The Wolf Of All Streets - $118K Bitcoin & $3K Ethereum: Massive Crypto Rally!
Episode Date: July 11, 2025Bitcoin just smashed a new all-time high at $118K, with Ethereum breaking above $3K — but a mysterious $8.6B BTC whale move has the market on edge. Elon Musk is launching a pro-Bitcoin political par...ty as lawmakers brace for a major crypto showdown in Washington. Nathaniel Whittemore joins Friday Five to break down the market madness, policy battles, and what’s next for crypto. Nathaniel Whittemore: https://x.com/nlw ►► JOIN THE WOLF PACK - FREE Telegram group where I share daily updates on everything I'm watching and chat directly with all of you. 👉https://t.me/WolfOfAllStreet_bot ►► JOIN THE FREE WOLF DEN NEWSLETTER, DELIVERED EVERY WEEKDAY! 👉https://thewolfden.substack.com/ ►► Arch Public Unleash algorithmic trading. Discover how algorithms used by hedge-funds are now accessible to traders looking for unparalleled insights and opportunities! 👉https://archpublic.com/ ►►TRADING ALPHA READY TO TRADE LIKE THE PROS? THE BEST TRADERS IN CRYPTO ARE RELYING ON THESE INDICATORS TO MAKE TRADES. Use code '10OFF' for a 10% discount. 👉https://tradingalpha.io/?via=scottmelker Follow Scott Melker: Twitter: https://x.com/scottmelker Web: https://www.thewolfofallstreets.io/ Spotify: https://spoti.fi/30N5FDe Apple podcast: https://apple.co/3FASB2c #Bitcoin #Crypto #Investments The views and opinions expressed here are solely my own and should in no way be interpreted as financial advice. This video was created for entertainment. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision. I am not a financial advisor. Nothing contained in this video constitutes or shall be construed as an offering of financial instruments or as investment advice or recommendations of an investment strategy or whether or not to "Buy," "Sell," or "Hold" an investment.
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Discussion (0)
Bitcoin made a new all-time high yesterday and continued up over $118,000 for one single
Bitcoin with Ethereum, temporarily breaking $3,000.
Of course, that means everybody's saying, what the hell is going on?
What is the catalyst?
What could possibly be the narrative that's pushing price up?
Good news is we have NLW here to talk about all of the news and narratives from the past
week on the Friday Five. Let's go.
Woke up, checked coin market cap, saw the price, said good price.
I was on a stream yesterday with Gary Cardone.
It was like 113 and we were celebrating and I was like, I'm going to wake up.
It's going to be like 118.
No big deal.
It was there.
So basically I'm a prophet.
Yeah, I got nailed it.
Nailed it.
Who could have seen a three or 4% Bitcoin move coming?
The thing is, like, it's a big deal that we're obviously making a new all-time high after ranging for
a couple months, but relatively, it's not even a huge move for Bitcoin.
Up 6% is really a nice day, but it's nothing crazy.
I don't know why people are so shocked, but this is the big first story of the day.
Obviously, we can take a look at coin market cap, everything pretty much up here. And then once again, Bitcoin hits new all time high at 116,
we can change that to almost 119,
nearly a billion shorts get liquidated of course,
and Ethereum reclaims 3000 as BlackRock spot Ethereum ETF,
not just 300 million in record daily inflows.
So let's talk price action first.
Yeah, I mean, so let's talk about what we can comfortably
say that it's not about.
And it's pretty clear that this is not
some exogenous crypto-specific catalyst, right?
No big new statement, no big new announcement.
In fact, to the extent that there
has been any sort of policy stuff this week,
it's been contentious.
So it's clearly not just a crypto-specific phenomenon.
I think that it feels like it's connected
to a broader sort of risk on move in markets in general.
