The Breakdown - Bitcoin Leads to Hyperinflation? Meet the Strangest FUD Yet
Episode Date: July 13, 2021In this episode, NLW focuses on: Inflation measures, impacts and who’s to blame News out of Paraguay concerning pro-bitcoin legislation A recent “Wall Street Journal” survey of economists r...evealed they expect higher inflation rates to persist for years to come. “Money Week” ran an op-ed playing on the increased attention on inflation where they pin bitcoin as an unused hoard of productive wealth and a reason for inflation. Is bitcoin really to blame for expectations of continuing inflation? El Salvador’s influence continues to permeate other nations hoping to make similar advances in crypto. On Wednesday, July 14, a Paraguayan “Bitcoin Bill” is expected to be introduced. Though the exact contents of the bill are not yet known, Paraguay would be the next country setting a positive stance towards crypto. Lastly, NLW covers more in bitcoin and crypto news. What does Grayscale’s move to make its Large Cap Fund a Securities and Exchange Commission reporting company mean? Also, can China’s post-COVID economic recovery be an indicator for what will happen in the rest of the world? -- Enjoying this content? SUBSCRIBE to the Podcast Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1438693620?at=1000lSDb Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/538vuul1PuorUDwgkC8JWF?si=ddSvD-HST2e_E7wgxcjtfQ Google: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9ubHdjcnlwdG8ubGlic3luLmNvbS9yc3M= Follow on Twitter: NLW: https://twitter.com/nlw Breakdown: https://twitter.com/BreakdownNLW The Breakdown is sponsored by NYDIG and produced and distributed by CoinDesk.com
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If that point is that a lot of money goes to chasing stupid things for the sake of making more money,
not making society better and more productive in the future, well, yeah, that's sort of part
of the deal when it comes to free market capitalism. I think it's a fundamental type of
financial ludicism to take this point of view too far, and certainly to apply it to Bitcoin.
In fact, I think one could pretty compellingly argue that Bitcoin's main function for many
of its users is to preserve the capital available to be deployed for future productive purposes.
If a person is holding to preserve their wealth in the face of inflation, that means they're going to
able to deploy that capital to other things instead of seeing its value evaporate to the benefit of
no one.
Welcome back to The Breakdown with me, NLW.
It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin, and the big picture power shifts remaking our world.
The breakdown is sponsored by Nidig and produced and distributed by CoinDesk.
What's going on, guys?
It is Monday, July 12th, and we're going to kick off this week with one of our sort of extended
brief editions, where instead of going to go.
massively in depth on one topic, I'm going to hop and skip across a few. One note, if my voice
sounds a little janky, I have whatever sickness every kid on the planet Earth has right now,
post-COVID as it comes back. But either way, let's dive in with our title story. The Wall Street
Journal does a regular poll of economists, and you can more or less guess the gist of the sentiment
from the headline. Quote, higher inflation is here to stay for years, economists' forecast. This set of
Wall Street Journal surveyed economists now expect inflation excluding food and energy to be up
3.2% in Q4 of this year, and they expect the annual rise to hover around 2.3% in 2022 and
2023. If that plays out, it would mean an average annual inflation rate of 2.58% from
2021 to 2023, which would be the highest since 1993. Joe Neroff, the chief economist at Neroff
economics, said, quote, we are transitioning to a higher period of inflation and interest rates than we've had over the last 20 years.
years. As an aside, I've always found inflation measures that exclude fuel and food, two things that
are absolutely essential to everyone, to almost willfully make the point about how not particularly
useful inflation measures can be. Now, that said, the Fed's preferred measure is called PCE, and it
includes food and energy, and PCE rose 3.9% in May. Still, in a report on Friday from the Fed,
they continued to argue that inflation is based on one, bottlenecks getting the economy back
online, two, difficulty hiring, and three, generally other, quote, largely transitory factors.
What has increased is the Fed's uncertainty over how quickly they might have to change interest
rates to get inflation back in line. And this, ultimately, is why the inflation discussion has
such an impact on Wall Street. It's not about people having to pay a little bit more. That's just
a concern for the little people themselves. No, it's about interest rates and how cheap money and credit are.
