BTC Sessions - The Real War Isn’t in Iran — It’s in the US Treasury Market | Luke Gromen & Lyn Alden
Episode Date: April 7, 2026Mentor Sessions Ep. 061: Macro Legends on Oil, the Breaking US Treasury Market, and the Dollar Crisis No One Is Ready For | Luke Gromen & Lyn AldenIran doesn't have to beat the US military. Th...ey just have to beat the US Treasury market — and that changes everything you think you know about this conflict.The Strait of Hormuz is the chokepoint for roughly 20% of the world's oil supply, and right now it sits at the center of a geopolitical storm with consequences that reach far beyond the Middle East. In this deep-dive interview, we break down exactly how a Hormuz disruption cascades into oil price spikes, supply chain breakdowns, and a inflation surge that puts the US dollar's reserve status under unprecedented pressure. You'll understand why this conflict is as much a financial war as a military one, what it means for energy markets in 2026, and why Bitcoin's role as a neutral, non-sovereign asset has never been more relevant. Whether you're trying to protect your wealth or just make sense of the headlines, this conversation gives you the framework to think clearly when the noise is loudest.⏱️ Timestamps:0:00 – Iran Doesn’t Need to Beat the Military, Just the Treasury 1:10 – Episode Intro with Luke Gromen & Lyn Alden 1:25 – Oil Prices, Futures Curve & Hormuz Crisis 2:10 – Will Hormuz Opening Fix Everything? 3:53 – Mid-May Deadline & Escalating Impact 8:02 – Supply Chain Fragility & Non-Linear Breaks 14:14 – The Upside-Down Global Economy (You Can’t Print Oil) 15:31 – Food Shortages & Global South Risks 18:35 – Inflation, Money Printing & Debt Spiral 20:04 – Why the US Must Print Money in 2026 24:10 – Treasury Market Stress & Buybacks 32:11 – Japan, China & Dollar Pressure 43:52 – Why Are We Really in This Conflict? 1:09:12 – Petrodollar Under Pressure & Gold-for-Oil 1:13:59 – Best & Worst Case Scenarios 1:26:54 – Bitcoin’s Role Right Now 1:32:23 – Final Thoughts & Where to Find Luke & LynFollow Luke:X: @LukeGromenWebsite & Research: fftt-llc.comNewsletter: fftt-treerings.comFollow Lyn:X: @LynAldenContactWebsite & Free Newsletter: lynalden.com📌 Previous Episode: Prof St Onge → https://youtu.be/fqi7fwqyV1g⚡ POWERED by Abundant Mines: Fully managed Bitcoin mining. Learn more at https://qrco.de/bgYKPB🔒 Lockdown your Bitcoin with the BEST gear on the market from Coinkite. Get the 5% Off the COLDCARD visit: https://qrco.de/bfiDBV💡BOOK Private Sessions with Nathan, Gary, or Ben at Bitcoin Mentor: Master self-custody, hardware, multisig, Lightning, privacy, and more. 👉 Visit btcmentor.io Follow Us on X:• BTC Sessions: @BTCsessions• Nathan: @theBTCmentor• Gary: @GaryLeeNYC#BTCSessions #Bitcoin #BTC #StraitOfHormuz #Geopolitics #OilCrisis #USDollar #Inflation #BitcoinEducation #MacroEconomics #EnergyMarkets #BitcoinPodcast #GlobalEconomy #PetroDollar #BitcoinInterview
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Iran doesn't have to beat the U.S. military.
They just have to beat the U.S. Treasury market.
It's all fun in games until the cash flows.
And holy cow, the system is collapsing if we take Hormuz closed long and up.
The global economy is an upside down pyramid with that little tip on the bottom being raw materials.
You take a quarter of that away and a big chunk of that rest of that pyramid is heavily impaired.
You can't print oil.
The happy outcome at this point is we walk away.
We let them keep control of the straight of Hormuz.
gold goes to the moon. The dollar falls sharply. High inflation, probably yield curve control,
capital controls in the United States. Gold, silver, Bitcoin, stocks just straight down. And then you
add the giga stimulus. So straight up. In developing countries, it's energy, supply chain nuances,
and food. Military action is literally putting hundreds of millions of lives at risk by Christmas
for some starvation. To be blunt, that's what we're looking at here. In this episode, we sit down
with macro legends, Luke Grumman and Lynn Alden to discuss the latest on the Strait of Hermuz Crisis,
how we're dangerously close to breaking the U.S. Treasury market to massive money printing
and to potentially starving millions.
I'm Nathan with the PTC mentor. Let's get into it.
All right, Luke, Lynn, thank you so much for joining me today.
Very excited to have you guys sit down especially right now.
There seems like there's a ton of confusion and chaos in the markets.
Just this morning I was looking we got WTIs at 112, Brent's at 109.
But the futures for September is at 78 a barrel.
We got treasury yields rising.
We got the Japanese tenure at a 31-year high.
Gold sold off.
rising, Bitcoin's trading sideways, and this all seems to be currently centered on, basically,
oil supply constraints, what's going on the street of Hormuz. So to kind of kick things off,
Luke, you recently had a phenomenal appearance on the Patrick Bed David podcast. Highly recommend
everybody check that one out. But you set kind of April 15th, I think, to about the end of the
month as kind of a deadline that we got to get oil flowing again. We got to get this thing opened up.
Over the weekend, just recently had Trump come out and very loudly set a deadline of Tuesday for
a deal. So to start the conversation, Luke, I want to ask you, if we got things opened up
this week. Like we got it settled done. Straight to Hermuz is open this week. Is it back to business as
usual or what's the extent of the damage that's already been done? I don't think it would be
business as usual if that happened. And I should say I think there's almost zero chance of that
happening. That's sort of the as sort of as the preface to that. I think there's zero chance of that
happening or very close to zero. If it did, I think you're probably still.
okay where there's going to be some disruptions, you're going to have some inflation, and it probably
takes three, four, five months to kind of work through supply chains. But it's not a worst case scenario
is based on how I'm looking at it, what I'm hearing from people, basically. That makes it,
linear thoughts on that? I would agree. Basically, when you take like how much barrels per day
are lost because of this, if you take it over a full year, if those barrels were only lost for two
months. It's actually a pretty small percentage of, say, total annual production. So the economy can
observe that. It's the duration that, of course, matters a lot too. I mean, at bare minimum,
a lot of this will take weeks to come back online, even once just ships can freely pass through.
And so there's a gradual ramp up. I mean, once you fix half the problem, at least you've stopped
the bleeding. And the long tail of getting literally back to whatever the exact prior levels,
that's less important in getting a big chunk of it back.
There's also scenarios where we just see gradually increasing traffic over months
as more and more entities make deals with Iran.
That's certainly another scenario.
And that's, I mean, that's a more bear scenario
because it means that the oil market is materially disrupted for a longer period of time.
But yeah, even the best case scenarios, we're not getting back to 100% anytime very soon.
Continuing from that thought, then, Lynn, I'll start with you.
Luke has pegged kind of mid-April to end of April as kind of critical for getting this backup and running.
And friend of the show, Simon Dixon, has it in his kind of theory of where things are playing out.
He has the May 15th, 14th, China Summit.
He expects there to be an negotiated deal kind of announced then.
So if this were to continue on, let's say, just kind of to mid-May, what would be the impact in your view, Lynn, on the global economy?
I mean, at that point gets pretty severe.
And I do think it'll still be at least, like, significantly impacted by then.
We'll see how much.
I mean, yeah, if you have best case scenario and start to open it up now, then by mid-May, you're probably looking decent.
The economy, especially markets, operate on rate of change.
So as long as they see the light at the end of the tunnel, they can start adjusting.
But I think, I mean, a good example, and it's fine.
I'll be in Egypt in a month.
So near the heart of energy crisis, assuming my flights don't get canceled because of a little lack of jet fuel.
And they're actually a good example of what a lot of part of the world could look like, because they,
already implemented curfews where cafes, many types of stores, public-facing stores,
have to close by 9 o'clock at night. And that's, I mean, in a lot of desert countries,
the time that people are active is shift later. So it's actually, I mean, from 9 to like midnight
is like a ton of economic activity happens. And that's very curtailed at the moment because
their natural gas bill per month tripled. And more than just tripled, it's like they literally
just can't, they can't secure it all because, I mean, they're, they're bidding against the Europeans.
They're bidding against Southeast Asians. They're not a very wealthy per capita country.
Their currency has weakened pretty materially, something like 10% in a very rapid period of time.
And that's, I mean, that's one example, right? So I think you see, you see scenarios like that.
Every week or every month that this goes on, you'll see more and more countries that are literally either canceling things, putting curfews.
rationing fuel in some way. And that, of course, has very significant effects on just overall
flow of just funds and capital and economic activity. More people are just impaired.
I mean, you can imagine all those shopkeepers. I mean, they operate on pretty low margins.
You know, they still have to pay their rent. What happens when they, when they lose prime hours
or at least a big chunk of their business hours? Just kind of like COVID. I mean, it's like,
you know, a small percentage of especially a retail operation is just catastrophe.
And so I think you'll see that in more and more countries, the longer this goes on.
And when it happens to places like Egypt, it's mostly a local problem.
When it happens to big creditor nations, it's everyone's problem, which Luke covers a lot as well.
And I cover that type of thing.
So the worse it is, the more global and more it impacts financial markets rather than just
daily lives of people.
Luke, if this continues on into like mid-May,
is that mean that we're reaching the point
that Lynn's talking about where this is going to start
to hit the creditor nation,
start to impact global financial markets as well?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I would be shocked if it wasn't at that point.
And that's the part that I think a lot of investors,
a lot of commentators are missing,
you know, and Lynn kind of alluded to this in part is,
you know, it's not just financial markets.
