The Wolf Of All Streets - Bitcoin Can’t Break $82K - Will CLARITY Change That Thursday?
Episode Date: May 12, 2026Bitcoin is testing its 200-day SMA near $82K as the Senate Banking Committee drops a 309-page CLARITY Act draft ahead of Thursday's pivotal May 14 markup vote — a moment that could redefine US crypt...o policy and unlock the next institutional wave. With $858M flooding into crypto funds last week, Saylor unveiling a $2.2B tax-loss harvesting playbook, and Wall Street giants like BlackRock, Apollo, and a16z pouring hundreds of millions into Circle's Arc and Canton Network, the setup is loaded. Add Morgan Stanley triggering a crypto fee war on E*Trade, Ray Dalio warning central banks won't touch Bitcoin, and the Iran-driven oil shock rattling markets — and you've got one of the most consequential weeks of the cycle. Is the breakout finally here? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bitcoin can't break 82,000. It continues to struggle here at resistance, but there's a potential
catalysts on the horizon, none potentially bigger than the Clarity Act, which is officially
getting marked up on Thursday. But the update today is that they released all 309 pages of
what's getting marked up, and there is quite a bit of incredible language in there, both for
and against the industry. We're going to dig into all of that and more right now with
Andrew and Tillman, we're going back to the basics.
Just the fearsome threesome here. Let's go.
What is up, everybody? Welcome to the show. Like, subscribe and play with yourself.
I literally don't care what you do. Whatever.
Hey, Telman. Hey, Andrew. How'd you like that intro? Welcome.
Not a better way to jump on the show.
Are we starting with the UFO files?
We were just pre-show. We were talking about your basement, how it's done, and there's no longer any gimp's down there.
so I had to do something awkward.
Well, I mean, that's not entirely untrue.
My father is handicapped, so I don't know if that falls into the gift deal,
and we moved them in about a month ago.
They're doing really well.
They're old and elderly, and thus the point of moving in.
But, yeah, Kim, Dad.
I wouldn't know.
I wouldn't know.
No, you don't think so.
My dad has a unique sense of humor, so he probably would think that's funny.
I'm happy for you.
Hey, did you guys want to hear the coolest news I think about the Clarity Act yesterday?
Just before we get started because I found this hilarious.
In case you're wondering how this all works, right?
You had 309 pages of actually a hell of a lot on what the crypto industry will be able to do,
what the banking industry will be able to do.
The last nine pages are a housing act.
Yeah.
Build Now Act.
Like just slipped it in.
nine pages. They didn't even like weave it in. I wish I could say I was shocked, Scott. I mean,
I wish I could say I was shocked. I think at the end of the day, the ulterior motives that are attached
to these bills, I heard somebody say the other day and I don't know really what side of the aisle they
stand on, but it resonated with me as being wise, which is like, let's go back to single bills.
I mean, you can't even make sense of all the stuff that they try to cram in these things. And there's
to your point, there's no reason to muddy the waters. When the water is plenty muddy as it is,
I mean, it's not like we need any additional talking points or points of contention to be attached
to any crypto acts. But yeah, it makes no sense to me. It's indicative, though, of the days in which
we live. I've lived through, I don't know how many cycles in the world of finance. And generally
speaking, you know, legislation makes an initial dent in whatever is the issue of the day
in the world of finance. But I've seen no industry that's better at finding its way around
things than the world of finance. So whatever the Clarity Act is or does or does not do or does
do three years from now, the idea of yield will be a real thing. They'll find a way around it.
you know, if you make two trades every quarter on Coinbase, okay, now you get your four and a half percent on USC.
Like, the amount of wasted time on this is truly extraordinary.
But I guess what's the reward activity for yield?
Move your USDA from this wallet to this wallet.
Yeah, I mean, seriously.
I'm not pastly holding.
I moved it.
Yeah, it really is nonsensical.
and it's why I
there are a couple times people mentioning
Clariont yesterday
and I just replied with that
you know picture of
Roger Sterling from Mad Men where he's taking a drink
and it just says who cares
underneath it like honestly
well I would just say that
I think that the banks care
I shifted my stance
I see why they're mad
yeah yeah I mean they have to
they have to have this thing go through
because left on a
intended, the consequences for them are much, much worse. And the landscape right now is wide open.