You had Nvidia touch 4,000 earlier this week,
sort of some amount of relative strength
in traditional markets, even though there are
kind of like, you know, warning signs on the horizon or concerns around, you know, tariff
round 18 or whatever, coming up in August, but people seem comfortable kind of fading that for
now. Generally speaking, there has been a not dramatic but very clear, slow, steady shift in the sort of broader investor
mindset, I think driven by IPOs, you see SPACs coming back, it's
just this whole, all these things altogether are clearly
pointing in a particular direction. And, you know, again,
we could probably spend, you know, multiple shows getting
into, you know, exactly the psychology there. But it feels
like this is Bitcoin and the rest of crypto coming along
with, you know, and participating in a broader market, market move that's just pointed now in
a more positive direction. That's interesting, because I would have just simply said, clearly,
there's more buyers than sellers right now. Right? I think we had the whale wallets that we know have
been selling very transparently online,
probably just get tired of selling. They sold what they wanted to sell. We see the treasury
company demand. We see the ETF demand as I showed there. It just seems like there's a lot of people
that are slowly entering this market, not coming in with any crazy amounts. And slowly more people
that couldn't get in are becoming unlocked, you know, whether their platform
eventually opens up or their RIA becomes more crypto friendly.
We just have a lot of buyers. I don't think that's an indefinite
thing. I agree. It's happening in the right environment. It just
feels like there's a hell of a lot more demand and there is
supply, at least on Bitcoin and now seemingly on ETH since we
have popular Ethereum treasury companies coming out
and a clear turnaround here in inflows on those ETFs.
Yeah, I mean, look, I think that the,
maybe taking a step back,
there is an argument to be made
that Bitcoin has felt low, relatively speaking,
relative to all of those forces that you just articulated.
And so to some extent, this could be simply explained by,
catching up with itself, basically. But I will say that,
I am hearing reports of people's barbers and taxi drivers asking them about Bitcoin
treasury companies again, and stuff like that. and again, I think that, you know,
a couple of successful IPOs, the rest of the market racing into IPOs,
it's not full on animal spirits.
There's still caution. I think there's still a
a real hesitance around, you know, policy headwinds.
But we've now had so many sort of moments of volatility that, you know, 20 to 30 days later have been
nothing burgers that I think that it's allowing people to mostly just orient towards where they want to be, which is
bullish and optimistic. And, you know, that combined with all of those forces that you just described, which is sort of structurally pushing demand for Bitcoin
and other crypto assets, you know, is leading to this,
you know, not so slow and steady grind up right now,
but compared to, you know, previous cycles,
certainly more of a grind up than what we've seen.
Yeah, I didn't necessarily intend to talk
about treasury companies,
but it has been really interesting.
And I have also in the matter of a month,
because this wasn't even
on my radar so massively until two months ago, of course, right when Cantor and
Heather and they all launched 21 then we had Nakamoto obviously who's almost like a fund to
funds for treasury companies and now they're just everywhere but now we've got Ethereum treasury
companies and people are starting to talk about it because of stocks like this. This is BMNR, I've showed it quite a few times.
This is Tom Lee saying Ethereum is the new Bitcoin.
This went up 3,800%.
Like Ethereum will never go up 3,800% probably.
And a company stating that they're going to buy Ethereum
went up 3,800%, but it's now down 73% from the top.
I mean, this is alt season insanity, FOMOMO happening on the stock market in these treasury companies.
And of course, this kind of volatility and upside even if temporary is going to capture
the zeitgeist even of the mainstream.
Tom Lee is a huge this isn't some random crypto KOL farm animal avatar talking to his audience
about a small cap alt coin and seeing it go
up, you know, 30 X. This is one of the most notable names on Wall Street. I mean, put
it this way, our new influencers are pumping the stock market and they're Donald Trump
and Tom Lee.
