Prof G Markets - Bitcoin Erases 2025 Gains as Crypto Bear Market Deepens
Episode Date: November 18, 2025Ed Elson is joined by Sherwood News markets editor Luke Kawa to make sense of Bitcoin’s slide and the broader crypto bear market. Then Bill Cohan, founding partner of Puck News, joins the show to as...sess the first-round bids for Warner Bros. Discovery, which are due this week. And finally, Ed digs into why Berkshire Hathaway just snapped up roughly $5 billion worth of Google shares. Check out our latest Prof G Markets newsletter Follow Prof G Markets on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Follow Scott on Instagram Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Profite Markets, I'm Ed Elson. It is November 18th. Let's check in on yesterday's
market vitals. The major indices all fell with tech leading the declines ahead of
NVIDIA's midweek earnings. Google stock was the exception, rallying 3%
More on that later.
Meanwhile, the yield on 10-year Treasury slid in anticipation of the September jobs report due Thursday.
And finally, the dollar climbed while Bitcoin dropped.
Okay, what else is happening?
Crypto has fallen into a bare market.
Late last week, Bitcoin crashed below the key $100,000 level,
and yesterday it officially erased all of its gain for the year
as it moved towards $90,000.
All told, it has fallen more than $25,000.
percent from its peak in early October to its lowest point in six months, and other currencies
have followed suit.
Ethereum is also down more than 20 percent in the past month, and an index of smaller
coins just dropped to its lowest level since the pandemic.
Meanwhile, crypto-related stocks also slid on Monday.
Michael's saying the strategy closed down, 2 percent.
Robin Hood was down 5 percent, and Coinbase was down 7 percent.
Okay, here to break down, what is driving this unwind and what else might be impacted?
speaking with Luke Kawa, markets editor at Sherwood News.
Luke, thanks for joining us again on Profi Markets.
Hey, glad to be back, Ed.
Thanks for having me.
So looking at the crypto markets right now, a pretty bad week, pretty bad month.
Bitcoin is down almost to $90,000 at the time of this recording.
Crash below its key level of $100,000.
I'll just start with your broad reflections.
What do you make of what's happening in the crypto markets right now?
First off, I, you know, it's very hard to look at the crypto markets and try and pin down
why things are happening. So I always like to try and take the what. The what is the takeaway
from this to me? Because when you have an asset that's basically an id asset, it trades on
risk appetite, momentum, degree of speculation. Then that really, it's, you know, telling you
a lot about the rest of the ecosystem. For Bitcoin, the reasons I've heard attributed for
it's so off, you know, include things like, as you mentioned, you break through 100,000.
There's, you know, obviously that's a key psychological level. We're all kind of evolved
monkeys who are very attracted to round numbers. And beyond that, I've heard 400 to 600 days
passed a halving, which is, you know, a range of over half a year that you tend to get
peaks in Bitcoin around that time. I think things like strategy having, it's the value of
its equity fall below the net asset value of its Bitcoin is kind of another sign of,
hey, well, if this big buyer is facing stress, I think it's somewhat of another sign or at least
an indication that people and institutions that bought Bitcoin on leverage, negative things
happen when it goes down and that in itself is a catalyst or an acceleration for even more
declines happening. Beyond that, you know, you've seen kind of the normal things you would
expect in a market where things are going down. You've seen a lot of outflows, for
instance, from Bitcoin ETFs, and you've seen, I'll call them, you know, synonyms for poop
coins. Those are, have basically wiped out, you know, they're back to like pandemic era
level trading. And you would expect to see more volatile, less high quality assets in as much
as, you know, you can describe quality to the space, underperform at times when things are going
down and act in a more volatile fashion.
So much in there. My first reaction, you know, we're also seeing kind of a broad-ish tech sell-off
right now. And it appears that, you know, maybe there is a little bit of fear in the market
right now. People are trying to de-risk, trying to get out of risky assets. And I guess that
might explain what's happening with Bitcoin right now. But I am reminded again of this dynamic
where it's like Bitcoin's supposed to be the safe asset. Like that's supposed to be the place,
at least, in theory, where you go because you're afraid of everything else.