I've had a lot of people say, well, it's, you know, it's worth having, you know, a financial market hit if, you know, if we can stop Iran from getting a nuke.
You know, and setting aside that they lied about knocking out the nukes nine months ago and these people are still believing this stuff, like, let's set that aside.
But they're missing an engineering understanding of supply chains, a real reality based under understanding of supply chains, right?
So I'll make a really simple example, which is, you know, three years ago, I tried to buy,
or two years ago, three years ago, I tried to buy a metal insulated, branded coffee mug
for clients as a corporate gift.
And I specified to the supplier here in Cleveland, we've been doing this for 35 years.
Hey, I want an insulated metal coffee mug branded,
with 0% Chinese content.
And they searched for six months
and they couldn't find any such thing.
The best they could do was Yeti
with 30% Chinese content, 70% American.
Great.
This is the part, the non-linearity
that investors and policymakers aren't thinking of,
which is to say, how many mugs do I buy,
people are looking at the gross number.
Oh, well, we make 70%,
we're 70% sales.
sufficient in coffee mugs. No, you're not. You are zero percent self-sufficient in coffee mugs.
If you, you know, it's the old poem, right, for want of a nail, the, you know, the wheel was
for loss of the wheel, the cart was lost for loss of the car, you know, and the kingdom was
lost for want of a nail. It's the same type of, of, of, of dynamic that people are looking
at the gross numbers of supply chains, even in oil. We're fine. We are, we're a net exporter.
No, we're not. Not once you dig into the numbers. I mean, yes, at the gross level, sure we are.
But that doesn't, we're still importing six million barrels a day or something like that.
So that's just like two examples of where you start to see nonlinear supply chain breaks.
Because it doesn't matter that we are self-sufficient and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Once Vietnam goes down, guess what? Parts of China are going to.
to go down. Once parts of China and Vietnam go down, factories in America are going to shut down.
Once factories in America shut down in Europe, once factories in America and Europe shut down,
particularly here in America, how many companies have borrowed money to buy back stock, right?
A whole bunch of them. What happens when their factories start going down around the world,
stop generating cash? They still got to pay the interest on the debt. Their earnings go,
they don't decline linearly. They collapse. And so that's where this,
There's this sort of linear view to everything that is just wrong.
And, you know, look, the Trump administration and Bessent in particular are doing everything they can to feed this lie because this is their weak point.
You know, right?
This is why Bessent is unsanctioning Russian oil and unsanctioning Iranian oil in a war with Iraq.
They are doing everything they can to maintain this lie.
And I understand why.
I would be doing the same thing in their shoes.
But it's a lie.
You know, we are, we are, I don't know if it's, if it's two weeks, if it's three weeks,
if it's mid, but I think mid-May is comfortable, you're going to start getting these nonlinear
breaks.
And once this is almost like any crisis, it's all fun in games until the cash flows hit, right?
Until the real physical interaction with the, they can't pretend that.
When GM comes out and says, we're shutting down all our plants because we can't get this little
component out of Vietnam, that, you know, that, you know,
If the market's not going to be up that day, I don't think.
And look, if it is, then, you know, I'm going to be wrong about a lot.
And I'm going to start buying everything because it's telling you, we're heading towards hyperinflation, right?
That's what it's telling you.
Like, oh, my God, the bond market's running into anything.
It's a hard ass.
But, you know, we'll see.
Interesting.
Lynn, I'd love to get your thoughts on that.
Yeah, there's, I mean, similar analog examples, like, during COVID, speaking of, like, cars and,
like a minor missing component.
I mean, part of why we had so much, like, temporary inflation and used cars, we had obviously
major supply chain disruptions from lockdowns and things like that.
And so you can have like a $50,000 vehicle that is 99% complete, but it's missing one little chip for the airbags or something.
And they can't sell it because some, some like tertiary supplier in Taiwan was out of a certain thing that then fed into another company that actually makes the chip, which then, and then the shipping company got delayed.
Whatever chain along that path makes it, whatever reason they can't put this chip in this like nearly completed car.
And so it's just sitting there.
And you get a million things like that.
And another example is, I mean, I'm a private investor in a consumer products company.
They have American and Chinese components.
They'd like to be American wherever possible, especially when tariffs were hitting when I was
having discussions with them.
I'm like, okay, so how are you being hit?
What are you, you know, what are your paths of resolution here, especially when we were
talking about 100% tariffs and things like that when it was kind of like peak negotiations.
And they were like, they were looking into reshoring that as much as possible, even though
they already kind of had, but they were like, okay, now we have to double down on that.
And they're like, so some of the options are in months, we might better resource some of it at a
higher cost, but also we have to re-engineer it to be lower complexity because people often
think that like you just out, you can take the same thing, build it in America or people, you know,
corporations are greedy and so they put it in China and make it there.
But it's actually they, they have a network effect of manufacturing.
They've got the human capital, all the interrelated.
with all the different manufacturers, kind of like how in Silicon Valley you got the network
effect around startups and all the infrastructure, like all the lawyers that know how to handle
that and finance years to know how to handle that and all the connections. New York has the,
you know, the securities markets network effect. China's got this like very strong manufacturing
hub. It's extremely hard to, over the long arc of time, you could shift it, but it's a network
effect. Like any network effect is super hard to chip into. And so they're like, we literally cannot find
a U.S. manufacturer that can make the part that China makes for any reasonable price.
We would have to simply simplify the design, make a slightly worse product that is also a little
bit more expensive just to reshore it. And that, by the way, that'll take months of retooling
and all this. And that, again, there's like a million examples like that. And so the whole, and then
bringing this back to the straight. I mean, the global economy is an upside down pyramid with that
little tip on the bottom being raw materials, energy, but also, I mean, energy is then put into
fertilizer production, all these like sulfur, urea, all these other just components along
that process.
They're all feed stocks, their chemicals, helium for electronics, helium for medical devices.
All those raw inputs, when you look at, when you add up all, all mining companies and all
kind of processing companies, refineries together, it's a small percentage of global GDP,
but you take a quarter of that away
and a big chunk of that rest of that pyramid
is heavily impaired.
So it's a disproportionate percentage.
It's not like a little layer,
a little 5% layer of GDP on top of all this
that we can live without.
You know,
you can live without luxury goods
or if we have a disruption in just something,
you know, optional,
that's, you know,
it's like 5% of global GDP.
It's like, well, we have to live without that for a period of time.
But if the 5% is that bottom of the pyramid, the inverse pyramid, it's a much bigger thing than 5%.
That's insane.
I kind of want to tease that out for just a second, because we've seen like shortages in
Vietnam and Bangladesh, we've got the flights being canceled as well.
There are two, the shortages of kerosene.
Do we have to at some point in time start to be concerned about fertilizer and actually
food supply going offline or having food shortages in areas of the world?
Luke, I'll get to start with you.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yes, we do.
Okay.
Yeah.
I mean, in America, probably not.
Latin America, probably not.
But yeah, I mean, I, that's sort of, I'm kind of surprised.
And again, I think there's an intentional framing of all this, right?
Is we're taking a, we're taking a military action because the Iranian government killed 45,000 of its people.
And, you know, the military action is literally putting hundreds of millions of lives at
by Christmas for some starvation. That's just to be blunt. That's what we're looking at here.
So is it worth it? I don't know. If it was if it was my kid that was going to starve to death by
Christmas, if this thing isn't opened in enough time. And maybe that isn't May 15th,
but maybe that's June 15th or July 15th. If it's not open by then, you're going to have real
shortages of food across parts of the global south. And who am I going to blame for that? I'm not going to
blame Iran. I'm going to blame America. I'm going to blame America. I'm
I'm going to blame Israel.
And so I, you know, again, I don't, I don't understand the strategy here.
But yeah, absolutely.
We're going to see potentially the longer this goes on, catastrophic food shortfalls
across parts of what's called the global salve.
Yeah, generally speaking at the moment, we've already got increased prices of many
types of fertilizer.
It's not yet translated into much higher crop prices, which means at the moment,
it's actually really impacting farmers because all of their inputs are more expensive, but their
outputs are not yet. But of course, that's not a sustainable situation. So the longer that persists,
the faster their exports have to go up. When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, we had a faster
food price response because partially that disrupted actual, like, say, rice production in Ukraine
and things like that, which, again, it impacted Egypt because they, like, you know, they're a buyer of that
type of thing. And of course,
at many other countries.
My understanding at the current times, like potash
seems fine enough, but like other fertilizers
where the issue is, it's not my area of expertise,
but I try to monitor those that
monitor that situation.
The longer this goes on, the more disruptions you get,
you know, the wealthier
country is, the much less likely
they are to have outright food shortages, because
they can outbid others.
So in a developed
country, your main concerns
are energy and
and supply chain nuances.
In developing countries, it's energy supply chain nuances and food.
Now, of course, in a developed country, food inflation is still an issue, especially in
the politically, you know, highly polarized political environment, you find ourselves in the U.S.
and Europe today.
So people are, you know, rising grocery bills do impact the economy.
But, yeah, I wouldn't bet significantly you'd have, like, acute food shortages in developed countries,
but you would have it in many poorer countries in the world, unfortunately, if this goes on long enough.
And kind of continuing with that thought of inflation, when you say inflation, are you specifically referring to, like, just prices go up in terms of, like, goods and services?
Or are you thinking there's actually going to be more money creation throughout this process as well, too?
Well, at the moment, it's just the things that are in short supply go up in price, do the supply and demand.
So it's the inflation of prices in that sense.
Now, if that is not meant by stimulus for a period of time, it tends to then reduce demand for other things because there's still the same amount of, say, dollars or other currency floating around.
They're now, you know, consumers are paying more for groceries, more for gas.
So they're cutting discretionary spending where they can.
So you get actually in some ways demand destruction and disinflation in those other categories.