A lot of the concern from economists these days is about how higher inflation could become a self-fulfill
prophecy. As the Wall Street Journal puts it, quote, supply chain bottlenecks, higher shipping costs,
and labor shortages might prove temporary as the market adjust to disruptions. However, the combination of
plentiful federal stimulus funding, an unprecedented stockpile of household savings, and the
rollout of vaccines is driving a surge in consumer demand, enabling many businesses to raise prices
significantly for the first time in decades. If households and businesses start to expect
rising prices, that dynamic can become self-fulfilling. But what about evidence? Is there
evidence that consumers are thinking like this? Well, yes, some. Consumer inflation expectations,
which is the rate of inflation the median consumer expects five to 10 years from now,
rose to 2.8%, which is the highest level in seven years. I've seen a lot of commentary on
Twitter, particularly from the traditionalist sector of FinTwit, that says things like,
oh, come on, does it really matter if prices go up a couple of percent for a year? I think they
fail to understand how many different parts of people's lives could be impacted. First, inflation
tends to rise faster than wages, meaning a real squeeze on household budgets, and when you're living
paycheck to paycheck, that matters. Second, when interest rates rise that increase the price of borrowing,
you might say, boo-hoo, stock prices are already too inflated, but that also hits housing in the availability
and cost of mortgages. Then, of course, there's the challenge of planning and businesses, like, for example,
construction. A commentator in the Wall Street Journal said, quote, it's disruptive, you can't be sure what
your costs are, whether you can get supplies or what the cost will be six months from now. I'd hate to be in the
construction business trying to bid on a job when you don't know what the cost of steel will be
18 months from now. I often find when people reject some position they find extreme,
aka 3% inflation means hyperinflation is around the corner. They completely dismiss the real
lived impact of what's actually happening as well. Put differently, you don't have to be a
bitcoiner to have meaningful concerns about a sustained period of even moderately high inflation.
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Speaking of Bitcoiners in inflation, we got perhaps the weirdest fud we've ever had.
Ad. Money Week last week ran an op-ed titled how a bubble in Bitcoin could lead to hyperinflation.
And if you're already shaking your head or dropping your favorite confused meme, you are correct.
This piece is a staggering work of theoretical what-ifism that totally detaches from the reality
of the world. Here's a choice excerpt. Quote, as with equities, cryptocurrencies have no terminal
date, so a bubble can be rational in the same way. However, once the macroeconomic context is
considered, it becomes clear that the bubble must pop. Why? Either.
the market price of Bitcoin, for example, can become infinite or it cannot. If it cannot, then at some
point the only possible change in the market price of Bitcoin is negative. At that point, all holders
would want to sell, unless central banks, as with bonds, were expected to support the Bitcoin
price indefinitely. If instead, the price can and does move towards infinity, then the use of an
infinitesimal amount of a single person's Bitcoin wealth would exhaust all the world's productive
potential. That is, each holder could command all the world's resources by being the first to sell and
spend. The rise in the general price level towards infinity as Bitcoin holders competed for
resources would impoverish everyone else. Now, hold aside for a second the absurd extremes of that
argument. The real point I think that he's trying to make is that investing in Bitcoin isn't
investing in more productive capacity for the future. The author's central beef is with investing
in things that create, in his terms, illusory wealth. In other words, wealth that doesn't increase
future productive capacity versus real wealth, i.e. wealth that does increase future productive
capacity. The singling out of Bitcoin here is crazy. What about exotic swap instruments and derivatives?
How do those increase future productive capacity? All that said, there are lots of versions of this
argument that lurk around and not just Bitcoin. Think of the Founders Fund Manifesto. We wanted flying
cars. We got 140 characters. You can also see it when people lament venture capitalists
funding a million copycat startups of food delivery companies. So if that point is that a lot of money
goes to chasing stupid things for the sake of making more money, not making society better and more
productive in the future, well, yeah, that's sort of part of the deal when it comes to free market
capitalism. It's fine to call out, but it's inevitable. And with that, I think it's a fundamental
type of financial Ludditism to take this point of view too far, and certainly to apply it to Bitcoin.
In fact, I think one could pretty compellingly argue that Bitcoin's main function for many of its users,
and yes, Hoddling is using, is to preserve the capital available to be deployed for future
productive purposes. If a person is holding to preserve their wealth in the face of inflation,
that means they're going to be able to deploy that capital to other things instead of seeing its value evaporate to the benefit of no one.