I mean, what the Clarity Act really does is put some rules in place that help them catch up to
their newfound competitors, which, you know, I think redefining banks is what this is all about.
It's like, who's a bank, who gets to act like a bank, who gets to do the things that banks do.
And here's the cats out of the bag.
I mean, they've already given cracking bank status as high bank status in the United States as bank status gets.
Direct Fed access, direct window access.
Well, you know, that's going to be tough to renounce.
That's going to be that.
That's the direction that we're headed is like more of that, not less of that.
And so the question then becomes, you know, how can.
quickly can both sides adapt to the Clarity Act. I think that's going to be kind of the major talk
here is legacy firms are getting into crypto through M&A that's just starting. And it's starting
behind the scenes. Companies that you've never even heard up before, but they're massive.
And even companies that are mainstay parts of our financial system like ICE, right, most people
don't know what ICE is, but ICE has done a deal with OKX, right? There's these major moves that are
being played on the board. And it's only a matter of time before the minor moves get played. And it's
for the masses and everybody sees the rails and the full integration has been unveiled. And,
you know, that's exciting. The question is, is how clear can the message be to the world? That's
my in my opinion because we do a great job of like we have muddying this message up so much that people
are almost like it's almost a bad word now clarity act like people grimmis when they when i hear it
why well because it's not it doesn't have to be that why what way especially around something
as exciting about as this like a future of finance finally it's here we've been talking about that for
a decade is like the rails are changing instant settlements here you know no counterparty risk
all these qualities that we now acclaimed to be the Bitcoin standard, we've been looking at from a
North Star perspective for a long time. And, you know, it's good and bad when a nation state
starts to adopt it systematically inside of, you know, its financial rails. And with Fannie Mae
accepting it as collateral, just get ready. It's only beginning. Like, this is going to be a fully
interconnected ecosystem of digital payments up to the Fed level, which is exciting.
You know, it brings its own problems and challenges too.
Yeah, two things for clarification. So I just did a deep dive here, which I've been doing
just to clarify. So banks, this is the actual language in Section 401 and says,
amends the Bank Holding Company Act, National Bank Act, and other banking laws to clarify that
financial holding companies, national banks, state banks, and certs,
certain credit unions can use digital assets and blockchain technology for any activity they're
already allowed to do.
Here's the take.
Banks have been legally forbidden from doing what Coinbase has been doing for a decade.
Clarity is the law that finally unlocks them.
And then to your point, Cracken actually is going for a bigger, they're going for a trust
charter now.
So they don't have everything they have, but Anchorage has it.
Morgan Stanley has filed for it.
Cracken just filed.
So basically, banks are racing for federal authority to custody digital assets that
like Anchorage already has.
And if you saw the story of the Anchorage CEO at Consensus last week, he said, without saying this, he said all 20, I think, stable coins launched in the United States since the Genius Act have been with us.
Because they're the only ones that have this charter.
And he said that there's like 30, he said 30 of them or something, and then 20 were in line or the reverse.
But either way, now Cracken has even filed for that.
So yeah, the banks are completely screwed here.
They've been sitting on the sidelines.
And before that, they had SAB-121, if you remember, where they couldn't not see these assets at all under the Gensler.
And so Coinbase just ended up as the custodian for every ETF.
So I think it's a very clear argument, at least in some of these sections that the banks are screwed.
I mean, they're also watching like their payment rails get, their lunch is getting eaten by crypto companies, BlackRock, PayPal, literally everyone.
They can't even participate in the stable coin payments.
So, yeah, I can see why they're, uh, booming at every piece of,
language here. Well, and you look at the other deals that are being announced while this is taking
place. Like, I think Ripple just did a big deal with OKX2 as it pertains to putting their stable
coin and using it as liquidity on OKX. Don't get me that Google it. You'll see the headlines.
But the point is, is like, these partnerships are happening at a fever pitch pace inside the
crypto space. And then you look across the.
at the banking space and it's still at a standstill.
Well, that's because of the Clarity Act and needing to pass.
And that's what ultimately shifted my opinion as to the likelihood of it passing because
they need it badly.
And the quicker we can get them armed with these types of competitive advantages, the quicker
we look attractive for foreign money to make deposits in America, which is ultimately
what we want, right?