Now, because we live in such a leveraged financialized world, as that negative,
the flywheel starts to go into effect, eventually you get breakages. You get snares that turn us
from a gradual print into a big print. And then you get, actually, you lock in more wider
inflation because then you're doing stimulus of some sort. So basically the main difference between
temporary price increases or permanent price increases ultimately comes down to that money supply
growing, but temporary price increases are more due to that kind of temporary supply demand mismatch.
Luke, is there anything there you disagree with or what's your outlook kind of on inflation,
both from the price perspective as well as the money creation perspective. And it kind of sounds
like we're almost setting up for the same sort of thing that happened over COVID.
No, I think what Lynn said is right, which is, and that's, I think it's real important
that this is that it's that second derivative that so many people are not watching, which is
all of this is happening at a time where through the first five months of fiscal 2026 for the
U.S. government, they were already at over 100% of receipts just on interest expense and entitlements.
So we literally need to print money basically to cover interest and entitlements through the first five
months of the year. Now, there's some seasonality that, of course, with April 15th taxes.
So, you know, we're going to get that bump back below 100% or are we better?
But I think we're, I think we will. But the point here is, is that we're in a
position, whether it's 95% or 100%, 105%, it doesn't really matter. You have a recession,
a deflation, a recession and receipts, which you will, if this goes on long enough,
for exactly what Lynn said, right? You're going to see, you know, you're going to see funds,
you know, the inflation of energy and food is going to cause deflation in other things. And then
you're going to get a decline in receipts. You get a decline in receipts. And now you're into a
the sort of debt-death spiral dynamic that we saw during COVID,
where it gets 105, 110, 115% of receipts,
and you have a decision in the United States of America
and everywhere else, which is, you know,
now US is one of the biggest debtor,
so it's going to start, you know, probably here or Japan.
But what do you want to do?
Do you want to default on entitlements?
Do you want to default on treasuries?
Or do you want to print the money to pay the interest
and to pay the entitlements?
And that's, well,
we're looking at. And that's where you end up with this big print. And it's, you know, I think it's a
critical differentiation now versus COVID. In COVID, it was a demand side decline. This is a supply
side decline, right? So we printed, remember, we did the big print or whatever was with the Stimmy's in
COVID, certainly at least initially. Oil was negative 20, negative 30 a barrel. We're going to talk about
doing this at $120.
And they're going to have to because the other choice is shrink the military massively.
Well, he just told us that.
He's going up to $110, $1.5 trillion.
So that's out.
He's not going to shrink the military.
There's nothing else he can cut that matters.
Military, interest, entitlements.
That's it.
Everything else is a rounding air.
And so he's increasing military spending by 40%.
Okay, that's out.
well then if you're going to shrink receipts as a result of the increase which which which which
you're certain to do given you know enough you know enough of the situation along enough of this
time of the situation they're either going to print the money to pay interest on on the debt and
entitlements or they're going to default on it that's it and we know what they're going to do so
then that gets into a very very um it's hard to overstate how inflationary that is because again
It's not a demand side issue.
It's a supply side issue.
You can't print oil.
I mean, you sort of kind of can, actually.
I mean, if you print it up to 200 a barrel or whatever, you're going to be, you know,
drilling for it and, you know, George Washington's nose in the, in Mount Rushmore.
And, you know, we'll have plenty more come online.
So you sort of can print it, but that has a very pronounced set of impacts on financial markets, politics,
geopolitics, et cetera.
When you say print the money, do you mean basically in order, because they can only deal with
maybe with interest is basically have the Fed monetize the debt and just force short-term interest
rates down in order to deal with that expense?
I think they've already started it on some level, right?
Like if you look last week, last week, two weeks ago, two weeks ago, 10-year treasury
you hold hit 4.4% three different times that week.
It was almost perfectly timed for Easter, right?
It was denied three times.
like the biblical story.
4.4% Trump comes out and goes, oh, it's all over, right?
He tacos once.
Then, you know, tenure goes down, comes back to 4.4.
Then it was BB's turn.
Hey, we're almost done.
You know, it went back down.
By Thursday, he did it again, and it didn't react.
So then last week, we get what?
We get the single biggest treasury buyback from Bessent on record, $15 billion of a
treasury buyback, which, you know, the purest is like, that's not printing it.
Yes, all right.
It's managing the thing.
But the Fed is also doing reserve management purchase at the front end.
So Bessent is issuing bills to buyback paper that was both from bills to it was,
I think it was everything was going to be expiring within three years of what they did
on that at the end of last week, that $15 billion treasury buyback.
So they're presumably issuing bills to buy back bills and other things that are,
you know, probably off the run stuff.
So who knows what some of that.
that was. Anyway, it's notes, notes and bonds.
At the same time that the Fed's buying bills.
So it's like, well, it's not, you know, it's, it's like the gift, right?
It's, it's not, they're not printing money, you know.
And to me, you know, again, they separate the, the cause and the effect very well.
Nobody talks about it. But do I think it had absolutely something to do with the fact that they
were trying, they're trying to keep the tenure below 4.4.4.
You bet you, I do. Yeah. So, you know, that's sort of softcore. It's not printing, but it's
managing liquidity, shall we say. This would have to be full on, you know, and again,
they will never call it monetization because that's, it's like a religion. But it's monetization of
that. That's absolutely what they'll be doing. 150%. That's what they'll be doing.
When I first got into Bitcoin, I was overwhelmed.
jargon, the security risks, the fear that one mistake could cost everything. I remember
staring at my screen and wondering, are my keys safe? Did I do this right? That experience is why I
started BTC sessions. For over a decade, this channel has helped millions of people like you
learn how to use and secure Bitcoin. But I realized something. For many people, videos aren't
enough. Everyone learns differently. Some need to ask questions in real time as an expert.
walks through their setup, their goals, and their threat model.
And certain things like advanced cold storage, inheritance planning, privacy,
and node or mining setups often can't be fully solved by watching another tutorial.
So I built BTC mentor.
I recruited the best Bitcoin educators on the planet to work with you one-on-one.
Real experts, real answers, personalized, hands-on guidance, tailored to your exact situation.
whether you're brand new or building a complex setup,
we meet you where you're at and walk with you step by step.
By the end, you don't just hope your Bitcoin is safe.
You know it is.
If you're ready for that level of confidence,
then head to bTCmentor.io and book a call with us today.
Lynn?
Well, the end of these things tend to happen in phases.
And this particular cycle,
the phase started before this,
it started in late 2025,
which is the,
funding mechanisms for entities that buy the treasuries, those start breaking first.
So in 2019, this happened with the repo spike.
We're just suddenly overnight, just all the interbank lending rate just soared.
This is what, like, you know, hedge funds and others will borrow to them buy treasury.
So obviously, if that spikes, you can't keep borrowing that to buy treasury.
So that's going to, if unaddressed, will impact the treasury market.
So back then the Fed put that fire out, started to go back to first they did repo, and then they actually started just buying treasury.
So they are increasing the monetary base directly.
They're monetizing a portion of the debt.
And we got a similar but like a slightly more muted version this time because they were kind of ready for it.
They had the standing facilities in place.
So we start to see over the course of a handful of months elevations in that kind of securitized overnight.
lending market and short-term lending market.
And the Fed's standing facilities in place.
So they're kind of providing liquidity on days where it gets a little messy.
And then the longer that goes on, it kind of grows and grows, gets more persistent.
So then they announce, you know, we're going to start going to gradual balance sheet increases
roughly in line with nominal GDP.
So increasing the monetary base.
And that kind of put out the near-term fire.
So you see less uses of the Fed's repo facility.
you see lower yields on that securitized financing spreads versus, say, you know, interest on
bank reserves.
You kind of at least mostly put out that fire.
And if they didn't, that would translate into treasuries.
And so far in this crisis, I think because they're already providing some liquidity,
so far we're not really seeing usage at the Fed's repo facility.
We're not really seeing credit, like swap lines being used.
but those are, you know, I would monitor those to see signs that that's heating up.
So far, it's not.
But if this goes on long enough, they certainly could.
And then to Luke's point, the other mechanism is treasury buybacks.
Now, duration neutral treasury buybacks are not, you know, they're more a very minor
liquidity boost.
You're basically, if, say, hypothetically, you're issuing five-year notes on the run,
five-year notes, and you're buying back off-the-run five-year notes, it's not, it's not
great optics, but you're basically, it's a quantity and neutral liquidity boost to the treasury
market. But yeah, if you're buying, you know, five and 10 year notes and you're issuing T bills
to do it, you're reducing total duration in the market. You're basically doing the emerging
market playbook where nobody wants to buy a long-term debt, so you have to issue more of it on
the short term. That has other effects. That's part of the reason why the Treasury General account's
so big is because they've got to roll over these T bills so so frequently. And, and so that,
I mean, that has effects. And so if you, if you reduce and, and it's funny because of course,
percent was critical of Yellen for having, you know, so much kind of shorter term treasure
exposure, kind of vowed to, you know, fix that. But it's like you, you say something and then
you do another thing. You also talked about the three three deal, which is not going to happen.
And so, yeah, we are kind of entering various phases of monetization, starting with the gradual print that kind of began in late last year.
Nothing particularly new at the moment or rather the size of the treasury buyback was interesting for sure.
The longer this goes on, I would be watching some of these standing facilities or, you know, the move index and other signs of stress.
because, you know, if you do get treasury yields breakout, if you do get a liquid markets,
the Fed will step in as needed. They'll increase purchases. They'll, you know, they'll expand the size of their standing facilities,
whatever it takes to not have a failed treasury auction, to not have acutely liquid treasury markets or interbank lending markets.
Two things I just want to quickly touch on there, Lynn. One, does that explain why you had the move index?
