoria,
and then the market spikes up.
And then you get complacency.
anxiety, denial, panic, and then it levels off into anger and depression, right? And that's a,
that's a full cycle of a bubble, basically, or any large market cycle. It's something that we've
seen recurring in crypto. I guess my question, as we look at the psychology of a market here,
Mike, is, okay, where are we now? Where would you place us? I think we are, you know, what's
kind of weird about this is that we didn't really have the euphoria in October. When I think
about the cycle, I sort of think of the euphoria really came, really Q4 of last year into
January, into sort of when Trump was coming into office. We had, you know, the Trump meme going
launch. And that was kind of when the, that was probably the most euphoric period of the market.
I think this threw people off a little bit. But I think it was kind of similar to what we saw
on the 21 cycle as well. I think the first peak was in April of 21 around when point base
went public. And I think that was really sort of the
the euphoric top of the 21 cycle. We did end up going back and getting up to like 66K
but it was kind of a muted sort of end to the cycle. I think we had a similar
setup that actually played out in this cycle. I think that threw people off just that
we didn't see that that sort of euphoria at that time. I think we are in complacency now and
I think that was sort of the conclusion that I was coming to, even back in early October,
that the market was too complacent.
And that there was quite a bit of pushback on sort of my view at the time.
I think that has becoming a little bit more consensus now.
But as this plays out, as Bitcoin, you know, continues to drop or sort of chop it around in the 80s
and the longer it goes, and it's sort of breaking these technicals and the market structure
that people are looking for it to confirm maybe a more bullish view,
then we start just get into the anxiety phase.
And that's when maybe people that came in over the last year,
when they see like a little bear market rally,
they kind of want to get out.
And that starts to kind of fool the market a little bit.
I saw somebody come up with some, you know, an analogy for bare markets.
And it's kind of like, think of it as like a bouncy ball, like going downstairs.
Like, it's going down,
but you do get these bounces when things come up.
And it's that the market structure is such that I'm concerned that these like
sort of weaker hands might just try to look to get out.
And then once that's all done and we get, you know, maybe we still don't know if there's
bad debts out there that sort of need to come to the surface and things like this.
This happened in the last cycle.
We had a number of like C-Fi companies that were in trouble and that all had to get reconciled.
And you typically have a few more legs down as that plays out.
So that's sort of the setup moving forward.
And I think the market is, you know, based on what I'm seeing on X,
we are certainly not in the greed, you know, buy zone anymore.
It does seem like we're kind of coming off to the right side of that chart.
Definitely, yeah.
I think October maybe was more complacency and then some denial.
Now I feel like we're in anxiety mode.
and denial. I think a lot of the folks listening to this are probably anxious listening to you as
you speak here. So that indicates where we are. Maybe not quite panic, although I don't know how much
of a panic will get this cycle. But it is roughly, the psychology here is roughly playing it out
as it has in previous cycles. Let's maybe map this to your idea of the stages of a cycle, right?
And so talk about this chart.
You've got four different stages of the cryptomental cycle,
let's call it, or cyclimentals part of the cycle.
You've got the early bowl.
You've got wealth creation.
You've got wealth distribution.
And I'm guessing we are now in the wealth destruction zone, October 25th.
So talk about this.
And why are you putting it on this specific chart?
Is this a price chart?
Yeah, this is a price chart.
So this is kind of like the 25 cycle here.
So it's kind of starting in early 23 when Bitcoin had just kind of bottomed after FGX.
And you had this early bull period, which was really kind of like the first part of 2020.
And like something that I always come back to with sort of the early part of markets and also the later stages of markets is that most market participants will be late to actually acknowledge a bold market.
in the early status.
So an example of this is like,
you know, by October of 23,
Bitcoin was up 100% or so on the year,
but I don't think people sort of...
They did not feel bullish at all.
It was still kind of like...
It's almost like people don't want to admit
there's the bull market's on
until you actually go back to all-time highs
and crossover all-time highs.
But also, they just opened their portfolio tracking app
and they see that they're still down.