We want to be the central hub of liquidity, of markets, which this.
This is the best opportunity to stay in that spot that it, you know, exists right now.
Yeah, I think that this is happening so incredibly fast.
I think Andrew's point is just so poignant.
It's like, good luck stopping it.
It's always been that way, right?
I think the Clarity Act is kind of important.
You know, the most notable thing maybe in the Clarity Act,
I don't know if anybody who was surprised by this, not me.
September, there was a full ethics clause in the Senate banking.
committee version. It got watered down in January. There's literally not a mention of the ethics
clause in the 309 pages yesterday. So we know that Republicans can vote on party lines and get this
out of committee. But when it goes back to reconciliation with Senate ag, you hit like Schiff
and Gillibrand, who are saying no, Bill without it. I think Elizabeth Warren's today said it would
like turbocharge the Trump grift. I don't want to misquote her or something. I think actually their
grift is more turbocharged without the clarity act so i don't really uh i don't buy that but this still has to go
back they have to create one unified bill with agriculture where they're going to run into the ethics
fight and then this has hit the senate floor and then seven democratic senators have to vote for it
assuming you don't lose any republicans and when you see things like this housing act in there you
wonder what other uh concessions are people looking for to to get this thing through and you have
the banks up the republicans ass like you know like just
So all you just told me were the other teams that the bankers are playing against,
but my money is still lies on the bankers.
They're going to win that battle.
I don't know how, but I know that they're, you know, they are.
Yeah.
To your point, Scott, the whole ethic stuff, we haven't even gotten to that yet.
Yeah.
Right.
But this is the quote unquote Republican markup version, right?
Like this is the this is the version that they're now going.
to again the language even on social media with this is so breathless oh the clarity act is heading
to mark up like that's a media thing that just means that they're going to go talk about it some more
in a public forum right that it doesn't have nothing to do with votes has nothing to do with
passage has nothing to do with again the meaningful obstacles that still exist and if you think
that you know the elizabeth warrens of the world the shifts of the world are going
to be cool with this stuff going through without ethics teeth.
Again, I just don't see it happening.
And again, you know, one way or another.
What if it's though a tit for tat?
I mean, that's the way it happens.
I talked to Patrick Witt last week who is, you know, basically like took Bo Hines,
David Sacks jobs kind of moved up.
And we had a very long recorded conversation,
which will probably come out Sunday,
but then we had a very long private conversation right afterwards.
And he was more confident on ethics.
He said right now it's not there,
but exactly for the reason you just said,
Tillman,
I think as these bills get closer,
that's when people start saying the quiet parts out loud to each other
and putting in the things they need.
And, you know, it just could happen, apparently.
We're defending things that already exist that keep, like,
there's no, there's no bill that's keeping Congress from insider,
trading on financial information that they are privy to, like that we know, we all know that
happens. It's been reported on. There's actual ETFs that I think are like, or there's financial
products that represent those decisions. And so if you, if you look at like the likelihood of
that going away, you know, there's just a lot of counterweights. You know, at the end of the day,
unfortunately, politics and profit go hand in hand these days. And there's,
lots of ways that people have levers and mechanisms and markets are one of them.
And so the crypto markets, the way that it's taxed, the way that it's deployed,
you know, the way that the liquidity flows, all of those things are things that, you know,
the cats have the bag.
Like we, the markets are going to move forward with or without us.
So the politicians can slow it down as much as they can to get ahead of it so that they
can, you know, understand it and build, you know, responsible rails around it.
But at the end of the day, you cannot stop this train.
It's already left the station a long, long time ago, internationally speaking.
Like, all we are going to do is just leave ourselves behind in that whole.
And I appreciate, I appreciate Patrick Witt's, you know, Stan.
And I appreciate his, you know, all that he has to say, but it's literally his job.
Yeah.
To be as positive as he possibly can about this and find a way to make this happen.
But again, I believe we want to see it.
So we'll see.
But again, to my point to start out this conversation, legislation or no legislation, this will keep moving forward.
I mean, look at the fastest growing banks like over the past five years.
None of them have meaningful branch operations.
They're all online.
They're the sofies of the world.
Or the chimes of the world.
They're the capital ones.