They've already been, already had it set up, already kind of been active. That's why move has been pretty much not that. It hasn't spiked.
move index has been relatively down. Does that also explain why, like, I think about a month ago,
the front end of the curve was still inverted, but it almost looks like we have a proper natural
yield curve at this point in time. And then just tagging on to that, speaking of the Fed,
Kevin Warsh coming in, do you think he'd actually do what is necessary? He's historically been
kind of hawkish. I'm curious your view on him stepping in May. Yeah, so the move index briefly
spiked. It has cooled off. I do think, you know, the fact that they are doing net balance
sheet increases, that the fact that they do have standing facilities and that now they're doing
unusually large treasury buybacks, these are all mitigants. None of them are particularly
noteworthy in and of themselves, but they are there. And, you know, we have it kind of the point
where creditor nations are like fire selling treasuries to buy energy yet. We're not at that phase of
this, which we could find. If the straits close for months, you could see Japan selling treasuries
to make sure they bid for $200 oil equivalent
and whatever the equivalent for LNG is.
So you certainly could get to these more extreme scenarios.
Right now we're not.
I do think, of course, that any Fed share would,
including this one coming in, most likely,
would do what's necessary with the balance sheet.
The steps that they talk about are, you know,
in theory, if they were to increase the duration
of the Treasury market,
they could have reduced the TGA,
which could then reduce the Treasury balance sheet slightly,
I mean, if anything, moving the opposite direction from that vision, you can slightly reduce bank
regulations to let them hold more treasuries, basically let them lever up on duration a little bit more
and not really be punished for it. That's another option. It's liquidity and neutral. You can take a
little bit off the Fed and put a little bit more in the commercial banks. I mean, those are all minor
around the market solutions. There's no Fed chair that's going to say, oh, the treasury market is
illiquid, tough luck. So kind of like how Scott Bassett talked about, you know,
we're going to have more reasonable treasury practices.
We're going to increase duration again and then comes in the office and is not doing that.
You would see the same thing with any Fed chair, any kind of prior statements that they had go out the window when the treasure market's not liquid.
Luke, your thoughts on Kevin Worse coming in.
And also I'm curious if you have any insight into the Japanese bond market and the impacts that might have, if any.
Yeah, I agree with Lenn, that, you know, Warsh is going to do what he has to do, particularly now that we're in wartime.
you know, they, if anything, I think the Fed will become more of a financing arm, more direct
financing arm, if they have to.
Japanese bond market, I think is, I still think is super important. And it's not, it's, you know,
if I came into the year concerned about it, all of this just makes me more concerned about it.
I mean, one of the charts have been following has been 10 year JGB yields minus, or sorry,
10-year
10-year JGB yield
minus 10-year treasury yield
versus dollar yen, right?
And so in theory,
a rising relative yield
on 10-year-JGBs,
relative to treasury,
should be driving capital flows
in a stronger yen.
And it's not,
it's driving a weaker yen against the dollar.
And that's emerging market behavior,
classic emerging market behavior,
which is just the market saying,
you can't afford your interest rate now
without printing a lot more money soon.
and it's continuing to widen.
And so to me, it's one of these things where I like I go,
I don't know when it's going to be a problem,
but it's probably not going to be a long,
it's probably not going to take a long time.
And I have a pretty good idea how they're going to deal with it.
And everything that's happening with energy,
you know,
a chart of highlight on X really since this war began.
And, you know, at the beginning people were laughing at me
and they're not laughing anymore is, you know,
dollar yen times oil.
and dollar yuan times oil for both versus the 10-year treasury.
I mean, I had discussion with people the very first weekend.
Ten-year treasury yield was at 3.94% that first weekend.
And I said, oh, well, that'll do it for that.
It's going higher.
People are like, you're crazy.
There's going to be a bid for safety.
It might have traded at 393.
Maybe, maybe.
Maybe 392 even.
But since then, it's, you know, right to 4-4, and they've been fighting 4-4 ever since.
And, you know, you can mess with the scales a bit.
But the bottom line is if this continues for long enough, what dollar yen times oil and what dollar you want times oil, relative that 10 year yield are telling you that the pressure on 10 year yield is going to go higher.
Almost, you know, and there's again, there are a lot of things they are mid doing to mitigate that, as Lynn noted.
There's other things they can do to mitigate it.
But the release valve is all the same thing, which it's the currency.
It's the yen and the dollar.
And that's where they are.
So nothing's really changed on that front.
I think ultimately, the longer this goes on, it's still the Japanese bond market and the U.S.
Treasury market, the two biggest debtor nations of the world are going to be the first two cracks, you know, in bond markets, whenever, you know, in the developed world, at least, whenever this really starts to, you know, become an issue, which I think, again, next month or so.
For someone in the U.S. or Canada, North America as listening to this, can you even just quickly,
explain why these currency flows, like why the flows between the Japanese bond market and the U.S.
Treasury market impact them, like why this matters at all, why they should be paying attention to that?
Luke, do you want to take that?
Yeah, I'll take it.
I mean, at the end of the day, it's a, for them, it's a piggy bank issue, right?
I mean, we have, there's something called the net international investment position, which is basically
how much foreigners own of our assets versus what we own, minus what we own of theirs.
And the way the system's worked, particularly since the great financial crisis, is we run big
deficits and they recycle those deficits into our asset markets. And so when you look at who we've
been running deficits against primarily, it's Asia, it's Japan and China in particular. And so they
own a lot of our assets. And oil's only priced in dollars primarily still, certainly for Japan.
And so when oil or the dollar get too strong, and the worst case is when they both strengthen,
they have to buy oil.
And so what do they sell?
They sell dollar assets.
And what do they sell first?
They sell what they can, not what they want to, which are treasuries.
Lin, your thoughts?
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, so Japan, it's funny because I've been bullish on Japanese equities for a long time,
especially Japanese equities that are, they're in debt and yen, and they own scarce
their assets.
So their debts are being devalued.
And they're, you know, they started at pretty low valuation.
so that's kind of been playing out.
I never really bet against the Japanese in the strategic sense.
They generally make the right decision when they have to.
And they have a lot of levers to pull.
So when people are talking about like massive Japanese blowups,
and not putting Luke in that camp,
but like when I see people on Twitter,
you talk about massive Japanese blowups,
I tend to think of it more as a series of steps that they take,
which they do experience pain when those things happen.
But then also because they are a very,
resourceful and fairly wealthy nation, those issues get pushed elsewhere because, as Luke mentioned,
they have a big piggy bank. So, like, let's say you go back to the emerging market situation,
because their currency and bonds are indeed trading like an emerging market, which happens to a
developed country once it enters fiscal dominance. And so, you know, there's two main types of
emerging markets. There's ones that have, like, very little foreign exchange reserves. So when
their currency weakens, that's when you get those crazy spirals that you say. And then there's
emerging markets, they have a ton of reserves. So they have a piggy bank. They've had, you know,
current account surpluses in the past that they've saved up. They might even still have them in that
moment. And then they can sell some of their assets, buy back some of their own currency,
even as they're increasing their own currency to say buy some of their own bonds. So they have
levers they can pull that's okay, what do we want to happen too fast? We don't want our bond yields
to go up too fast. We don't want our currency to devalue value too fast. We don't want to sell
reserves more than we have to. So whichever one is kind of like on fire at the moment, you can like
take one of the other variables and put out that fire. So for example, when the, when the yen was like
going vertically down versus the dollar in recent times, not, not super recently, but that was
happening before, you know, they can come in with like a shock intervention and basically put the
fear of God back in the people shorting it. And, you know, you kind of blow out some of the leverage.
You slow down that process, make them kind of restart their positions. And you, you know, you buy back
some of your yen. So if we, you know, we start to see nonlinear action in, in Japanese, you know,
government bond yields. Right. So over the past like four years, the Bank of Japan's been, you know,
flat to down on their balance sheet. We would, we would expect to see a resumption in balance sheet
growth at some point, kind of like how we've already seen with the Fed. You see a resumption and
balance sheet growth. I mean, it's already kind of flat down. It's not really going down the way it was.
So you start to see a more incline upward.
that all this being equal is not good for the yen,
especially if they, you know, traders looking at this and saying,
well, they're an energy importing nation and there's an energy crisis.
Now, they can outbid the Egypt's of the world,
but it's still not great if you're Japanese and you're paying much higher dollar
denominated and much higher just raw energy prices and natural inputs.
So then they can, you know, they can increase their monetary base,
buy back some of their own bonds, do kind of soft yield curve control.
if the yen gets super weak, then they can sell some of their preserves, which are a large part of that is treasuries, but it's also other types of assets around the world, which then it comes and hits U.S. treasury markets.
And then we get weird action and the Fed assets suddenly say, okay, we were buying this many treasures a month. We actually have to buy this many per month now.
Or you see a big spike in the usage of a swap line or a standing repo facility, something like that provides temporary liquidity until the Fed steps online.
And so that's why these things are global markets.
When you have China, Japan, the U.S., parts of Europe, but they're increasingly kind of a smaller part of it, when you have these really big entities run into crises, you tend to get these ripple effects in other markets because they have a lot of levers to pull.
Luke, do you have anything about it add or disagree with there?
No, I think that's right.
And I think it flags to the sort of this, you know, part of the kind of the great game.
which is, you know, on one level, Japan being close to America is very useful.
We can supply them energy.
We can give them swap lines, et cetera.
The flip side of that is Japan can't buy energy in anything other than dollars if they want to stay our friend.
And the Chinese don't have access as much to the swap lines, et cetera, but they do have a greater ability, you know, to buy energy outside the dollar in Yuan.
and have been doing so.
And you say, okay, well, you know, two of the three, two of the three biggest oil suppliers have been doing that.
One has been taken over by the U.S.
The other is currently under attack by the U.S.