And so the idea that people are selling their Bitcoin, you were seeing these mass outflows
because they're frightened about the price going down, to me, that just doesn't really fit
with what Bitcoin was supposed to be.
You've got gold, which is up more than 50% year to date.
Bitcoin's now down year to date.
How do you explain that?
The great thing about correlations and narratives and regimes is that they change.
For a lot of time of its history, Bitcoin has primarily been, I would say, more so than a store
of value. It's been a hyper-leveraged play on the NASDAQ. That has been a more reliable way
to describe Bitcoin's price rather than some kind of store of value in the financial sphere.
So to me, a lot of this is really Bitcoin reconnecting with what it has generally
and more predictably been,
and it's been effectively
a hyper-leveraged
low fundamentals tech stock
that, you know, behaves as such
in most cases. So to me, that's
kind of more the takeaway from this
is that the store of value
narrative has,
you know, I would say not had
that much empirical
validity throughout time, and it
certainly isn't showing any at this juncture.
Yeah. You mentioned the rest of
crypto. The poop coins
we'll call them shit coins, the alt coins, which are down to sort of pandemic, pre-pandemic prices,
it looks a little bit like this is sort of the beginning of the end for the alt coins and the meme coins.
Is that a step too far, or do you think these cryptocurrencies aside from Bitcoin and Ethereum and the big names,
do you think that these tokens are here to stay, or is this going to be a big problem for Comrocket and Pepecoin?
I look at it kind of the same way as I do with highly speculative stocks in that these things
have been washed out very hard and nobody asks questions when they're going up 5, 7, 10% a day.
Nobody's asking at that time, you know, what's happening? Why is this happening? Is this ever going
to stop? I feel at the same juncture. It's the same thing in reverse, right? All it takes is a
flip in risk appetite for these things to start working again. And I would kind of look to you or point to
if you're looking to events on the horizon, both for speculative stocks generally and for
crypto, which I believe behaves a lot of the same way, would be you have, A, Invidia's earnings
coming up on Wednesday after the close. There's been a lot more, I would say, not broad
concern, but a lot more nuance in terms of how we're treating AI winners versus potential
non-winners versus potential losers lately. And that has the ability to at least recognize
some kind of animal spirits broadly throughout the space or not, of course. And beyond that,
we've been living in this very deep fog in terms of the U.S. economy now for, you know,
well over a month where we've had very, very limited data to go on. And during this period
where we've had the government shutdown, I feel like every one or two or three days through
the shutdown, there was a nine, ten, eleven figure announcement about an AI spending
commitment. So if you think the stock market has been, you know, one half AI this year and
one-half kind of macroeconomic outlook, we're about to get the deluge in terms of the macro
outlook, both with jobs figures coming on Thursday. More inflation data will be coming out again,
and that has the ability to change two key things. The first is, how do we actually feel about
the economy? Is job growth really slowing dramatically, or is it leveling out more in an area
where you could say is roughly consistent with population growth and not enough to keep the
unemployment rate somewhat in check in a firmer space. And then it also has the ability to change
the view of what, if anything, will the Fed do in December? Because another reason why I think
that speculative stocks and Bitcoin have come off the boil is the odds of the Fed cut have gone,
in December, have gone from roughly 80, 85 percent to about a coinflip.
at this time.
Yeah, absolutely.
Just before you go here,
just to go back to Bitcoin for a moment.
You know, we're down 2% year to date.
We're kind of where we were when Trump was elected.
And really, this was supposed to be,
I mean, the tailwind for Bitcoin,
it was this mainstream adoption,
which we did start to see.
We started to see more acceptance on Wall Street,
more ETF participation.
but then most importantly, support from Trump.
And yet we're kind of back to where we were.
How do you, what do you make of that?
I mean, is the learning here that Trump really didn't do much for Bitcoin?