They're still down from the previous all-time.
time high, so they don't feel bullish because they didn't position themselves in a cash position
across the cycle and they weren't buying that, you know, October 23, that Q1, October 23 play
there. That's probably why. There's no FOMO at that point, right? That's the interesting thing
to me is that you could be up 100, you know, up 100 percent off the lows, very little FOMO. So that's
kind of the early bull period. And then, you know, in this cycle, the wealth creation period was sort of
an interesting period because we had the Bitcoin
ETS came out. And that happened before
the halving occurred. We actually went to all-time highs
before the having, which is the first time that
that's happened. And so that was another, you know,
period where, okay, now we're, you know, people are
feeling good. I think everyone's
back to, you know, just feeling good about
where the markets are. You're probably getting,
getting more FOMO at this stage as Bitcoin's, the price of
Bitcoin is probably moving past sort of the average.
holders cost basis, and people start allocating again, and then this starts pushing.
That was a move from like 35K Bitcoin all the way above 100K Bitcoin by January 2025.
And the 100K felt like quite a milestone to be above that for the first time.
Right. And by the end of that, by the time you got to January 25, you know, a lot of the
people that were buying in the early bull, some of them are happy to exit. They're up, they're up
5x or so. They're happy to exit. So you're already started to get a like,
we talk about market structure, you're starting to see the market structure turn over once you
get to those elevated levels. And that's a thing, that's a thing to pay attention to because that leads
into the wealth distribution zone there, which played out over the last year or so. And we can get
into some metrics that we look at in terms of like the cycle metrics here. But as you get into
wealth distribution, we didn't, this is part of the reason we didn't get the euphoria is like
people, long-term holders, were happy to exit at, you know, three to five X gains,
but we didn't have the, you know, the new buyer coming in at that time to really
steady the ship and allow us to go to new highs. We did have a lot of leverage in the system.
I think because of the debts, I think people got complacent thinking that there's a,
there's a price-agnostic buyer in the market with these debts. Let's go ahead. Let's put the
leverage on. A lot of this was more in all coins. And then that leads to
those big liquidations, which I think that the one that we had on October 10th really kind of
broke the market structure, broke the psychology of the market a little bit.
So January 2025 to October 2025 is a wealth distribution phase.
And now we're in presumably if all of this is lining up correctly, you think the weight
of probability is we're in a bare market wealth destruction phase for what, you know, nine,
12 months.
Maybe we'll talk about the next early bull market indicator.
in a moment. But is that how you're anticipating this plays out, the wealth destruction?
Yes. I think we are sort of in that zone right now. And I know people don't want to hear this.
It doesn't feel good hearing it. I think that's kind of, you know, where we sit and we can get into
kind of what's coming next, I think. Before we do, though, you mentioned that the cycle key performance
indicators, like the main metrics that you're looking at for 2025. And these are some of the on-chain
metrics. So I guess this is mapping them to the different points in the cycle, right?
So for each metric, we're looking at early bull, wealth creation, wealth distribution,
and then where we are today, presumably early wealth destruction phase, let's say.
So what are these metrics and like how would you explain these numbers across the different
phases? Yeah. So this is kind of what we use. This is just a small sampling of some of the
the data points that we look at.
But as you can see, so if we just look at maybe the market value to realize value,
the NBRV there, that is measuring, you know,
what we think the average sort of cost basis of the network is relative to the market
value of the network.
And so we always want to buy Bitcoin when it's under one because that means sort of on
aggregate, you know, as a proxy for the average cost basis, the price is below that.
So in the early bull, you know, Bitcoin price back in early 23 is, you know, just around 20K or so.
And the, you know, average cost basis of the network is sitting around 24K or so.
So when you have that disparity, that's like a flashing green sign to go ahead and buy Bitcoin in my view.
And then as you can see, as you go to the next stage of the cycle of off creation, you can see now you're above one.
So maybe it's not like perfectly fair value to be buying Bitcoin at that time.
But you are in a bull market structure.
You know, it's pretty, you're you can still buy Bitcoin.
Then you're probably buying it at, you know, 50K or somewhere at that stage and you still
have some nice outside left.