And you'd make the case that, you know, the third, Russia has been under proxy attack by the U.S.
for the past four years.
So maybe past 10 years, arguably, really, 10, 12 years.
if you go all the way back to the Maidan, et cetera, crisis in Ukraine.
So that then gets back to sort of the geopolitics around, okay, well, you know, it is,
those are the, those are the levers.
And they are sort of first principal tensions that we're watching play out even as we speak.
Coin kite has been in the game for years, creating hands down the best and most secure.
hardware when it comes to securing your Bitcoin. The cold card Q is an absolute powerhouse
and my daily driver, and it's ideal for newcomers and advanced users alike. The tab signer
gives you a low-cost, user-friendly option for those just getting started or for convenience
when traveling. You can head to coincite.com and use code BTC sessions for discounts,
or simply scan the QR code on the screen to get started right away. One company I like pointing
people too when they ask about Bitcoin mining is abundant mines. They were founded by Bo and Christine
Turner after losing over half a million dollars to broken promises in the mining industry,
and they built their hosting model to remove the usual headaches. With abundant mines,
you own your machines and keep 100% of the Bitcoin you mine. There's no revenue share,
no hidden skims. Pricing is simple. One flat monthly fee covers power, parts, labor, and repairs.
They also guarantee uptime.
The machine goes down, their hash rate redirect system
routes hash power from their fleet
so earnings don't just stop,
and every machine is insured at full replacement value.
Everything is hosted in the U.S., powered by hydro,
and mining equipment may qualify for 100% year-one bonus depreciation.
Learn more at abundantmines.com slash sessions.
Very interesting.
I want to jump back for a second.
Maybe push back on the theory just a little bit, Luke,
and you can tell me where I'm going horribly, horribly wrong.
So we had the idea, we even mentioned at the beginning of the hop.
The idea of it being squared off and done this week is not likely in your estimations.
You think this is going on for longer.
And then additionally, we're talking about oil hitting like $200 a barrel.
I'm looking at crude futures right now,
and I'm seeing for June contract, $98, July 89.
If I go all the way out to December, we're looking at $72.93 a barrel.
So my question is, are the futures contracts indicating that
they think there's going to be a end to this relatively soon? Or is this potentially reflecting
something else, maybe even something worse, like demand destruction, causing oil to fall? Or is this just
noise we don't put any value necessarily in those kind of contracts? I think it's a little bit of
each of them. I think, you know, you need to look at relative trends, right? So I, you know,
I had a friend of mine who's been in the energy business forever ping me a couple weeks ago,
said, you know, the December contract hit 70 for the first time ever, you know, a couple of weeks ago, right?
So that number has been rising, which tells you the market.
markets have been saying, okay, this might last longer.
Then you have to look at the relative liquidity of those contracts.
I would think in oil, they are probably pretty liquid, but that's a quite, I think it is
partly that there's still not a belief that this thing can go longer.
I think there's some real informational value there.
And then I think it's the demand destruction too, right?
I mean, it is a balancing everything I'm kind of saying about, look, if the world's
going to start coming unhinged by, you know, two to three weeks from now.
as a result of this, if Hormuz is still closed, then, yeah, you're going to start to have some
reflexivity of trying to do a calculus around, you know, if I can't get oil, it's really expensive
today, and then there's a, there's a factor into that. So I think it's a little bit of all
of those factors probably playing into that. Lynn? Yeah, I don't disagree with any of that.
Nothing particularly bad either. All right, beautiful. I'm curious then, Lynn, in terms of other
indicators in the market, what actually has your attention most right now? What are you kind of
focusing on the daily that you're using to trying to find some signal in all this noise?
Well, so we are, unfortunately, they're a very headline-driven market. So there were,
there are periods of time where, like, things tend to lead into the next thing, like monitoring
a liquidity situation. In the past, you know, now we're in a very headline-driven market.
So things can just become nonlinear very quickly. So one is, unfortunately, I just have to monitor the news
first and foremost. And then aside from that,
I am monitoring, I mean, just, you know, what's happening in the street?
Is any energy, you know, are certain deals being made to at least some energy out?
Is it going in the right direction or is it not going in the right direction?
I look for things like what are countries doing about mitigants.
And then, you know, because my focus is on markets and finance, you know, as a profession,
I'm focusing a significant on liquidity.
I'm looking at things like are, are cracks forming or not yet in liquidity situations?
I watch things like Japanese treasury yields.
I look at things like are any Fed kind of liquidity facilities being used?
If so, how much?
What are kind of funding spreads for a short-term institutional lending, securitized lending?
I look at those kind of move index.
Of course, are there kind of days we have stocks down, bond yields up, and dollar flat to down?
That's kind of emerging market behavior.
do you see days like that in Japan?
So kind of like just signs of like how quickly this is playing out versus slower scenarios.
I mean, there are key analysts that I follow that are specialists in the oil market.
So I kind of watch their temperature on any given day.
You know, what are they freaking out about or not freaking out about?
Have they kind of revised any of their guidance?
But yeah, a lot of it today, of course, is about the straight, about down.
stream effects from the straight, as well as liquidity specifically, because that's where
ultimately starts ricocheting back into other things.
Luke, I want to maybe go down a dangerous path here, but we'll see how it goes.
Everything is centered around the street.
That's where all the attention is.
That seems to be the main driving factor in markets right now.
I'm curious from your perspective, why are we there and who benefits if anyone?
So for example, I can make a case that maybe Russia benefits from like higher oil prices.
But I'm not actually sure.
It just seems like everyone's kind of waiting and taking it on the chin a little bit.
Is there anybody in the financial landscape or macro landscape that benefits from this?
And I'm curious your thoughts as to why we're there to begin with.
There's a dangerous question.
There's a school of thought.
There's multiple schools of thought on this.
there is the school of thought of what I would call Iran jihadis, right?
They're the jihadis against Iran, right?
And so, hey, Iran's going to get a nuke and anything else like, hey, we might crash economy.
It's worth it.
Hey, we might, you know, it's worth it.
Hey, we might starve a billion people in emerging markets.
Hey, it's worth it.
That's one school, I thought.
there's another school of thought that
that this is sort of 5D chess and that ultimately
either 5D and it's you kind of get the same way.
It's either 5D chess that we can really squeeze China's oil supplies
and thereby increase our leverage vis-a-vis rare earths,
which they've been holding over us or since,
well, you know, certainly since Liberation Day.
And there's maybe something to that or trying to strategically break China's ability to buy oil outside the dollar, maybe something to that.
There's sort of a different version of the same thing, which is sort of bombing that we're bombing inside the wire.
There's a lot to suggest that maybe we're losing to AI, losing an AI to China or very close to it and certainly losing another area.
and maybe somebody made a decision that, hey, you know, it's sort of like, you know, we were soldiers once and young.
You know, once they were inside the wire, you call broken arrow, you call the airstrike inside, inside your own wire.
And so you kill some of your own people.
You kill some of your own people, but you kill everybody.
And you hope some of your guys live.
And that's, there's an element that I think says that that's the case.
And that's essentially just saying, hey, we're going to lose this round, right?
So when you were a kid, you know, we're going to lose this Monopoly game.
and I'm angry.
So before I come back around and have to pay you another $2,000 in rent on your hotels on boardwalk,
I'm going to flip the board, punch you in the face and go back and go outside and play kickball or something.
And in that world, like, look, we do that.
The rest of the world is going to starve first.
That's how it's going to work.
And quite frankly, American cities are going to starve right alongside the world.
Like, you're not going to want to be an American speed.
We're like, we're better off.
And this is, you know, like this net part I was talking about earlier.
Like, yeah, on a gross space, America will be fine.
You're not going to want to be in New York City if this goes as bad.
You know, if we're starving Asia, if we're starving, you know, a billion people across
a global South, you're not going to want to be in cities in America, not at all.
And then there's two other way.
There's two other thoughts.
There is a school of thought that I have to phrase this delicately.
this one is as I have from a very credible source there is a school of thought that it is in the
United States strategic interests to let Iran and Israel beat each other to death in a controlled fight
and if Israel and Iran beat each other to death that actually helps United States strategic
interests in a number of areas because both of them become threats to dollar reserve
status in different ways.
I don't know how I feel about that, but again, I have it on very good account from a very
credible source that that might be the case.
So that's another school of thought I've seen that that actually makes some sense because
up for the last 10, 12 years, Trump has been, love him or hate him, he's been a very,
he's had very good political instincts.
And this on the surface seems just stupid.
So that would actually make some sense.
And then the final that is, you know, for me, still the Occam's razor explanation and therefore my base case is he kicked a beehive.
And they thought it would be easy after Venezuela.
And now the beehive is stuck on his foot and he doesn't know what to do.
And so he's getting angrier and angrier because he didn't listen to his intelligence.
And there wasn't a plan for what would happen after on the decapitation strike.
And that is still my base case.
But I'm open to sort of all these other things.
And conveniently, conveniently, the longer Hormuz goes, stays closed, the less any of these really matter as terms of the why.
All that starts to matter is the what.
But they all at some point converge on, holy cow, the system is collapsing if we take Hormuz closed long enough.
But those are, those are sort of, you know, the, the different whys we're there that I have
circulating around in my head that as I watch headlines and stories and markets all sort of
play this out.
Lynn, I'm curious your thoughts.
If you have any insight or theories as to why we're in this conflict to begin with, and even
if not, if there's any economic or financial benefactors that you see, is somebody
profiting from this from this outbreak for that from this conflict well potential inside of traders are
benefiting yeah that's a good one uh and i mean basically i i side with the occum's razor as my by far my
highest probability case uh which is that they thought this would be easy they kicked a beehive
and now they're scrambling uh i think that that there are there are always that segment of neocons
that pretty much always want to deal with their ran issue uh they found the guy that that would do it um i think
they were on a high after the efficiency of Venezuela operation. I think Trump thought he could
basically decapitate any kind of secondary or tertiary country at whim. And I mean, Venezuela is a,
you know, a corrupt socialist state. If you take out the top guy, you can, you can just
negotiate with the second person. You just wants to buy luxury stuff and keep their job. Whereas
in Iran, you're dealing with a lot more hardcore ideologues that you're.