Yeah, I mean, listen, I think that one of the things that's interesting is it is a very powerful combination to have a meme
coin style investors feel like they can play their games but with an asset like Bitcoin
underneath and that's sort of what Bitcoin treasury companies are doing for at least
some portion of the audience right right? Like, they're very
clever financial instruments that like have a lot of this, they have a very strong thesis behind them, whether you agree with it or not, it's not hard to understand why some people would get excited
about it. Basically, all you have to believe for, you know, treasury, the Bitcoin treasury company
phenomenon to be interesting, at least theoretically, is that Bitcoin is going, you know, that Bitcoin is
not even close to where it's going to end up right now, right? Like, that's the arbitrage event is that Bitcoin is going, you know, that Bitcoin is not even close to where it's going to end up right now. Right? Like that's the arbitrage event is that you still
know and that is too few people still know where Bitcoin is headed. That's really the
entire basis of these Bitcoin treasury companies. Now, tons of details that could, you know,
whack you off the face of the planet in terms of how these deals are actually structured
and what type of debt you're getting, you know, like all these sort of, you know, a
lot of conditionals and contingencies here. However, it doesn't take a lot getting, you know, like all these sort of, you know, a lot of conditionals and contingencies here. However, it
doesn't take a lot of, you know, it's an interesting thesis, right? It has been. So you've got that phenomenon. And, and
it reinforces the sort of centrality of Bitcoin. Everyone's on board now, at this point, with the idea of Bitcoin as a as
an incredible sort of asset that underlies this. You know, again, holding aside the sort of the leftovers
of previous movements, this is now a mainstream point of view.
It has always felt like a theory of natural opportunity in
this equation was Bitcoin is the store of value, you know,
King King s of F Mountain kind of asset in this space.
And a theory of represents everything else, right. So if you are just not really paying attention, you're not really
caring, and you want exposure to store value, you know, sound
money, crypto, you get Bitcoin. And then if you want exposure to
everything else, defy and NFTs and everything, you just buy
Ethereum, right? That's actually like, yeah, that is a decent, a decent approach. Now, Solana really came in and kind
of screwed with that narrative for for Ethereum, but Solana isn't really available in full
bore yet on Wall Street. And so I think Ethereum does have a moment right now where it could,
you know, try to really sort of grab that.
We represent everything else in crypto space.
And I don't know how much this is that
versus it's just run over demand from Bitcoin,
but it feels natural, I guess is the point.
It's like, it feels coherent to me.
It doesn't feel like mania,
even if there's questions
around some of the underlying structures.
Absolutely.
And pivoting back slightly to macro, Fed minutes show policymakers split on how tariffs might
impact inflation.
Basically the Fed and inflation here are our second topic.
It seems that there's a lot of confusion even among the Fed governors as to their belief
in how tariffs will impact inflation, of course,
and even what the tariffs will be, right?
So you have to guess at what the tariffs will be,
when they'll happen, if they'll continue to get delayed,
but then there's also these fundamental sort of cracks
in the facade here with them disagreeing
if they're inflationary or not,
which then leads to the conversation
of when the Fed is likely to cut again if they are.
Yep, but here was the bullish take, I think,
which was maybe the predominant view coming off
of these minutes.
When we just had the Fed decision before,
it looked like a pretty split decision, right?
There was a lot of some number of Fed governors
had suggested they had increased their anticipated number
of cuts.
And some, there were still a fair number
that thought it was gonna be zero this year.
Well, what we got with the minutes,
and this is an example of,
sometimes minutes don't matter at all,
sometimes minutes are actually quite useful.
In this case, they were quite useful,
because what it made it clear
is that pretty much everyone in there agrees
that holding aside tariffs,
it is probably appropriate to cut from where we are now, right? That if there were no tariffs, if that was not part of the conversation, we'd be cutting. Now how much we'd be cutting is maybe the sort of not so good news that that market observers aren't paying as much attention to. There's also a fairly strong sense that we, you know, it's only a couple of cuts to get us to the neutral rate. However, the what was
clear is that there is there is pretty strong consensus that cuts are the next move and that
holding aside tariffs, that's that's the right place to be. It's just that there's this fog of
war around the tariffs. And that's really the big disagreement is just how much to care about pay
attention to focus on that, versus kind of, you kind of deal with every other factor. So I think what the market interpreted with that is like,
got it, okay, so the contingency here is tariffs,
beyond that, we're in cut mode, right?