Where does Trump play in the Bitcoin story now that we look at the price near 90,000 down 2% year to date?
I think I'll draw the direct connection between crypto and quantum computing here.
I think that what this shows us is that speculative assets that don't have a lot in terms of near-term fundamentals, they need persistent catalysts to keep working.
So, you know, there is a lot.
I think you can say that Trump did do for crypto in terms of easing institutional adoption, things that help.
There are also other things that institutions have done on the other side, which we've talked about recently in terms of perpetual futures, things that kind of help.
gender and encourage volatility, which is now what we see on the downside a lot more.
But just in the same way that quantum computing companies fell to bed after basically
the rumors that they were going to get the government to buy and take a direct stake as soon as
those were poo-poohed, it's kind of the same with me for Bitcoin, that if you don't have
that consistent degree of momentum helping you, then sooner or later either momentum breaks.
And you don't have anything in terms of fundamentals to really fall back on.
that would encourage fresh buyers.
So it's a, it's not a matter of what has Trump done for Bitcoin or not.
It's a question of what have you done for me lately.
Yes.
All right.
Luke, market's editor at Sherwood News, Luke.
Really appreciate your time.
Thank you.
Pleasure.
After the break, a look at the Warner Brothers Discovery Sale.
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bids for Warner Brothers Discovery are due on Thursday. And this officially kicks off a high-stakes
auction featuring Paramount, Comcast, and Netflix. Warner Brothers hopes to wrap up this process by
the end of the year, but they have already rejected three bids from David Ellison's Paramount
Skydance. Meanwhile, Netflix and Comcast are reportedly working on offers for Warner Bros. Studio and
streaming businesses. Okay, here for an update on this auction and what is going to happen. We are
speaking with Bill Cohen, founding partner of Puck News. Bill, thanks for joining us on Profty Markets.
I'd like to see you, Ed. Thank you for having me.
Absolutely. We want to get your take on what's happening with Warner Brothers. The deadline to make a
preliminary bid is Thursday. We've been talking a lot about Warner Brothers recently. We've seen
it a lot in the news. Can you just briefly explain, like, where are we today? How did we get here?
Well, Ed, every public company is for sale at a price.
I mean, some aren't because they're just too big.
Like, I don't think anybody's going to come along and pick up Navidia.
But, you know, Warner Brothers Discovery is not in that category.
It now has a market cap of 60 billion or so plus another 30 billion of debt.
So David Zazlov, who engineered this deal.
to buy it in April
2022 from AT&T
I think was always
somebody who
he's a deal guy
he's been a deal guy for a long time
ever since he was at GE
and so I think this was probably
an inevitable outcome but what really
kicked it off was of course
the three bids
from the Ellison's
via Paramount Skydance
as it's known now
that were rejected
putting the company effectively into play.
So you say every company is technically for sale.
I mean, you can buy any company, really, if you have the money.
But they're saying that the deadline to make the bid is Thursday.
I don't fully understand what that means.
Like, what does that actually mean?
They say it's a preliminary bid deadline.
What does that mean?
Well, I think they're trying to create a process here, Ed.
I think they're trying to instill some sort of discipline on the Ellisons so that they raise
their bid beyond the 2350 that's already on the table that was rejected. And the way they show
the Ellisons that they need to raise their bid is by attempting to impose some discipline on the
process and say to other potential bidders that, you know, we want to know what you're
thinking about potentially preliminarily, you know, by this Thursday. Otherwise, you know, and if no one
shows up, by the way, which is a possibility. I mean, you know, we've been led to believe that
Comcast is kicking the tires. We've been led to believe that Netflix is interested, maybe even
Amazon, maybe even Apple. Those seem like longer shots. You know, don't forget, Zazlov in June,
also proposed a plan to split the company into two pieces.
That is also in effect a competing bidder because a bunch of Wall Street research analysts have
come out and said that at some point, the two pieces of this company, when split, might
generate as much as $30 a share.