You can kill layers deep and they're still going to troll you on Twitter and refuse to open the straight.
And they've also, they've got very good engineers, as we've seen from these drone attacks.
And they've also planned for us trying to target their operations and disable their capabilities.
They built clearly a lot of resiliency in this.
Despite other criticisms, I would quickly lay at Iran.
I'm certainly no fan of their regime.
But in this area, we certainly, I think they'd make.
administration underestimated them.
And you can,
you can, you can, it's like, you can go downstream as you want.
I mean, like, so this administration has not really been strategic to say the least.
I mean, I was on the record ahead before Doge.
I was like, Doge is not going to work.
They're not, it's not structurally.
They're just, they're focusing on the wrong point here.
Doge is not going to work.
It was a blip in the radar.
And then, um, the tariff operation, like, it's, you do.
emergency powers to put in tariffs, you claim the rest of the world's paying for 100% of them.
It's just on the surface not accurate.
I do think that they were correct to focus on the trade deficit for a change, which the
administration have not been doing, but then the actual mechanism to do that is messy.
If you look at Stephen Myron's paper, which was kind of like the steelman version of what
the administration wanted to do, they published paper back in November 24 when he was
becoming kind of Trump's like chief economic advisor.
They kind of said, if you were restructure trade, here's how you would do it.
And, you know, outlines mechanisms and risks.
I generally disagree with the paper at the time, but there was parts of it that were logical.
And you could, like, I had a more pessimistic snare on the outcomes.
But like, I think a large part was that they underestimated things like the net international
investment position, the difficulty of reshoring supply chains, the network effects of manufacturing
hubs. So they thought that, you know, by hitting hard with these tariffs, the dollar would go up
and that they would then be in a very strong negotiating position to get all these new deals.
It didn't work out like that. And then because the tariffs were put in using emergency powers
for non-emergency purposes, a conservative-leaning court struck down a conservative president's
tariffs. It's also just complicated because in general fiscal conservatives are not in favor of tax
increases and that was effectively a tax increase. It was at least partially on Americans.
So that was like an unsound, just, it's like a short-term focus strategy that's just kind of
built on paper rather than say if you want to implement tariffs through Congress that are more
persistent you could, but it didn't build the coalition to do that partially because it, you know,
and then, you know, then it's like, then the whole Epstein fiasco, right? And then just Epstein,
gradually declining poll numbers
wars historically are kind of
effective for distracting
you know
I think Trump obviously he takes things
personally so
I mean he didn't like Venezuela
and their response and then that
operation happened and the special
forces clearly did a very efficient job
with that it was kind of shocking how
just clean that ended up being
I think then he was probably riding
a high from that and said well
why not submit my legacy by
you know, ending this 50 year kind of issue with Iran.
And it's not the same.
And so, you know, maybe there are scenarios where they could have nailed it.
But it's structurally different.
It's geographically different.
It's ideologically different.
And I think we were replaying why we can't just kind of play God with the rest of the world
and assume that we can just keep doing things and just after a time that they never have just,
they never light on fire.
They never come back to him.
us. So I think we're scrambling. And of course, there are parts of, you know, there are advisors
that are trying to play 40 chess. There are any sort of king's court. There's multiple competing
factions. And you'll have dumb ones and smart ones and, you know, all manner around. But I think
the actual outcome, the decision making process here, I think it's the outcome's razor. I think it's just,
I think it is the mess that it seems to be. Yeah, I mean, the White House still has up on their website
last I checked from June of last year.
Iran's nuclear capabilities
have been destroyed. Anything else that claims otherwise
is fake news. That's sitting on
the White House website while we had to go
in here ostensibly for nukes.
I think it is actually as
cartoonish as it looks. I think that's the
we live in a simulation and we're in like the
crazy version. Well,
and the scariest thing to me is
how many times I hear from
you know, serious investors,
people on X, well, it's all fine
as long as, you know, best since the adult in the room.
right like he's the adult in the room how many times you've heard best since the adult in the room
I was in Denver at a dinner in January 25 and with a friend of mine who's an energy
former energy exec and he goes I'm hearing that secretary Chris Wright's trying to sell
his oil company shale company and he can't find any bids with oil at $73 at that point
time no bids because they can't make the math work right so here's our secretary of energy
Chris Wright. Literally that weekend, I was at a conference where I met with somebody else.
There was Chatham House rules. I can tell you what they said, not who it was. But they told me they had
just met with Besson. Besson had brought them into wherever, New York or Washington to explain
sort of the sort of supply demand situation of the United States oil production base.
And this person goes, look, if you look at sort of, you know, where we are at the form of
you know, where the growth of production has come from in shale and in liquids.
And if you look at where those are, and if you look at the break-even prices, you know,
Mr. Secretary or Mr. Secretary-elect, whatever he was at the time, I know you're saying
one of your three arrows is increasing production by whatever it was, three million barrels
a day by 2028.
But he was, Bessent was also saying, we're going to get oil down to 50.
And this, this, this analyst goes, Mr. Secretary,
you're not going to be able to do it at 50.
The math does the math.
Yeah.
Well, and this, and here's the incredible thing.
The adult in the room told this person, I don't believe you.
Thanks for coming.
Now, apply that to this whole nonsense.
And so if the adult in the room, if that's the thought process of the adult in the room, basically, I'm God, it doesn't matter.
Well, now he's 0 for three arrows, by the way.
Let's start there.
But then the other thing they didn't factor in in all this.
is other great powers get a say.
They was just saying Russia and China, Iran is existential for both of them, too.
And I'm told on a very good account that in 2024, when we were shooting, helping the Ukrainians shoot missiles, not helping, we were shooting missiles into you.
We were basically just taking the Ukrainians hand and putting it on the button, right, of shooting missiles into Russia and high-fiving each other, chest thumping, we're awesome.
and the Russians wouldn't take the bait.
But they did say,
we reserve the right to respond
at a time and place of our choosing.
Well, it turns out the time and place
of their choosing
was about two days into us attacking Iran.
Because all of a sudden,
all of these people who are planning this thing
are like, oh my God,
how are the Iranians so accurate?
Well, it turns out
they were using Russian and Chinese satellites.
And so this isn't a war against Iran.
This is a war against Iran backed by the Russian industrial base and the Chinese industrial base.
Because everyone's like, oh, we're going to choke out China.
What do you think China's going to do?
They've already said in Chinese language they're going to support Iran.
The Russians are absolutely supporting the Iranians.
And so when you have two countries, you know, Secretary General of the UN, Mark Rudy said in January 2025,
the Russians have outproduced all of NATO four to one in Ukraine.
four to one.
So the Russian military industrial base is at least four times a size of ours because that's all in NATO.
So it's probably more like five times a size of ours.
And the Chinese military industrial base is probably 10 times, 20 times, 30 times the size of ours.
We picked a fight with with with.
And oh, by the way, the Chinese make a quorum of our military force.
two, you know, several layers down. So there is just a level of, I'm going to try to be
delicate, a lack of second and third derivative thinking, a lack of understanding the first
principles in which you are operating amongst the adults in the room, let alone sort of,
you know, the president who this weekend showed he's maybe having a little bit of stress,
maybe having a little bit of emotional breakdown.
I don't know.
But yeah.
So I don't know really why we're there.
I mean, I just think it's gone really pear-shaped really now.
Look, are we beating them up badly, tactically?
Absolutely.
Are we flattening them?
Yes.
Can we kill them all?
Yes.
What does that make us?
Like, you know, not to get all philosophic on a finale, but like, what does that get us?
And at what point does that draw in?
Again, this is existential for China and for Russia.
You know, this whole can we do it.
Just because you can't doesn't mean you should.
And certainly you shouldn't.
If you've already demonstrated, you have no ability to think about second and third derivatives,
which this administration from the best, from the smartest to the dumbest,
have all shown they have no ability to do that.
It seems to me like a feeling.
I think in some ways we actually kind of repeated Russia's mistakes.
So Russia, of course, invaded Ukraine.
they thought it'd be a quicker, more decisive operation.
It's now going on for four years.
It's one of the situations where, I mean, Russia's not better off, Ukraine's not better off.
The number of dead is just off the charts.
You know, the number of dead Russian men, Ukrainian men, women even, the sheer amount of resources that have gone into that,
that could have been going into other things.
It's like you look around and say, who's better off, right?
It's like a lot of these things that seem that, you know, people that will claim to be strategic is often just a hubris of a handful of people, either for legacy or for their own enrichment.
And then, you know, the U.S. has been kind of trying to, you know, with some success, some failures, trying to make Russia pay as much as possible by, of course, funding.
And to Luke's point, we're providing resources in various ways to make it harder for Russia.
And the U.S. then turned around and four years later, does, we fall into a similar trap.
which is we go in expecting a quick operation
and then Iran's backers are like,
well, let's make this as hard as possible for the Americans
if we can rather than just roll over.
And so we're kind of in ironically a similar situation.
I mean, we're only a month in rather than four years.
But this one has so far bigger impact for the world
because 20% of the world's energy is, you know,
two miles from their coast.
Did we just, did they,
The U.S. potentially idiocracy its way into the gradually then suddenly moment.
Like if this actually pros on long enough, because Luke, I know you've mentioned before that basically,
so if I understand, the GCC countries are selling oil for dollars, then cycling those dollars back into U.S.
Treasuries, which is then funneling into the military industrial complex and all the spending that the U.S. does.