It's interesting because the Fed generally makes
their decision by looking back at data.
I don't really recall another time in the past
where I was paying attention that they were concerned
about a theoretical in the future
for policy decisions.
Totally, yeah.
I mean, it's a weird moment for them.
I think that sometimes, especially with the Powell Fed,
his tendency, of course, is to go slower
than anyone really wants and to sort of be more data driven
and hold your horses, right, as a general position. But I think that in this case,
it's a lot more understandable that, you know, when he throws
up his arms, you know, drops the shrug emoji in the chat and
says, goddamn, we have no idea what's gonna happen with
tariffs. Like, it's more credible, in this case, than it
is in some of the other times that he's sort of had a similar
posture.
Absolutely. And in a sort of crypto related conversation,
we have Elon Musk saying his new political party
will support Bitcoin, Fiat is hopeless,
but obviously we have the America party,
which is the bigger story, him saying effectively
because of the big, beautiful bill and the money printing
and the inflation and the fiscal and economic problems is going
to cause that he wants to launch a no nonsense third party that actually cares about things
like the national debt.
And of course we have Trump pushing back rages against train wrecked Elon Musk predicts ridiculous
America party will falter.
It's a good day when we can reference the New York Post.
And here's the long post that that's from on truth social. So I guess we're unpacking the America party
itself. Trump's reaction, and Musk saying that the American
the America party will effectively support crypto and
Bitcoin.
Look, so the when Trump says that third parties don't have a
great track record in America, obviously, he's just factually correct. The
question though, is whether that is predetermined and whether there are changes that would make that
not the case. And boy, if there's ever been a time where it feels like there is an open space,
it's now, right? You have both parties who are, whether they acknowledge it or not, in some form of civil war.
The Democrats are in, you know, they have to decide whether they're going to go with sort of the full liberal wing,
you know, or the full sort of, you know, populist AOC, Mamdani kind of part of the party, the Democratic socialist side of the party,
or reconstitute something that's not that. The reason that it's not more of an outright battle is that there's not really anything
competing.
Like there's no vision for that party, you know, outside of that group right now.
But tell you what, as the next sort of cycle comes around, there is going to be a competition
for what the core narrative of the Democratic Party should be.
Meanwhile, the Republicans and the GOP look super solid, but that's because Trump's still
at the helm of it.
And Trump has whipped everyone around him. In the vacuum that
comes after Trump, there are going to be massive, massive
competitions for what the identity of the GOP and
Republican should be. And I'm not drawing any value judgments.
I'm not making any predictions about what's going to win. That
is just factually the reality. You know, like, there was there
was a I mean, you know, Obama at this point, I think, as charismatic as he was,
as central to the Democratic Party as he was,
there was a vacuum after him,
and he's nothing compared to Trump
when it comes to the hole that he will leave in his party.
So the interesting thing about that is that
if there were ever a time when a third party a third party could if not carve out a big spot
for itself, but at least influence those two conversations, that's the right sort of cauldron
for that to happen. Secondly, you already have independence, I think, as the most registered
party right now. So there is clearly some sort of middle space that Americans are looking towards
that's not represented in mainstream political discourse third
Whatever you think of the man like the the over time the aphorism or sort of you know conventional wisdom to not fade
Elon, you know just get stronger and stronger and stronger
You know, we're having this conversation in a week when he dropped grok for which the latest comer to the to the LLM party
That's outperforming everything else on the benchmarks. That doesn't mean it's the best model necessarily, but it certainly is a reflection of the fact that it's very dangerous to just assume buffoonery entirely.
Right. So, you know, all of those things add up to when it comes back to our part of the conversation that we care about with Bitcoin and crypto. To the extent that they care about, you know, values that are aligned with Bitcoin and crypto,
it's going to be an interesting, it could be an interesting political force in the coming years.