But then as you get into later into well distribution, you can see the market value has
now detached considerably from the average kind of cost basis of the network.
We only got up to about, we didn't even hit three as a peak in terms of that ratio this cycle.
So we were expecting it to get a little bit higher earlier.
You know, we were making our calls earlier in the cycle.
And so it was slightly muted.
And then you can see now it's starting to, it's starting to trail off.
It's kind of going in the opposite direction.
So that's just kind of one metric that we look at.
We're also looking at the, you know, we talk about market structure.
a lot of that is looking at the percentage of the Bitcoin supply that's held by long-term
holders versus short-term holders.
You can see there's kind of like a process here where in the early stages of the cycle,
you tend to have a much larger base of long-term holders dominating the market.
And then as you go later into the stages of the cycle, those folks exit the market.
And so you can see the percentage of long-term holders.
holder starts to decline as you go through the cycle. And then we can also look at like,
you know, are they in profit or are they in loss? And you can see a story there where,
when you're at the bottom of the market or the early bull, a decent percentage of even the
long-term holders are actually at a loss. And then, you know, as you go through the cycle,
that comes down. Typically, you get to a place where actually zero percent of the long-term holders
are in loss. That's once you get up to all-time highs again. Today we're at 12 percent. So now we're
we're kind of going back in the other direction.
So these are some of the key metrics, and this is just how we anchor.
You know, it allows me to sort of sit back and have conviction over because we know
what the return profile can look like based on these types of metrics over a one, two,
three-year periods.
And so this is also an indicator of when you should buy back in, I suppose, which will
maybe talk about. One question before we discuss, like, what's next and how you think about this.
Part of the narrative that you're talking about, you're talking about long-term holders basically selling,
basically exiting their positions to the newer entrance in the market. There was an article that I read,
I think I mentioned to you, by Jordi Vassir. It was entitled Bitcoin Silent IPO, why this
consolidation isn't what you think. Now, he was setting up this article to say, hey, this is just a
temporary bump in the road, temporary dip, and longer term, things get bullish.
I think he was maybe talking about some more shorter term.
He wasn't predicting the end of the cycle as maybe you are.
But he was saying effectively that early Bitcoin holders, this is kind of their IPO moment,
basically, where we've got ETFs and they're exiting to newer holders.
And is that what you're seeing in the data?
effectively, did whales and long-term holders kill this cycle? Is the Bitcoin silent IPO narrative correct?
I think there's some nuance here, and I read Jordan's piece, and I thought I was a well-written piece.
He didn't have a ton of data in his piece. So this is something we've been tracking, and, you know, we're following this structure,
and we've been pretty vocal saying, hey, yeah, like long-term holders are exiting the market.
the structure is a little bit a little bit lopsided.
But, you know, is that actually like materially different from what we saw, you know,
at the peak of the 21 cycle?
That's really what I wanted to investigate a little bit further.
And, you know, my conclusion here is that probably not, you know,
there did look to be a little bit, you know, higher levels of kind of inactive supply.
So what we're looking at here is total supply that was,
inactive over a three to 10 year period. So this is like the stock of Bitcoin that has been
inactive over from a three to 10 year period. And so we kind of look at this to get a sense for
did this come way down in this cycle relative to the last cycle or the 17 cycle? You can see the
blue line kind of goes up as coins age into this cohort, right? As time goes on, more coins that haven't moved
are aging into it, it's growing.
And then as Bitcoin kind of goes into price discovery mode,
you tend to see that blue line drop down where those red arrows are.
And you see that kind of on the backside of each cycle.
We can see a pretty significant move there in a 17 cycle,
a much smaller one in the 21 cycle.
And I think, you know, I'm kind of like guessing here,
but it feels to me like there were a lot of whales that probably thought
that Bitcoin was going to get to 100K last cycle.
And we're maybe planning to sell at that point,
but never got the chance to.
And those whales seem to have, you know, stepped in
and, you know, made their coins active again.
And that's what shows up in the data here.
But why don't we flip through a few of these slides
because we can kind of start to tell a story here.