Capital Ones of the world that started out as a credit card company and turned themselves into a bank and blah, blah, blah.
So that trend is not going to slow down.
Crypto exchanges have to jump on that trend in a meaningful way or else, you know, three years from now when commissions are nearly or at zero for crypto trading,
which, by the way, has, you know, nearly disappeared in and of itself.
You know, they can't be a meaningful operation if they're not able to make money.
Well, how do they make money?
They've got to offer banking-type products to induce people to stay there.
Because if you're not trading crypto, which a lot of people are not,
then you're not an operation that's sustainable.
So we're headed that way.
And, yeah, to Tillman's point and to Lynn Alden's point,
Um, you know, nothing stops the direction that we're headed with all of this stuff. Um, and I, and I always fall back to, you know, what is, what is Black Rock talking about? Is Black Rock talking about the Clarity Act? Nope.
They're tokenizing two new ones. Yeah. They're editing in Circle's new blockchain arc in a token pre-sale. That's correct. That's correct. So they're just, their, Black Rock is action. They're like, hey, politicians, do.
whatever it is that you do, we're going to build products. We're moving industry forward.
And you know what? You guys figured out in three years when everybody, everything's tokenized
and we just ignored whatever it is you were talking about. Well, as much as we don't want to admit
it, BlackRock is not a domestic company. BlackRock represents the top of the heap as it
pertains to international wealth. And so they have a unique ability to be a leader in this.
And I think they're just evidence of what we're talking about, which is eventually the slippery
slope is faced towards crypto. It's going to continue that way. And so the longer you resist,
the more you stay out of it. But Black Rock's already down there. But to your point,
Black Rock is full pedal to the metal.
We know this cat is out of the bag.
And so we're going to make as much money on this being out of the bag as we possibly can.
We're going to be a leader in this space.
And, you know, that, again, is not going to stop, whether it's domestically legislated
against or whether it's internationally done.
It's going to continue.
And even our corporations that we, you know, acclaim as American, they're going to be able to
participate in this.
They just won't do it in America.
Like, that's the nature of international business at this point.
It's like they're all going to be on the bleeding edge of this technology, whether it's here or there.
Another marker has to do with the fact that, for example, Morgan Stanley is hiring blockchain slash crypto slash digital asset staff by the droves right now.
Like they're hiring tons and tons of people.
And they're also out there talking.
about it.
It's always talking about it.
They're leading.
I think on the consumer side and the product side, they all of a sudden in the last
month have just come out and said, they said, they're not worried about BlackRock.
I think they're worried about BlackRock fees on the ETF, which is why they launch their own.
But they want to beat Schwab and they want to be Coinbase and they want to be Robin Hood.
I mean, this broke weeks ago, but it's launching now.
But I mean, they're doing 50 bibs crypto trading.
That's cheaper than Coinbase Robin Hood, Schwab, literally.
So they come in with the cheapest ETF in a crowded space, and now they come into crypto trading
and actually clearly are not just trying to roll this out for their 8 million e-trade customers,
but they're using it as a way to woo customers from other places with cheaper fees.
I mean, this is a race to the bottom, right?
I mean, with fee.
For sure.
By the way, that's also in response because, again, there are smart people that work at Morgan Stanley.
I don't know if anybody noticed, but all the crypto exchanges, at least,
80 to 90% of them increased their prices on commissions over the past six months.
Well, especially when all the prediction market stuff came out,
that was their excuse to raise prices is now they've got new products to offer.
And it's commoditizing it.
The biggest financial firms, and this would be the competitive advantage that Sailor would have
and everyone else that has large either liquidity and or holdings,
is that they can subsidize all of that.
They can go to zero.
They can go negative if they want to acquire the customers.
And therein lies the question of like,
what does Bitcoin's rate look like in the credit markets?
And we're yet to find that out.
I mean, you're seeing it firsthand be discovered with Stride,
I think it is with Michael Saylor.
He's pressing it.
I think it started at 11% dividend paid out monthly.
And now it's like 12.5 paid out bimonthly.
So he's pressing, like, how much credit can this thing absorb and take on its shoulders from a modeling perspective?
And if you are Morgan Stanley, you can create a competitive admit.
You can jump right into that game.
And it'll be interesting to see where people decide to take their bets across what line.