Yeah, it's hard to unpack how successful they'll be in the future. But the one thing we do know,
regardless of the roller coaster that the crypto industry has been on, obviously, with Elon Musk,
which I would argue is just the crypto industry's emotions and not fact.
But the roller coaster we've been on is that he was early to Bitcoin.
He understood the meme side.
Tesla literally bought Bitcoin and has largely held it.
And he's raging against the machine on the issues that are generally most
important to Bitcoiners.
If you believe that the Fed and the United States government are irresponsible and that
we have a uniparty when it comes to money printing and the belief that we can grow and
inflation is the effectively part of the economy, then you support this party because that's
the singular thing that drove him to create it.
I mean, Yomas is literally saying like inflation, money printing, debt, these are the problems we need solved
by a political party.
Oh, and by the way, Bitcoin and crypto will be a part of it.
I don't know how that doesn't get everybody's
kind of motor going.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's,
maybe for some people it's not full-throated enough, right?
It came as a response to a comment
or to a question on Twitter.
But I think there's an argument that like the, of course, like this, you know,
we literally plucked some of these principles from, you know, Bitcoin
Twitter is pretty, pretty strong in its own right.
There's no question.
Like, yeah, people may not like the way the message was delivered, but he's
shown it through his actions for years. So I don't think
anybody should really question it. The next story here, mysterious Bitcoin whale moves 8 billion in
largest daily transfer of old Bitcoin in history. What a crazy story. I believe that this Bitcoin
hasn't moved in 14 years and it was just 10,000 Bitcoin clips sending these
things around. What's going on here?
I don't know, man. This is this is so crazy. I mean, I think if
you're like, one of the more fun, you know, crypto archaeology
stories we've had for some time, so much that was weird about
this, the fact that they stored that they had it in these 10,000
you know, wallet clips all the way back then is insane and so out of sync
with how people were doing things back then.
It's so weird.
They also, this was a shoot straight from the hip,
no test transactions, just like fire it off,
like the brass, whatever.
I mean, that's like $1.18 billion a clip. Uh
huh. No, I mean, you got you know, 40 5060 7080 1000. billion
bucks is still worth the five minutes to send a text test
transaction. Yeah, right. You think an old wallet from an old
wallet that hasn't been touched. I mean, we're 14 years ago,
2011. Well, I don't know the wallet technology because I was
not there. But like his faith that those are it's a data file
that sits on your desktop. I mean, the fact that this like
that this wallet, they'd still had access to it that long ago.
That's so crazy. You know, like, let's let's put it this way for
anyone who's like, ah, it's not that long ago. Do you have a
computer in your house from 2018, much less 2011 that you
could actually fire up and have it work. You know, like, just the actual
hardware itself, you know, it's wild.
Wow. Yeah, incredible. Also, it's I think there's the
underlying part, which is it was done really cheap and fast.
Billions of dollars, you know, good luck sending billions of
dollars from one bank to another and getting that through without
any third party middleman flagging your transaction
He wrote a note to himself or they wrote a note to themselves about this Bitcoin on their iPhone 4
Anyways, look, I think that there are two really interesting things about this
about this one is
It certainly
about this. One is it certainly reinforces the fact that we don't really know who this is or or who did this. Certainly reinforces the view that pseudonymous that Bitcoin not being fully
private still can abstract at a very strong level who's moving these transactions, right?
You know, this is the most interesting, like I said, Bitcoin
archaeology story we've had for a while with everyone kind of trying to hone in
on things. I know best guess, I guess, crypto Twitter has decided maybe it's
Roger Ver, but there's a million reasons why that doesn't make sense too.
Like, we just don't know, right? And so I think that to the extent that, you know,
there's a lot of project logic around privacy coins and things like that,
there's gonna be some number of people who look at this
and are like, all right, well, do we really, you know,
need to go that far or is this efficient?
So that's one thing that I think was interesting about this
from a discourse perspective.