But I also would imagine, and I suspect that the GCC country is also funneling into equities as well,
that they might want to go out on the risk curve and might be buying U.S. stocks as well, too.
then we just talk about the the based in bitcoin the end of the dollar at some point
if this went on for like a really long time could that actually be we see like a definitive
moment you can say like that was the end of the u.s. dollar hegemony like that would be the
point where everybody else to start using barter systems other currency exchanges or is it
still so entrenched that even if this went on for four years like ukraine that wouldn't
happen i think you have to define what is end of hegemony or end of dollar hegemony you know
I think dollar usage will still be 80, 85%, whatever, 90% payment because, you know,
any Chucky Cheese token will do when you're, you know, when you're looking to get to the prize
window, right?
That's, it doesn't matter.
Look, when I wrote the first, you know, this is the bomb started flying in February 28th,
March 3rd, I wrote that Iran doesn't have to beat the U.S. military.
They just have to beat the U.S. Treasury market.
And in that report, I said, look, this has a potential if it goes the way I think it's going to go to
become a U.S. Suez moment where, you know, for like the U.K., it was sort of when it became
apparent to everybody that sort of the, the, the hegemonic period over the UK was over.
And look, I think that's now the best case.
I think a Suez moment for the U.S. is now best case.
Because we can look and see what are the outs here?
The outs here, you know, the most likely outs are we declare victory and go home.
In which case, A, the Iranians will have dealt a strategic defeat to the United States of America.
Everyone in the world will understand that except for the sort of Iran jihadis and certain revelments of MAGA.
Option two is we keep going.
And look, one of the dogs that is not barking this week, everyone's like, oh, great rescue.
and it was a great rescue and they're very brave.
Why did it have to happen?
Our president told us on Wednesday night
that their military was destroyed,
their army destroyed,
Navy destroyed,
decimated, crushed like never before,
blah, blah, blah.
And yet,
next day they shot down an F-15.
And then the next day during the rescue,
they shot down two C-130s and four helicopters.
Like,
so we,
that that just gives us a little taste of what putting ground troops on the ground is going to do.
I've been a new Gallipoli.
Luke watched the opening scene of saving Private Ryan, knife fight in a phone booth,
whatever metaphor you want to use, that's going to happen.
And that is going to be, you know, look, we got into Vietnam.
That was the end of the dollar.
That was the end of Bretton Woods.
So it's strange credulity to think there won't have be, you know, that won't.
be that outcome. And then I guess the last option is, I guess, really one of two options. Number one,
like the Iranians get a say, right? Even if we say declare victim and walk away, they keep shooting.
And if I'm them, I'm going to keep shooting. Absolutely, I'm going to. That's a, that's an
indictment. And the last one is, look, we do something extreme. Like, we go in and we nuke them.
And like every day this goes on that it is not going, tactically, it's going fine for
us, but strategically, you know, when you run out of intercept their missiles, what do we think
Israel is going to do when they completely run out of interceptors? Which, oh, by the way, they probably
need Chinese rare earths to maintain supplies of. What do we think they're going to do?
I don't know. Would they do the Sampson option? Maybe. Then what? So there's these, and I guess the last
thing is the Iranians are, they're telling you the let oil move for for Yuan. And people say, well,
there's no, you know, Yuan is, it's a close capital account, blah, blah, blah, blah.
They're missing what the Iranians are doing.
That's gold for oil.
How do you get Yuan?
It's simple.
You buy, you sell dollars, you buy gold, you take the gold to China, you sell the gold to China
for Yuan, you take the yuan to Iran, you buy the oil, you put it on a boat, you sail it out
of there, and away you go.
And so that option is absolutely the end of the post-71-dollar system.
That is a, you know, weather whirlwind.
allowing it to happen, or as some assert, or whether we can't do anything about it,
you know, like sink the Chinese boats moving the stuff, it doesn't matter.
You've got a yuan oil system parallel running alongside the dollar oil system.
And that is de facto, the end of the dollars post 71 status.
So yeah, my best case, the happy outcome at this point is we walk away.
we let them keep control of the straight of Hormuz.
They continue to transact in yuan through gold.
Gold goes to the moon.
The dollar falls sharply.
That facilitates a reindustrialization of the U.S., high inflation, probably yield
curve control, capital controls in the United States.
That's the good outcome at this point.
They all get uglier from here, from that point.
Yeah, I mean, I think there are multiple, I think Luke described it well.
I think there are multiple layers.
I mean, over time technology changes.
And so what was once dominant, like the carrier group,
when you have things like hypersonic missiles or very effective one-way drones that cost $40,000,
just the math changes to some extent.
So it's just that you could have competent people running things and that still could just chip away at things.
That, of course, we're 50 years into the Triffin dilemma.
So the U.S. has deindustrialized itself to maintain its global reserve.
of status. It's kind of a natural flywheel that gets an effect. It's not even always a decision. It's
just the network effect of the dollar system. And so we just, our ability to replenish things is lower.
Our manufacturing hub is weak compared to China's and elsewhere. So those are just kind of like
all the just serious realities that were happening, which then increased the odds to be run into
a strategic defeat like here, which then has downshue implications for the currency for other things.
I've argued before that, you know, like most empires, when they could just see that, okay, we've over expanded, we're doing great, but there's a lot of risks ahead.
We can just, like, right size our borders to make sure we're defending the right spots and, like, we're going to focus on inward flourishing.
They rarely do that.
They try to maintain every border they have.
They lose all their blood and treasure to try to maintain what they have because that's what the emperor wants to do.
And so far, we're on that path.
instead of kind of retreating from a position of strength, gracefully, leaving other people's
problems for other people, we've decided to do more boondoggles.
And so, but I do think that the dollar system, short of extreme scenarios, has a very long
life to it because a lot of this goes down to just the math of it, which is there's like
tens of trillions of dollar denominated debt in the world.
all of that represents in flexible demand $4.
It's mostly not even owed to the U.S.
It's owed to other cross-border entities.
That can be chipped away at over time.
You can do defaults on it,
but then you get very nonlinear financial outcomes,
both in the U.S. and globally.
There's a very complex game theory with that.
You don't want to be the first one to default
or even the first five to default,
usually unless you're the biggest to default first.
Or restructure is the polite term.
And so I do think that I would separate the risk of a military kind of strategic defeat from the dollar system itself, at least in any sort of like near term timelines, even though one, of course, can lead to the other over time.
And I do think that regardless of this particular scenario playing out, I think we were already headed sort of a multipolar world in terms of what sovereign store their reserves in.
and then to some extent, even what they denominate payment in so that they can't be like sanctioned or censored unilaterally.
So I think we're already seeing just a natural shift there.
And then I'd argue it's even in the U.S.'s interest to let that happen.
That would have been an example of letting things happen kind of gracefully and kind of focusing on inward stuff rather than trying to maintain that unnecessarily.
But this, I think, is an accelerate.
There are moments in time where, you know, like the U.K.
losing its reserve status was a process that, you know, there's, there's World War I,
then there's World War II, then there's a Suez moment, and then there's the, you know,
there's the rise first of kind of the, the early stage of that, the German economic power,
then the rise of the American economic power. So there was just like gradual handover.
And I think this is one particular moment. I think the Iraq war is already an early moment.
That was kind of our, it's called World War I for like, you know, losing status. It's like the early,
that's the first shot.
And then, you know, you have a global financial crisis.
Then you have COVID.
Then you have like lockdowns and things like that.
And then you have, you have, you know, this rising conflict between the U.S. and China.
And then you have this particular moment.
I think these are all kind of like flags along the way toward a more multipolar world.
And all of that can be true without the idiocry component.
But then you mentioned idiocacy.
I mean, I do think that it's an oddly present movie because it's, I mean, that was
like a pro wrestler president.
We have a reality star president.
We were in a situation where we were like facing election between a
senile guy and a reality star.
And like when the senile guy had to drop out, we had a
person who couldn't win her own primary if she had to.
So we skipped that.
It's just the way the timing worked out.
And so we find ourselves in like the silliest timeline.
And then we had, you know, like Doge Epstein,
Iran boondoggle.
is just we're in kind of yeah we are yeah that that idiocacy component's kind of happening
alongside of what otherwise could have been these similar things just slightly smarter
I think it's too it's it's it frames why you know Lynn the point you made about the
the entrenched dollar debt is is I think why what Iran's doing with D1 and I think gold is so
important is that's the one way out of it you can get that's the escape hatch to it is
Look, if you start using oil to bid up gold, physical gold, you know, the oil market's still nine, nine times the size of the gold market, even at, you know, $5,000 an ounce.
So at $45,000 an ounce, sort of the implied valuation of the dollar and the real burden of that dollar debt start to look very, very different.
You can completely, you know, that $40,000 gold, $20,000, $20,000.
you're going to have a lot more collateral around the world with which you can sort of
redenominate that dollar, you know, those Eurodollar claims without that crisis.
And I think that is in no small part, part of the reason why gold has been managed by the
United States and the Anglo Americans more broadly, the city of London more broadly,
is to prevent gold from getting big enough to drive that network effect that then allows the world out of the dollar
system painlessly. And I think on some level, that's part of what we're watching is because
it's through oil that that happens. It's through commodities that that happens. And, you know,
let's see. And I think that's when you kind of then tie that back to, is this going to be a strategic
loss? That's, I think, a very important dynamic to it, because that is, I think, the one way out
of all of that dollar debt is you just devalue the heck out of it with gold.
You replace the dollar collateral with much a greater increase in the value of your gold collateral
and away you go.
And now, and that's not necessarily a worse world for the U.S.
It's certainly a much better situation for sort of the part of the U.S. that wants to reindustrialize.