You know, is it 15% risk?
Is it 20% risk?
You know, Michael Taylor has been famous for a long time saying that, you know, Bitcoin eventually settles at 18 plus S.
And P.
Well, we're going to find out.
It's the stretch track.
So I just watch this now.
So, like, obviously, like, nothing happens when it's below 100, you know, like,
how you come into the middle of the month.
So they're, they've filed to do this twice a month, but it hasn't happened yet,
Tillman, and which is interesting.
I had my conversation with Sailor.
And because they're proposing that, we had to, um, submit the transcript to the SEC.
Oh, really?
in our conversation last week,
which tells you exactly why he would be out there saying we'd be willing to sell Bitcoin
because the SEC is probably requiring him to say,
I've launched a security,
and the thing backing it is on the table in case I need to protect this security.
Right?
He even said it.
He was like,
I can't have all this Bitcoin on my balance sheet and say I would never sell it.
He basically, you know, without saying it,
because then it's a useless, like, asset that can't be put to work.
And, you know, the SEC, for all their faults,
One thing they are in charge of is consumer protection.
And when you're saying that this is like a money market fund for retirees at 11.5%,
they need to know that you're going to protect that at all costs.
But once it gets about of 100 above par, now we're at 100.01, the machine kicks in.
He's going to buy billions of dollars of Bitcoin in the next few days, which, by the way, is why I think it pushed 802.
Because smart money now knows you can get within a week ahead of whatever seller's going to smash by a couple billion,
you should just probably buy and trade around it.
Well, what this is proving is it's capable of absorbing more debt.
That is what this is.
It's collateral, right?
It's being used as collateral.
And I agree with you.
I think that they're based upon the wide breadth of products that they offer now,
having a mechanism that allows you to take profits off the table
when Bitcoin has asymmetric moves is mandatory from a risk perspective.
Like not from a, like it works.
works from a narrative perspective, sailors saying, I'm never going to sell, and that's what's got him to this point.
But he's outgrown that. He's become so large that sophisticated mechanisms of risk avoidance have to be deployed.
And he's getting a lesson in that, probably, like you said, from the SEC or at least being forced in that regard.
And that's a good thing, right? He does have a way in which, if he plays it correctly, he's pretty much bulletproof.
you know, for the, for a hundred years, you know, if he, if he does things in a prudent way.
So why wouldn't we want that stability in our markets?
I, you know, I do think he's kind of at a point where he, if he doesn't play by the rules,
government intervention is probably mandatory or necessary.
In like five seconds.
Huh?
Within like five seconds.
Yeah.
He's got to be the most heavily scrutinized person on Wall Street.
His products have to be the most heavily scrutinized securities that he.
exist. A couple points harkened back to the Morgan Stanley deal. It's not a surprise. Morgan
Stanley, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, if they're nothing else, they have a hundred years of experience
at acquiring customers. So whatever they do in any way, shape, or form, they now see Bitcoin
slash the crypto space as additional high net worth, ultra high net worth people that we need to market
to and bring into our ecosystem.
So that's effectively what they're doing across the board with any type of product offering or
conversation.
On top of that too, I think it's very, very notable that consensus and most crypto conferences
at this point have changed so much in the last three years. Why? Because
Because what are we seeing and what are we talking about now in the Bitcoin space?
We're talking about collateral.
We're talking about debt type of entities.
We're talking about all of this stuff that is traditional financial type of language.
And that's the place where it's gone to.
And the scale at which we're going to see this stuff traded has started to really move in ways
that we've talked about for two years.
We talked two years ago that at some point there'll be Bitcoin mortgages.
Well, Fannie Mae and collateral associated with Bitcoin.
J.P. Morgan talking about Bitcoin as collateral.
Sailor doing everything that he's doing.
Two years ago, he was just buying Spot Bitcoin.
Now it's all levels of financial engineering associated with debt, all sorts of stuff.
That is going to be copied across these other organizations.
Like without question it's going to be copied.
And so what ends up happening in the crypto space?
You have pomp saying things like crypto is dead.
And what he really means is there's not going to be, you know, at some point that the word
crypto is just going to go away.
They're just companies.
They're just organizations trying to be banks and generate revenue based on customers
that they've acquired that have meaningful capital.