So what we did there, you know,
we just kind of looked at the chart to see if there was anything visually
that's like really making us think that there was a big
change this cycle. What we're looking at here is we're actually quantifying the total amount of
coins within that three to 10 year inactive supply cohort that actually became active
in the year before the price peaked over each cycle. So we're doing like a relative
comparison in terms of the total number of coins within these inactive supply cohorts
that actually became more active. And then we're normalizing that to the
the amount of the total Bitcoin supply at the time of the price peak for each cycle.
And so we can see that actually, this is sort of interesting because the amount of inactive
supply actually grew in the year leading up to the 2021 peak.
So more coins were just aging into this cohort.
And it tells you that maybe there wasn't a ton of selling or a ton of movement of these coins.
and we can see that in this cycle about 2.9% or so of the of the circulating supply actually
it moved within this cohort.
So that tells me, okay, that looks like, you know, maybe that narrative is correct.
And that's, this is the key thing to pay attention to with those stats is that's just
tracking movement of coins.
It's not telling us for sure if somebody sent their coins to exchange.
It could just be somebody, you know, moving some Bitcoin from one wallet to another and then
actually sell, but it's going to show up in that data.
So I wanted to then look at, hey, can we confirm that with like what we know to be actual transfers
from long-term holders to exchanges?
This gives us a totally different view.
It actually looks like there was less movement of coins that went to exchanges.
is this data is going to pick up
everything that was a direct
transfer to an exchange.
It's not going to pick up
an OTC sale, for example.
And this just kind of gets into a lot of the nuance
with this data.
An example of an OTC sale
that wouldn't show up there
would be like galaxy processed,
like a $9 billion dollar
in July, right?
So that would show up on the revived supply.
It's going to show up on this chart,
but we're not going to show up.
going to see it on the transfer to exchange is because that was an OTC sale.
So that's why we look at both of the,
there's a lot of nuance here because I think a lot of people will see people putting
charts up on Twitter or something.
And it just, it's easy to sort of look at that and say, oh, yeah, that's obviously what
happened.
But there's quite a bit of nuance to this.
I think maybe what you're saying is so the question of did whales and long-term
holders kill the cycle?
Is the answer to a question, yes, but not any more.
than usual. This is how cycles always end. So this was, this was nothing special. This is always
how they end. And of course, long-term holders are selling to shorter-term holders. That's kind of how I
think of it. I didn't find anything that I totally jumped out to me. And the reason I say this is that,
you know, to me, it's really more about there's just, you lost the marginal buyer.
Right. You lost the marginal buyer. And like, it wasn't an issue when, in July, when you had
someone dumping $9 billion of Bitcoin.
We were at $117K Bitcoin.
The market absorbed that pretty well back in July.
But that's, you know, once we kind of move through that,
there just wasn't that marginal buyer to capture that.
And so, yes, there were certainly, you know,
large whales and long-term holders that were selling.
I think it was mostly in line with what we've seen in past cycles.
And just like in past cycles, they tend to end when a marginal buyer just isn't there anymore.
For all the talk, this cycle has played out a lot like previous cycles, right?
I mean, we didn't get some of the euphoria.
We didn't feel like we did.
But everything else has played out pretty standard.
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And one of the other indicators that I know you look at besides the on-chain data is macro
indicators like Michael Howells Global Liquidity Index. Can you talk about global liquidity
and how that factors into what you think happens next for crypto? So weight of probability
is we're in a bare market.
What do you think the global liquidity conditions will be?
Yeah, and I recommend, I know you interviewed Michael recently,
I recommend that people check that out.
We source from a lot of his work,
and I think this is really helpful to sort of map out
not just what we look at in terms of the crypto-native data,
but then to kind of come to conclusions about where we think we are
in these liquidity cycles.
And when we were kind of getting a little bit concerned,
you know, late September,
early October, we were starting to see the signs that the global liquidity cycle might be
sort of, you know, topping out. And, you know, I always want to like understand why. Like,
I'm not just going to look at the chart and be like, okay, it's topping out. What's actually going on
under the hood here? And to me, what we're in a period of transition, and a lot of this has to do with
the Trump administration, tariff policies, and really what's happening in terms of like the
fiscal side of what we're seeing from the U.S. government.