There's still sort of this fantasy going on, I see on X that we can, you know, we can,
maintain the dollar system as it's been structured for the last 50 years and we're going to
we're going to make all of our own weapons and industrial basin reshore and it's like no you're not
pick one agreed very good before i asked the final question here i did just want to post to you guys
lynn do you have anything do you want to ask luke or luke is there anything that you want to ask lynn
it probably we agree on a lot of things that's always it i was like i was looking for little nuances
of where you might disagree i'm like nope they're both telling me that
if we don't get this open, we're screwed.
Okay, duly noted.
Yeah, I mean, look, I'm a, I'm a guy,
if I disagree with you, I'll tell you.
But I'm sorry, what are you going to say, Lynn?
I was going to say, I guess the question I would,
I would try to drum up is if you were to map out your,
what is your current map for kind of the order break?
Let's say the straight-up room stays completely closed for six months.
What is, what is like the, your rough order of kind of,
like, who cries uncle first in terms of, like,
major powers in terms of, you're running into kind of,
I think it's going to be, yeah, I think it's going to be like, it's a neck and neck between Australia, UK and like Southeast Asia.
So like Vietnam, Thailand, type, you know, Korea region.
And I don't know which of those.
And then some European countries probably, you know, if they can put down their egos enough to buy energy from Putin, they might be fine.
Of course, Ukrainians are now making that worse by blowing up lots more energy.
it seems like in Russia.
But I think that's where you'll see it first.
And I think you'll see it.
I think the COVID shutdowns are somewhat instructive, right?
Is I remember one of the wisest people I know pointed out,
I think tourism.
It's like eight or 10% of global GDP or something.
It's like a staggeringly high percentage.
Oh, yeah.
So like people are like, well, don't worry.
It's just them shutting down flights.
And you're like, no, no, no.
You don't understand.
We've already lost 10% of the world's oil.
You shut down tourism.
It's over.
It's over.
So, and then that might turn, you know, that is where I could see kind of that acceleration.
I'm just waiting for, I don't know what the, I saw it phrased as the, the Tom Hanks moment for COVID.
And I wish I could give whoever coined that phrase credit.
I'm sorry if you're watching this.
But they called it the Tom Hanks moment where this reminds me so much of COVID.
Like, we can all see its close.
all do the man we all know that it's not good we're all sort of like well maybe it'll go away
and admittedly i was one of those people i'm like it's just a flu right and and and then all of a sudden
ianx got it right you remember that tom hanks like i have covid and we're working and everyone's like
and like that was the freak out moment like then we had shutdowns and blah blah blah and and i don't
know what the tom hanks moment will be but it's coming and it'll be oh
like they're like sort of and so but i i do think amongst the major powers that's how i would
lay it out how are you thinking about it similarly i think probably that i i tend to be kind of
probably a little more bullish on asia in the sense that i think they'll be pretty effective
at out at pushing a lot of the problem toward the developing world which is that i think the taiwans
the koreas the japan's will likely build a bit enough i mean they are
I mean, Korea is already rationing.
I mean, like, these things will show up there.
And so, but I think that they will avoid kind of the worst scenarios most likely by pushing
those on to the Egypt's, the Pakistan's, the, you know, the Bangladeshis of the world.
You know, and I tend to be not very constructive on Europe.
So I tend to think that Asia, you know, at the end of this, Asia is kind of in a stronger
position than Europe. But I think
most of these crises, I think the developing world pays
the biggest price. They're the ones with the
they get the acute shortages where everyone else gets
severe inconveniences. And in the U.S., we have this weird
situation where you have like two Americas, right? There's like one
America that's like mostly goes, you know, they're kind of the one that
last to get hit. And then there's the other part of America
that's kind of right alongside the folks in Asia and Europe
that are getting hit pretty quickly as soon as gasoline
like four or five dollars or eight dollars in California.
It depends on across the country.
And they can barely keep food on the table without cutting health insurance or something.
They're kind of right alongside, say, the South Koreans in terms of how impacted they are.
But it's, you know, there's always little guideposts that can happen that can then rearrange how things look.
In Canada, I think the federal government was already floating.
the idea or someone was pushed for the idea of having federal government federal employees work from home.
So I'm fully expecting like energy lockdowns in UK, Australia, Canada at some point in time.
I completely agree that this smells a lot like the COVID set up to me. It seems very, very
familiar and I'm kind of watching for that. The last thing that I want to make sure we touch on,
got to make sure we touch on it. Luke, I will reluctantly admit that your timing was quite good,
despite the fact that I don't want it to be. Bitcoin has been for about since February kind of
trading sideways within range bound.
I'm curious your thoughts on Bitcoin at the moment and how you see things progressing.
I am, you know, I actually posted something about this morning about that.
I've been fascinated to see how it didn't get hit in March.
And, you know, sort of the trying to ascribe a motive to it's like, wow, is this capital
flight out of the Middle East bidding it, whatever.
And then I ran the chart of Bitcoin against IGV software.
And it's still the same chart.
And so it looks like it was just, okay, Bitcoin got killed with software in February and they've both been kind of hanging out.
Maybe because, you know, software is like, all right, not going to get killed as badly by oil for the moment or it's a secondary concern, the concerns that were in February to what's going on elsewhere.
What do I think?
I'm, I am, I still not added back anything I've sold.
I am very interested watching very closely.
My view is that this war is going to go a lot longer than people think and the disruptions are going to go a lot longer and people think.
And I think ultimately that's bad for risk assets.
And if it's bad for risk assets, it's going to be bad for Bitcoin.
So I still think I'm going to be able to buy Bitcoin in the 40s, maybe lower if things really.
But that is a very loosely held view depending on like, look, we get, you know,
tomorrow wore off. I fully expect Bitcoin to be at 7580. And if there's real, I, you know,
I might not be able to buy back till, you know, 90. And then it won't look as smart a trade.
So it's not something I have like super high conviction in how it could go. Because it's,
it is basically beholden to Trump and the people that got us into this, you know, a decision in a
room, right? That's to me, if you think they're going to sort of walk away from this and this thing's
going to end in the next couple weeks, you know, Bitcoin's probably a better buy here. But I think
there's very little, I think there's very little chance of that happening. So I'm still,
I'm still cautious in the short run. I think that's a reasonable view. I think Bitcoin and
the software sector, they continue to be uncannily correlated. I think part of it is that the software
sector got so cheap that basically like some of them the value investors are kind of watching that
space now there's like less of an outright sell bid but it's not it's not catching an upward bid but the
bleeding has slowed and so I think that that'll probably consider inequality of Bitcoin I think they'll
both kind of find bottoms historically Bitcoin tends to find bottoms gradually because it's not like
a stock where it can just have an earnings announcement that the surprise of the upside and then it's
it's off to the races. It generally,
you have to churn out the fast money.
All the coins,
overtime slide into the diamond hands.
And, you know,
sailor owns a lot of them. And then, you know,
people that just never want to sell. And then over time,
they're just basically sellers get exhausted.
And then we either get a better liquidity environment or something.
We started to get a small amount of interest until you kind of eventually relate that fire.
The exception, of course, was COVID.
I mean,
you had a downward spike from liquidity where, I mean, gold, silver, Bitcoin, just stocks just
straight down. And then you had the giga stimulus, so straight up. So if we do get outright
liquidity problems, we're like the dollar just, the Dixie spikes by 10. And, you know, the move
index just breaks and, you know, off the run treasury markets break. And there's a couple days for
the tendle banks to get the act together before they help with the gigaprint.
we probably see days where Bitcoin could fall 5K, 10K in a day.
And it looks like COVID.
I'd be a buyer of those kind of crises.
Again, they're hard to predict.
They're more just like, if this happens, this is likely why it's happening kind of scenario.
I think outside of that, I think we probably grind for a little while.
And then when you do start to get, say, bigger stimulus or resolution to this one way or another,
I think that Bitcoin's already gotten a lot of the fast money out.
It's already shifted a lot of the coins toward the stronger hands.
Some of the folks in the 50K range, like the 58K gang, I mean, they're still, you know, they still got a shot.
So maybe lower, like if you get an illiquid kind of spike down.
But I think it's interesting time to layer in.
I'm also, I'm watching other risk assets.
I mean, there's like, say, Latin American banks are like, like,
like some of these airports that are like obviously not ones you're jumping in yet,
but you kind of watch them.
And I think there's like this set of risk assets or these things that are priced
like risk assets, at least Bitcoin self-custodial, but it's still priced like a risk asset
by most pools of capital.
So you have Bitcoin and a couple of these kind of beaten down areas that I think it's still
from a trading perspective too early to say, okay, you want to ape in now.
But it's like you have them on your watch list.
If they do get really bad days, you might start layering into them.
but that you really want to probably see a light at the tunnel
before you'd make the trading call that they're going up.
Beautiful. Awesome.
Lynn, Luke, this was absolutely phenomenal.
Thank you so much for taking the time to sit down today.
Before we go, Lynn, please tell everybody where they can find your beautiful new book
and your newsletter and all that stuff and then Luke you after.
Sure, people can check out lyndal.com.
And I have a new sci-fi novel out.
And part of the reason I wrote it is because we already live in a simulation clearly.
It's like my way of kind of, it's like, let me just,
right about sci-fi stuff because that's in some
ways more normal than
what's going on now. So
I was like, it's like fiction, it's less
extreme than reality. So people can check
that out if they want something
fun to distract themselves.
The Sto-Guard incident, correct? Yeah, the Stuttgart
incident. They can find that on, they can find that on
Amazon, Barnes & Noble,
elsewhere. Beautiful.
Luke? FFTT-LC.com
and at Luke Gromin on X is where people
can find me. If you
enjoy this episode with Luke Gromond and Lynn Alden, please do like and subscribe. It really
helps us out and check out the previous episode with Professor Saint-Aj.