And so at conferences now, per your point, Scott, you were a.
suit the whole time you were at consensus.
Maybe that's because, you know, you were, yeah, well, maybe that's because you're a bit.
My wife convinced me.
You know, I noticed, I also noticed that Adam Back was wearing a sport jacket while he was there.
So the industry has changed, right?
And the reason why the industry has changed is because Bitcoin has been meaningfully accepted
as collateral in a bunch of different places, which absolutely mushroom cloud.
the spread of it and the entirety of the capital that exists around it, right?
Like, we're only seeing about 10% of what, quote, unquote, collateral and, let's just call it,
transactions that exist with IVIT options, which, by the way, are some of the highest traded
options and biggest market in the world.
Forget about just Bitcoin or crypto, just in the world, right?
that's going to be replicated a bunch of times and it will grow and grow and grow.
So remember when everybody thought it was crazy like, you know, a year ago and when Larry Fink said,
you know, Bitcoin could end up, you know, in some way, shape, or form rivaling the mortgage market.
Now think about everything that I just said.
Why did the mortgage market get so big?
Because it was on bet, on bet, on bet, with debt and options and debt and options, right?
that's where Bitcoin is headed.
We're seeing it right now.
And so now it's...
Bundling and all...
Because once you introduce it as collateral, you have to rate it, right?
A plus F, you know, you have to give it some sort of rating scale as it pertains to credit worthiness.
Well, in Bitcoin, that collateral is...
There is no credit worthiness.
It's either in the smart contract and collateralized dual signature on the smart contract terms,
or it's not. And so if you talk about lending at scale, where's the, where's the failure point
of lending at scale? The repossession of collateral. That's where the failure point is. So every
model fails at that point if you're a lender. And so overcoming that and getting infinite lending
out on the back of digital collateral, it changes the entire rules of the game. And not just a
a little way. It completely changes the paradigm. And so as a lender going forward,
if what's easier, me repossessing your Bitcoin when you miss a payment and me having the
Bitcoin in a smart contract that you're getting the benefit of ownership, you're getting the benefit
of the yield. You're getting a benefit of all the stuff. But I'm getting the benefit of the instant
repossessable qualities of Bitcoin in lending you money. The second you don't make those payments,
Smart contracts starts bleeding off penalties, fees, interest, and everything else, according to the smart.
Like, where's the failure point on a lending model like that?
It doesn't exist.
So the value of Bitcoin or the value of the digital commodity that's offsetting the loan, as long as it can grow infinitely, the risk model can grow infinitely.
And that is, that's amazing.
That is like breaking math.
that's the in the in the in the world of finance nothing has ever given us that type of an ability and so
if you look at even like big banks that have failed what is it the failure on it's catastrophic risk
taken in the housing market and the housing market fails or the debt behind it is deemed to be
lower rated than they thought when they acquired it thus the value of it gets stripped out and they're
underwater and the, you know, it's basically the same thing that's happening across every level
right now. The collateral is hard to repossess and a lot of banks don't want to repossess it.
It's like the age old adage of like, if I owe the bank a million dollars, it's my problem.
If I owe the bank a billion dollars, it's their problem. Well, what about a billion dollars
of real estate? Whose problem is that? I mean, that is the stickiest, you know, who wants to
manage a billion dollars of real estate as a bank?
You off your hands if you need.
I mean, I want to kind of transition, but quickly, I just wanted to pin this because I know that it'll lead into the conversation about arch public.
But this broke, and I mean, when you look at how fast the agentic economy moving, it's absolutely insane.
Like, we've talked about each of the platforms that's launching it.
But, I mean, OKX, this is from them.
But agents can now do real business, not just make payments.
when you look at what it could do, I mean, the bottleneck shifted from intelligence of commerce,
not just paying, but the full cycle of doing business, quoting negotiating, escrowing funds,
metering usage, settling, and resolving disputes, escrow dispute resolution coming soon.
I mean, we went in like a week, and even with them, with their agent payments protocol and
their tools, like, I feel like in a month, we went from, hey, like, agents will be making
payments for us to, like, agents have access to the full suite of financial services and negotiation.
and we'll literally just do everything for you.
Yes.