And I think it's like probably not a super well-known thing that the fiscal deficit
actually came down for FY25.
Trump was only in office for, you know, about two-thirds of that.
That ended up, FY25 ended the end of September.
And so we were still running a big, you know, deficit, but on the margin, it's actually
coming down a little bit.
Part of that's because tariff revenues are increasing.
And then the other part is that the spending levels are just not growing at the same rank
they were under Biden.
And so when you add those two things up, that is liquidity negative to the markets just in terms
of what we're seeing in the United States.
I think there's this view that we have a new Fed president likely coming in.
It sounds like Trump is close to making a decision on this person.
Market expects this person to be very doveish, lower interest rates.
And I think that that is the setup, but I'm not convinced that that is going to actually be
really positive for risk assets.
And part of the reason for that is if you have less capital, like going into the markets
from the Treasury in terms of just Treasury spending and on the margin, that's just not growing
as much, if we see a Fed president come in and cut rates, you know, 100 basis points or so,
that's going to be even less, that potentially is going to increase and boost liquidity
with bank lending, but you're actually lowering fiscal spent, right? Because we're paying interest
on $38 trillion of debt. And so if you drop that by 1%, you know, 1%, that's hundreds of billions
of dollars, less going out into the economy. And I don't think the market is really appreciating
this. It's sort of just, oh, it's going to be the dollar's going to drop. Interest rates are going to drop.
good for risk assets. I'm not sure about that. And that's part of the reason that even with
this sort of like more maybe, you know, doveish Fed president coming in, we're not, you know,
convinced that this is going to be great for liquidity and great for markets.
So you think the GIL, this global liquidity index, Michael House, will continue to kind of like taper
down at least for a while. Like we're at the end of one large cycle and there's going to be
drawdown first before there's an injection, re-injection.
of global liquidity?
That's basically my base case.
And this is global.
So it's factoring in all of the major central banks and, you know, what China is doing
and everything as well.
But we really think the United States is kind of driving the bus.
And, you know, we tend to have these, you know, sort of periods of transition.
We had one when Biden came into office during, also during the midterm year where we had
to get, you know, we had to kill inflation.
And so it was a little bit of a different transition where the Fed was, what was hiking rates.
and we were ramping up fiscal spend
and then we were hiking rates.
This time we're going to be dropping rates
and lowering the fiscal spend,
but I think the outcome is going to be a bare market
for each scenario.
That's interesting, and that's why investors
should stay tuned to obviously your work,
but also Michael Howell's work,
because I think if you look at the headlines
and you're like, oh, well,
Trump is just getting a very dove-f Fed chair next,
and we've already started the rate cuts,
and so we're just going to cut, cut, cut.
Well, what if those cuts actually
don't impact global liquidity in the positive way. What if, you know, global liquidity, the big
picture story is actually, it continues to taper down. Well, it doesn't do what people expect,
and that's why they need to dive a little bit deeper on some of these numbers. Okay, so the setup,
we've looked at the on-chain data, we've talked about global liquidity. So that is going down.
So I guess what's next, it sounds like, is some sort of prolonged measured in months kind of
bear market. Can we talk about how to play this? So I know your style is to look at the cyclimentals
and like trade these things, trade kind of the four year, the six year, whatever it ends up being,
rather than buy and hold. Some people listening to this might just be like, Mike, this is still
too complicated. You got lucky, okay? Good calls in September, October, but you kind of got lucky.
I'd rather just buy,
hold dollar cost average
my way through these cycles.
That's how I've always done it.
What do you think of buy and hold
versus a trading these cycles type of strategy?
I don't hate it.
I definitely don't hate it.
I think it's definitely a personal decision
for people.
And there's kind of a few schools of thought
that I guess I have around this.
For me, I prefer to
try to buy the lows
and have conviction.
and be rooted in data to do all this.
And then, you know, try to get out of markets once we think like some of the sort of full market metrics are being hit.