If they're using it for things like remittances and faster, cheaper global settlement,
it means that more capital is available to end people and companies rather than now redundant rent-seeking intermediaries.
How productive is economic rent?
Anyway, I'm not super worried about this argument right now,
but I do think it's worth not totally dismissing the possibility that some people at some point will point to Bitcoiners effectively as hoarders,
taking productive wealth away from others. That said, things like the experiment in El Salvador could
make that argument a lot harder to argue. And on that topic, Paraguayan lawmaker Carlos Riala says
that he's working with Senator Fernando Silva Fasetti to introduce pro-Bitcoin legislation on July 14th.
He tweeted, quote, I am here to unite Paraguay and that's why we decided with Senator Fernando
Silva Fasetti to present together the Bitcoin bill on Wednesday, July 14th.
Stay tuned, there will be a mega surprise for Paraguay in the world, something giant is coming.
Now, from what Rehalla has told Reuters, it sounds like it won't be a bill to make Bitcoin
legal tender like in El Salvador. Instead, it seems like Paraguay is wading into the competition
for global tax revenue and economic benefit from attracting digital asset businesses.
Rehalla said, quote, we want the regulators and banks to also participate so that Paraguans
or foreigners can operate with these assets legally, because we know that illegal transactions
exist here and in other countries. We want to be a crypto-friendly country. One interesting note
about Paraguay is that Rehalla may be the loudest, but he's certainly not the first or only person
on the scene. The Paraguayan FinTech Chamber has a blockchain business development group that
has spent the last three years helping the Paraguayan government around related issues.
To the extent that something happens there, it will likely be in part from that work
that has been in development for years. All right, a few more stories from the Bitcoin and Crypto
World. Grayscale's large cap fund has become an SEC reporting company. 93% of the fund
holds BTC and Eath and the other 7%, well, a whole bunch of other stuff.
So why is Grayscale doing this? First, it's a play for legitimacy in the eyes of both regulators
and investors. It's a voluntary increase in the amount of requirements and disclosures. It also
has some practical changes in liquidity as the holding period of private placement shares
gets reduced from 12 to 6 months. But yeah, I think the big thing is legitimacy in playing
nice with governments. It seems to me that all the biggies are going to increasingly play
the game of being good faith actors. And even if you personally don't care, one argument
for supporting moves like this is that a group of good actors makes it harder for politicians
to paint everyone with a bad brush. This seems especially relevant as the crypto is for criminals
narrative returns with a vengeance. Also, when it comes to regulators in crypto, it seems clear that
the Fed is paying a little bit more attention. I discussed last week the potential meeting between
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and Fed Chair J Powell. And on top of that, that same report that
was released on Friday that I referenced earlier with regard to inflation actually discussed crypto.
It's just a small mention saying that a surge in crypto prices reflects increased risk
appetite, but the interesting thing is that for the first time, the Fed is using crypto as a barometer
for broader market conditions. Finally, let's close out with one more story from the macro world.
Because the pandemic started earlier in China than in the West, watching post-COVID recovery in
that country has been, for economists, sort of like having a window into at least one potential future.
Increasingly, that is cause for concern.
One of the most read articles on Bloomberg today is China's slowing V-shaped economic recovery sends global warning.
Growth in Q2 was at 8%, which is down from 18.3% in Q1.
In response, the People's Bank of China cut the amount of cash banks must hold in reserve, hoping to stimulate more lending.
It's not that this slowdown in growth wasn't anticipated, it's just that it happened faster than many people thought.
The two consequences of this issue are potentially one.
it might model future slowdowns in other recovering economies, and two, the practical reality of
China itself slowing down given global trade. The head of global markets research at Nomura Holdings
told Bloomberg, quote, there is no doubt that the impact of a slowing China on the global economy
will be bigger than it was five years ago. China's first in, first out status from COVID-19 could
also influence market expectations, that if China's economy is cooling now, others will soon follow.
However, there is a flip side of this, and that's that China's slings.
could ease inflationary pressures. A slowdown could mean less pressure on factories, and that could
mean commodity prices continue to come down from their historic highs. In short, the summary of today
is that no one in economics ever knows anything about anything, and that's why it's such rich,
fertile ground for debate. But whatever you think, I appreciate you listening and hanging out.
I hope you're headed into a great week. So until tomorrow, guys, be safe and take care of each other.
Peace.