The other is this kind of calls into question
some of our estimates about how much Bitcoin
is lost forever, because there
were many calculations of the, you know, the two to three kind of, you know, million lost BTC,
that included these wallets. And, you know, now, how many more of those wallets are dormant and
waiting to wake up? Now, I do think that these were some of the largest unidentified kind of wallets out there.
You know, so, you know, who knows, maybe it's not a meaningful shift in that, but it is,
it does bring up an interesting question about what our assumptions are with the lost Bitcoin.
Yeah, we need to move on to the next stories.
But Yago yesterday on this channel said, I asked him the question, I was like, listen, you were there in 2011,
how many of these non Forbes lists,
Bitcoin billionaires are just laying dormant around
that you know of you kind of thought said,
probably 2747s worth,
so about 600, 700, 800 people
that aren't on any Forbes list or list of billionaires
of which there's only supposed to be 3500 in the world,
you know that nobody knows and are just holding these wallets and they're still around and could move this money at any time.
It's pretty just wild when you see it. Yep.
All right. The next story obviously is crypto week next week capital agenda. It's crypto crunch time for the house.
Let's just as quickly I guess unpack the agenda for crypto week,
which is coming where they basically said this is the time to get things done on Capitol
Hill for this industry. I think look, let's leave this in the realm of the preview because
obviously we'll be talking about it next week. I think that the big takeaway or the thing
that's interesting to me is that post tax bill, you know, post BBB, Republicans have
decided to put this as a core, core kind kind of agenda like to move quickly on. And
that's very encouraging. Now, we don't know, the thing that I'll be looking for is what the latest round of objections is, you
know, what what the battle lines are, are they going to be old battle lines are going to be new battle lines? Is there going
to look like, you know, does the market structure sort of bill, you know, look like it has actual momentum or is it, you know, not whatever we got to we kind of
have to wait and see next week.
But it is it is very meaningfully on the agenda and not just a lip service kind of way.
And I think that's that is in and of itself a positive sign.
Absolutely.
I agree that we should leave this one till next week because it'll probably be our main
topic.
Yeah, it might be all fine.
Right? God willing. Yeah, yeah, that would be good. Well,
let's hope about discussing how they're really good or really bad bag. But I think I have confidence that it's going to
be at least a net positive. Treasury Department drops case
over Ethereum mixer tornado cash months after dropping sanctions
against Ethereum coin mixer tornado cash months after dropping sanctions against Ethereum coin mixer tornado cash
The US Treasury has agreed to end a related legal battle. How big is this?
It's it's nothing that new. It's just sort of the final final confirmation of the this
administration backing off what was one of the most concerning, you know, aspects of,
what was one of the most concerning aspects of policy
last time around, which was the sanctioning of Tornado Cache, which had all sorts of implications
for self custody and for basically the sort of
right to transact.
I think that the asterisk on this story
is that the prosecution of Tornado Cache's lead developer
slash founder proceeds a pace in New York.
And so we're not out of the woods
yet when it comes to are developers
liable for the code that they write.
And that's the big concern.
But it's still a very positive signal
that, at least from a broad kind
of structural standpoint, we're headed in the right direction.
Yeah, totally agree. So listen, I had the Robin Hood story
queued up, but we talked about it a lot and actually talked
about it last Friday. So I think we'll dig into that one and see
where it develops next week. I think we basically covered it
all at this moment. Everybody go enjoy a weekend where Bitcoin is trading at $118,000 and Ethereum is pushing to week. I think we basically covered it all at this moment. Everybody go enjoy a weekend where Bitcoin's trading
at $118,000 and Ethereum's pushing to 3,000.
I mean, there's nothing bearish here at all.
I think it's nothing but tailwinds at the moment.
Yep.
All right, everybody.
Thank you, NLW.
Give a follow to NLW on Axe, of course, his YouTube,
and most importantly, the breakdown
where he covers all of these
things on a daily basis in much more depth even than we do here.
Man, have a great weekend.
Everybody have a great weekend.
We'll see you back for Macro Monday.
Bye. Let's go.