The reason I like this is we can, I think you can get better returns.
I like the idea of being able to sort of re-underwrite the thesis, you know, every few years as we kind of go through cycles.
Because different cycles have different winners too, right?
I mean, presumably Bitcoin and Ether, they win some set,
but then there's going to be some breakouts down market.
100%.
And that's the other piece of it is like we're still so early in crypto.
It's hard to be like just fully long term on anything besides maybe like Bitcoin and
a couple of the majors.
And so we do think there's going to be new assets that come in and new projects that
we will likely be interested in.
So it gives us a chance to kind of step back, you know, books and profits.
the day, what we're trying to do is increase, you know, the amount of Bitcoin that we're
holding through cycles, improve our returns, and then be able to underwrite maybe other,
other big bets as well. You know, I get that this is complicated. This is something, you know,
we're in these markets looking at data every day, doing this 24-7. If you're just a professional
and you're, you know, just looking to kind of build some wealth, you know, by holding some crypto
assets, you know, maybe it is better for you to just try to buy when, you know, you know,
you think they're in a bare market and some of these more fair value metrics are being hit that we report on.
And maybe you don't sell.
You just or you sell maybe a very small amount and then you just try to fire more again in the bare market.
So I think there's different ways to play it and it's kind of a personal decision.
Okay.
Just as I've watched you play it through the DFI report and all D5 report,
subscribers of course get access to your portfolio on kind of like a weekly basis or if there's some sort of catalyst type of event.
Just, I mean, you've been in your risk on mode. You were like, you're close to, you know, 15%, 20% cash and the rest fully deployed into crypto. After the events of October, you've kind of reversed that. And I think, you know, October, the morning of October 10th, you were like 60%, 50% cash, something like that. And the rest crypto. And now you're 80% cash and 20% crypto. And that's really how you play these cycles, right? You want to be primarily.
cash so that you can redeploy into cheap assets with strong fundamentals.
And fortunately, that's the position that you're in.
And I guess listeners, their case will somewhat vary.
But now for those with some spare cash, looking to deploy across this cycle,
let's talk about when maybe they should deploy at what price point.
So you wrote this post.
There was a report earlier in the month of November, which is like, what would it take
for Michael Nato to turn bullish?
Like at what price point?
What are you looking for?
Maybe we'll talk about Bitcoin.
You said, we can track several key indicators
to gauge where we're on the cycle.
In bare markets,
we expect the Bitcoin price
to drop somewhere near the intersection
of the realized price
and the 200-week moving average
and the cost to mine one Bitcoin.
You also said there were some additional indicators
that you were going to look at,
like the 40% of long-term holders in profit,
price below the ETF average cost, which gets into some of the off-chain metrics, I guess,
price below the sailor and the micro-strategy average cost, and the 12-month RSI approaching 40.
And so that's when you are going to start to get bullish.
I read a Chris Brinitsky post, I think you put this out on November 20th, and he said,
there's so much pessimism, a short-term thinking on crypto assets, you can start to get
tilt towards long-term optimism.
That said, not yet. He said, I shared my view 109K that Bitcoin only starts to get interesting below 75K.
So he's saying Bitcoin starts to get interesting below 75K. And a revisit of the 200-week simple moving average is always possible, which is at about 56K currently.
So below 75K, Chris is a buyer. What about your indicators? What price point are you kind of looking for and what metrics are going to?
to tilt towards, okay, Mike is back on, you know, nibbling in the risk-on mode.
Yeah, so the 200-week moving average is definitely a really good one.
And I like that Chris mentioned that.
That's around 57K or so right now.
And Bitcoin actually dropped below that in the last cycle.
It was the first time I actually dropped below, just below it.
I think that's going to probably, it's a rising, you know, it's a moving indicator.
It's rising over time.
I think that's probably going to land somewhere around, you know, 65K or so over the next, you know, six to nine months or so.
The realized price is also actually sitting around 57K right now.
And so I think, you know, that's also a rising number as new people come in and buy at these more elevated prices.
So I'm thinking we're probably going to see an intersection somewhere around 65K or so.