We're going to find out shortly that agents are really good at some things
and really bad at other things, and we're right in the throes.
Yeah, it is.
What I will tell you, you know, listen,
we crossed the 25,000 user mark a couple weeks ago.
So we have a meaningful amount of,
let's just call it data via conversations,
interactions with our customers.
And, you know,
the agent stuff,
associated with exchanges.
It's interesting as a headline.
It moves the needle for that organization,
for whatever they're trying to get accomplished
with their investors, yada, yada, yada.
But users don't have any idea how to do this stuff.
They're thinking, if I push the wrong button,
I'm going to set on fire my capital here.
I don't want to make a mistake.
This confuses me.
And so 99% of people that have meaningful capital, which, by the way, those are folks that are 40 to like 65 years old and they've worked really, really hard for it.
They just simply want somebody to talk to about it.
So the thing is just to be clear, like, you know, these tools, I don't think it's like I don't need an escrow agent maybe on a daily day-to-day basis.
But this is for developers cross-chain to do a jetty payment and build tools.
Right.
To build apps specifically.
Like the app development craze, you have not seen anything yet.
Imagine like, you know, the whole world up until this point, it's taken years and millions
of dollars to develop apps.
And now it takes one guy, some AI agents and 50 grand, basically, to launch it to fully,
you know, get social media and gay.
All of the whole package, it's just, you know, it's down to like a two-week.
incubation period now. That's only going to get better. But again, it's like AI agents can't solve
first world principle problems. Like first principal problems are the markets are a zero-sum game.
It doesn't matter how smart your AI agent is. It's not going to only win in a market that is a zero-sum game.
You're going to be a loser. So the question then becomes who wins the most. And you're in the same boat,
I would argue even in a worse pote from a technological disadvantage perspective,
then you are from a human perspective in approaching those markets.
And so it's not going to solve all of the problems.
What it will do is solve the mundane management issues.
It's going to defrixtonize.
It's going to lubricate the rails, if you will, of the mundane payment of bills
and those types of, you know, kind of.
Yeah, it is, listen,
And this is the cutting edge of technology, right?
So agents slash AI slash agentic, all buzzwords, right?
And they're needed and they're useful and they're here.
And from a productivity standpoint, they've shifted the Overton window.
But again, I come back to when you're a guy that's got $242,000 in your Coinbase account,
you say, well, how can I use this to my advantage?
you just don't know, you don't know the answer to that.
You feel like, hey, I got to, you know, I kind of want to stay on the dance floor here,
but I don't know, I don't know what I'm doing.
I don't know where to put one foot, you know, in front of the other.
So, archpublic, right?
And what do I mean by that?
So, yes, we're on the cutting edge.
Yes, we have algorithmic, automated, agentic type tools, but we have people, right?
and those people are there to walk you through the process of you're on the cutting edge here.
You're going to take trades in your Coinbase account based on the setups here that we provide.
You can choose in our recipe lab and you're going to take trades at two in the morning, three in the morning, three 30 in the morning.
You're going to wake up to them.
But you're also going to be able to talk to us about it.
You're going to say, yeah, I like that one.
Maybe I need to change this strategy or move this here.
Can I make an adjustment this way?
And instead of just having that conversation with yourself
or having it with, let's say, chat GPT,
who has no context as to why you're asking the question
or what it has to do with,
you're actually having it with humans like this on a call.
Heck, we're having a Zoom meeting
with a bunch of our customers tomorrow from 1230 to 115,
where they engage with our team.
They can ask all these questions,
We're showing off another new innovative product that's going to be talked about tomorrow.
Yeah. And point being, though, is if you don't have a human or somebody to guide you through this process,
you absolutely are going to stumble all over yourself. And when you stumble, you skin up a knee or an elbow.
And most people don't want to do that financially.
Yeah. The execution piece of the A.m.
movement is the most difficult one because it can cost you the most from a
repercussions perspective and you know I it's reminiscent of an article I read
the other day about a company who was selling you know basically an
intermediary between two AI models and they were selling their SaaS model at
$30 a month and the average customer was drawing a thousand dollars of value of
tokens out of their subscription each month. So they were losing quite a bit of money very quickly
on those token purchases. It's just an example of like this, this, this, this movement is
exciting. It has an incredible potential. There's a lot of execution that you can deploy,
but doing it in a very prudent way that is an extension of your will. That is the most important
thing. And that's what we've been doing for over five years now is building software for people,
so that their will could be represented in that software.