So there's sort of this $30 a share boogeyman out there, future value, split the company
up come next April, and it might at some point in the future.
be worth $30 a share.
So that's sort of hanging out there against anything that the Ellison might propose for buying
the whole company because they're probably the only ones who are interested in buying the
whole company.
Comcast is, of course, spinning off its linear TV assets into something called Versant.
So it's not going to be interested in buying Warner Brothers Discovery linear TV assets.
But it would be interested in buying its streaming in studio.
business. And so, you know, all of these pieces, there's a lot of moving parts, a lot of
valuation exercises that are going to have to be undertaken. And so it's a question of, you
know, what is going to be the fairest value? What is going to produce the most value from a financial
point of view to the Warner Brothers Discovery shareholders, is it this whatever it is that the
Ellison's come up with in a cash and stock deal? Is it the split up of the company that
Zazlov is proposed? Is it a combination of Comcast buying the streaming and a studio business
from Warner Brothers Discovery plus the value of the global networks business?
and or the same thing for Netflix or Amazon.
So all of these pieces have to be put into context and valued by the three bankers that the company has hired.
And that has to be all presented to the board.
And the board can pick what it wants.
Yeah.
My view is that essentially what David Zazlov wants the board to do and its bankers to do is what we'll have.
happen here. Yeah. And yet, I mean, all of these moving pieces, all of these players, and yet we've
only seen bids from one player. Right. And we're two days away from the deadline. Well, hopefully
it doesn't leave. Which leads me to at least, right, it leads me to question how serious these other
bids actually are. I mean, we keep hearing about Netflix, we keep hearing about Comcast, and yet
no bid has been made, at least it doesn't appear that way. Do you believe that they're really looking to
make a bid? Well, look, just because we haven't heard about it doesn't mean it's not happening. In fact,
that would be good corporate governance activity. Yeah. It's bad corporate governance activity to have
leaks, right? So the fact that we have, there's no leak here other than, you know, we know Comcast has gone
to Saudi Arabia, we know that to try to raise some money or whatever it is they did over there.
We know that Zazz has met with Comcasts.
We know that Zazz has talked to Netflix and probably Amazon too.
So we know that they're trying to gin up a serious process to be competitive with the Ellisons.
Yeah.
But we don't know whether they're going to step to the plate.
You're right.
It's one thing to look at something is another thing to actually put forth a bid and put your reputation behind a bid.
Because that'll all get public.
and then, you know, you'll be held to account for that.
Again, if Comcast doesn't show up, if Netflix doesn't show up,
if Amazon doesn't show up, then it's going to be the Ellison's versus the split-up plan.
Yeah, if that happens, let's say we get to Thursday, the deadline has arrived,
we don't see any new bids, we don't even see Paramount make a new bid.
What does that mean for Warner Brothers?
Because, I mean, before this was all happening, we were looking at like $11 per share.
Then it's in play.
People think it's going to get acquired.
We're up to around $24 per share.
Could that just totally tank the valuation of the company?
Or do you think it's still going to be considered in play?
It depends how the company handles it at this point.
Okay.
If Comcast doesn't show, if Netflix doesn't show, if Amazon doesn't show, okay, fine.
But if the Ellisons are still there, and I've been led to believe that they are seriously still there, they're, you know, at least at 2350, and they're going to be at 2350.
Do they have to raise their bid beyond 2350?
If there's no one else, I wouldn't.
But, you know, maybe they will just to get it done.
And if they're still at 2350, then this stock will hold up.
If they're gone, I mean, if they've decided, you know what, you guys had your chance, you blew it.
Yeah. We're just going to work on fixing Paramount Skydance, and we're gone now.
Then that stock will tank back to 11, yes.
Yeah, that seems to be the question of this.
And then it'll get ugly.
Be the end of Zaz, perhaps.
Just before you go, if you had to make bets or make predictions, how do you think this
will all play out?
Let's say 12 months from now, what do you think Warner Brothers looks like?