So I will probably be getting interested, similar to Chris, around the 75, you know, K level,
and then looking at all these metrics, looking at market structure, looking at sort of the outlook
for macro and everything moving forward. But these are the areas, I would say that, you know, we're
targeting. I think I would be very happy to be able to buy Bitcoin at 65K. That's, that is, you know,
that's like a 50% correction. So it's actually a lower, you know, correction than we've seen in the past.
I think we went down 75% in the last cycle, closer to 80, 85% in prior cycles.
So this would be a much shallower, you know, bare market for this cycle.
Well, do you think that could be the case?
Since we never got the heights of a super euphoria, maybe during the bare market,
we don't get the depths of super despair.
And it's sort of a shallower high and also a shallower low.
It makes sense to me that that would be the case.
Exactly.
You didn't get the euphoria.
and just because of what we've been talking about,
the market structure that you're actually going to be setting
like kind of a higher base, I think.
And this should continue as we move forward
and we could just continue to see less,
even less elevated bull markets
and maybe quite slightly shallower, you know,
bare markets as Bitcoin continues.
But Mike, you do expect this to take some time to play out
because for all of the reasons we've mentioned already
is just because, you know,
sellers have to feel that point.
of kind of exhaustion and despair and just like you like check out completely and the tours have
to leave and then you have to start a floor of now the long term holders are coming back in
and they're saying hey you know still here crypto is still here it's still growing and they just have
to start nibbling at the edges and then as the cycle the next cycle progresses you have to establish
a new group of buyers maybe this will be sovereign wealth funds in the future maybe this will be
central banks, who knows what the next new crop of buyers might be. But that doesn't happen overnight.
We don't just flash crash down to like below 75K Bitcoin and then, oh, we hit the numbers.
Like, this is kind of like a grueling, you know, month by month where markets go apathetic.
And mainstream stops talking about crypto and Bitcoin altogether. And they just say, oh,
there's another bubble, right? That's how you expect this to play out?
that's the base case unfortunately is that yeah like I think I think there's still probably
still some people on the market that that are looking at rate cuts and still thinking
you know that that's going to that's going to be you know big for for risk assets maybe it is
it's possible it is but I think where that depression and sort of the later stage is kick in
potentially is if you start to see the rate cuts and it's not you know we end we're going to be
ending QT, I think, you know, basically very soon. I think this was going to be beginning of
December. So that's ending now. I think when that was announced about a month ago, most people
thought that was going to be bullish for risk assets. So let's see how that starts to play out.
Let's see how the market starts to react to maybe, you know, an announcement on who the next Fed chair
is going to be. And I think that's where depression potentially starts to sit in, where like these views
that people maybe had that were these catalysts would be bullish.
If they're not bullish, then that's where you kind of got the capitulation.
And, you know, we're already starting to see, it's fascinating to see how the psychology
shifts where I'm seeing a lot of content now about more of the, you know, I don't know,
I'm going to call it, I think it's actually fair criticism, but like, you know, quantum computing
is going to break Bitcoin.
These are the types of stories that you see in bear market.
So these are a narrative following price as well, right?
all the bearish news.
Everyone's like, oh, it's because of quantum.
That's why prices down, obviously.
Right, right.
So, yeah, these are the things I'm looking at.
And I do think, you know, historically, you know, this cycle did play out, you know,
so far has played out similar to last cycle.
So I would, you know, my base case is that the bear market probably plays out
similar to past bear markets as well.
I saw an interesting stat actually on X the other day on midterm years.
And I was not aware of this, but since 1926,
the average drawdown in a midterm year is 18.2%.
So equities as well?
Yeah, for equity, or the S&P 500.
So for whatever reason, midterm years tend to be bearish.
I think the market still thinks that Trump is just going to somehow will the market up.
Which is next year.
For those that don't follow U.S. politics, next year's a midterm year, 2026.
And so next year is a midterm year.
Base case is that, you know, probably a bear market for crypto.
Okay, all right. Let's talk about if people want to play this the way DDR is playing it.
Because I've been looking at your work, reading the reports on a weekly basis.