If I put my Scott Galloway hat here on for a second and make a prediction,
You know, I'd say that, you know, Warner Brothers Discovery has put itself into Revlon mode.
And what that means is they basically have to sell the company to the highest bidder in effect.
And if the Ellisons are there and serious, and I kind of think they are because I think they may see that the problems at Paramount were a little more in-depth than they were bargained for, I think they go through with it.
Of course, it's up to Larry because Larry's the one with the money, not anybody else.
His fortune took a bit of a hit in recent weeks because of the sell-off, you know, at Oracle.
He could be having second thoughts, but assuming – don't you wish you just got a quick answer on this thing?
Assuming that they are still there, I think it goes into the Ellison's buy it, and then the fund begins.
All right. Ellison's by Warner Brothers. We're locking it in. We're going to check back in 12 months, Bill. We're going to hold you to it. Or fewer. Or fewer. Maybe in a week.
Right. Bill, really appreciate your time. Bill Cohen is the founding partner of Puck News. I read your newsletter all the time. Highly, highly recommend to our listeners. Thanks, Bill.
Thank you, Ed.
Google stock hit a record high after Berkshire Hathaway revealed that it bought roughly five billion.
dollars worth of shares. This move could be the last major investment made under the leadership of
Warren Buffett, who, as we've discussed, will be stepping down at the end of the year. Meanwhile,
Berkshire trimmed its Apple steak. Again, the firm's Apple position is now 75% smaller than it was
at its peak. Google stock closed up 3%. So Berkshire Hathaway is buying Google. They are long Google.
This is a big win for the Google Bulls. And also a big win.
for us. Because if you're a regular listener, you know that Google was our number one stock pick at the
beginning of the year. We recommended Google when the stock was trading at less than 160. It's now
trading at nearly 290. It is up more than 80%. This is a huge win for us. And our view on Google was
quite simple. Just as a reminder, our view was, it was undervalued. People thought that open AI was
going to eat Google's lunch. It was kind of seen as this AI loser. Gemini was not being
taken very seriously, nor were the other growth assets like YouTube and Waymo and all of this
was translating to a historically low multiple that was really striking compared to Google's
historical multiples and also compared to the rest of the market. Well, it appears that Berkshire
Hathaway agrees with us, which means one of two things, either one, Warren Buffett independently
came to the same conclusions or two, and I prefer this reading, Warren Buffett listens to the show
we're going to go with number two for now. Aside from all of this, why else is this news important?
Well, more than anything, this is just a bullish signal in what has really been kind of a bearish
week, especially for big tech and for AI. Bubble fears are rising. The tech stocks are falling.
So for Berkshire Hathaway to come in and say, actually, no, we still believe in tech and we still
believe in AI, we still believe in Google, well, that can only be good news for investors.
And it is especially good news when you consider the type of firm that Berkshire Hathaway is.
Because remember, Berkshire is not a hype machine.
They're not an early stage VC.
This is not a firm that just invests in the next big thing.
This is Warren Buffett's firm.
They don't care about the hype.
They don't care about sexy technology.
They care about the simple things.
They care about cash flows, fundamentals, wonderful companies at reasonable prices.
That's how they talk about it.
That's what Berkshire is about.
So the fact that Google now meets those definitions for Warren Buffett, that is a promising signal.
That's not everything, but it's something.
There's been a lot of doom and gloom in the markets recently.
People are very worried about this AI bubble right now.
But at least, according to Buffett, the bubble hasn't gotten to everything, or at least
it hasn't gotten to everything quite yet.
It hasn't gotten to Google.
And that, at the very least, should be presented.
promising.
Okay, that's it for today.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller,
edited by Joel Patterson and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss.
Our research team is Dan Chalon,
Isabella Kinsel, Chris and O'Donoghue, and Mia Silverio,
and our technical director is Drew Burroughs.
Thank you for listening to Profugee Markets from Profit Media.
If you liked what you heard, give us a follow.
I'm Ed Elson.
I will see you tomorrow.
Thank you.