We've been doing these episodes. We will continue to do these episodes on bankless on a monthly basis to update you with everything that's going on in Mike's head.
We're actually considering maybe doing a weekly episode here too and maybe polishing that elsewhere.
So bankless listeners are interested in that. Let us know because we'll do more of this content.
because this is the most energized, I think Mike actually is,
and he is looking both at this cycle data set.
Also, you're compiling a watch list, I believe, of crypto assets.
Beyond the majors, right now that 20% you hold in crypto assets is kind of the majors, right?
It's like Bitcoin and a little bit of ether as well.
But during these bare cycles, you like to go down market and find assets with strong fundamentals
as you're kind of like resetting everything.
You're saying, okay, like, what's going to do well?
What looks strong from an on-chain perspective?
So you are compiling a watch list on the Defi report
that is available for subscribers of assets
that you're essentially putting in this bucket,
I don't know if there's going to be 10 to 20 to 30 or so of these,
that you have not yet taken a position in,
but you are watching.
And they're of note.
So I think you're going to be publishing that
for DeFi Report,
subscribers, but just in general, how are you playing this moving forward in terms of the assets
that you're going to allocate to, and how are you keeping your subscribers informed?
Yeah, and this is why I like the bear market. So the watch list is essentially a curated
list of projects that in some of these we actually were invested in during this past cycle.
These are projects that maybe they came out this cycle, maybe we've had an eye on them for a while
and we're tracking.
And when we get into the bear market,
we get a lot of signal as to which ones
are going to be the ones we think are going to emerge
when we get into more bullish conditions.
And so that's the watch list.
That goes out to all of our free subscribers.
It's a report that goes out every Friday
based on fundamentals.
We typically share a data dashboard,
a Dune dashboard that goes with that.
And what I'm looking for, I guess,
broadly within the portfolio is a lot of these
sort of fair value metrics that we track for Bitcoin,
is we want to have clarity on when we were going to buy Bitcoin, when those metrics hit.
And then we want to know, you know, we want to know which of the products on our wash list
are the ones we feel most strongly about so that we're ready not only to buy Bitcoin,
but when we think those other assets are at fair value or below fair value,
that we're ready to add those to the portfolio.
So you're looking for entry prices for those assets.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
That's the idea is to put them on the list.
Let's track fundamentals.
let's have a view.
And then the ones that we think we feel most strongly about,
you know, basically make it into an even smaller list.
And those are the ones that will be looking to add to the portfolio.
This is effectively what you did during the bare cycle of 2022, I believe,
and into 2023.
And I think you picked up some big winners, right?
Solana was one of those that you noticed in kind of the depths.
It's like, hey, there's on chain activity here.
There's stuff going on here.
And you bought that on the lows.
So are you looking to kind of repeat that level of?
success? That's the idea. Yes. And, you know, that was an interesting one because at the time
Solano was a new project. It was a little bit harder to have like really strong, you know, fundamentals,
but it was more of a bet on the developer ecosystem at the time. And so yeah, we felt strongly
that Solana was just like way, way, way oversold. And that was a big winner coming out of this.
We were allocating to assets like Robin Hood and Coin as well as with crypto equities,
making it into the portfolio. And yeah, that's the idea. Let's find like what we think is a
strongest projects that are just wildly oversold,
kind of at the bottom of the bear market.
Looking for gems here, Mike.
This is going to be a lot of fun, I think.
It's got me more energized,
even though we are in a bare market.
I don't like to look at prices,
but we get to do more research.
And, of course, this asset class,
we are both bullish,
will be do very well from a long-term perspective.
So maybe we will leave it at that.
I will be following your work at the DFI report.
We'll include a link in the show,
notes, there's an option to be a free subscriber. You can access to the free reports or a paid
subscriber where you get access to two weekly reports, all of Mike's portfolio holdings, when he
does what, where he's allocated, and also access to some of those watchless assets. So we'll
include a link in the show notes for that. Got to leave you here. Of course, you know,
none of this has been financial advice. Crypto is risky. 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.
Thank you.