And that extension of them is now available at 2.30 in the morning
and doesn't have a motion attached to it or mathematical computations that are needed to be done in the moment
or all the things that traditional trading is kind of fraught with.
This solves those problems and makes that execution piece incredibly stressless,
incredibly exciting.
It's like seeing behind the curtain and then having this new set of
tools that you can dig into. In the wide array, the tens of thousands of outcomes and the strategies
that you can create with these tools will get you to whatever your objective is. If you own a lot
of these assets and you want to divest of them in a manner that's prudent and risk adverse,
there's a way to do that. If you want to acquire a lot of these assets, if you want to trade
the volatility on these assets, like pick whatever you want out of the market. You want to
the markets and have a conversation with our folks and they'll show you how to use these tools
to accomplish that. Exhibit A, by the way, is the guy that actually hosts this show, right? I've watched
in a real time, right? So he is using our tools in at least 50 times. There's emails that go back
and forth to our team and say, well, wait a minute, I think I want to change this or a progressive
on Salana or there's too much here, change this. Can you guys change this? Can you guys change
this? What do I need to do? Literally the expert in the innovative space of crypto that's been here
for a decade is saying, hey, how can I make some shifts here that make the most sense? So that guy
has questions as these tools continue to evolve and develop. Everybody else has questions.
They're just looking for an organization that's open to saying, hey, we're thrilled that you have questions.
you want to spend the time with you.
We just created an entire service division that has nothing to do with sales,
has nothing to do with anything other than answering questions,
making sure you're comfortable with how you're set up.
And it doesn't matter what the question is.
They're there to make you feel better about, hey, you know what?
There are no dumb questions.
Well, it's indicative of, you know, when you grow and you acquire customers,
and those customers fly across the United States to make effort to come face to face with you
and to break bread with you and to tell you how great the software has changed their lives,
it really is powerful.
And the community that we have has really floored me over the last year.
I mean, being up in New York at the Bitcoin Investor Week and having 100 plus customers fly in for that
to essentially just fellowship with us and to talk about how excited they were and how well they had been served,
All of that stuff speaks to the fact that, you know, to y'all's point, the more technologically driven we as a society become, the more valuable human interaction and human guidance to do that technology is going to be.
And we pride ourselves in that.
And, you know, I put you to the challenge.
Our software is free to use.
Yeah.
And you will, if you call in and you schedule an appointment with one of our guys, they will spend as much time teaching you have the software, whether you're a paid user or a free user or a.
an enterprise user or a treasury company looking for help on the treasury management front like we serve
a very wide array of customers from people who have never bought a crypto before and want to invest a
couple hundred dollars a month systematically into it all the way to people who are are trying
to create yield on large treasury balances and create complex layering strategy so we pride ourselves
in in serving you where you are in that journey and and we'll
take good care of you as it pertains to getting you eased into this new phase of automated execution.
It's very excited.
Do I mean, do you want to talk about tax harvesting and all the things?
Because it's, I really could have used that when we were 60.
There's a, there we are.
It's not backed almost even down 7%.
Great.
Thanks.
Thanks, tools.
The crypto has been given a unique status.
We are not accountants.
We develop software that help you as tools.
But crypto specifically has something that you can do with it called the wash sale rule that doesn't apply to it.
And what it allows you to do is to take losses and then reacquire those assets at the new cost basis so that you have those losses within the taxable year to apply to other things.
obviously consult your CPA, but we have a very useful tool that will help as long as you have good
information and you use it with your CPA, it will help you accomplish that very easily.
And it's a pretty arduous, you know, most people don't take advantage of this because of how
big of a pain it is. And software makes that pain go away. So that's essentially the nuts and bolts of it.
Yeah, it is a tool that goes directly to a pain point in most people's lives.
Taxes are a pain point in most people's lives.
So if you have the ability to reduce that particular pain and you can do it with a tool that is decision-making on your behalf,
probably a good idea to take a look at it.
And I don't know, you know, I don't know if there's anything else out there like this that is hold-unquote agentic, that is automated.
that will do this on your behalf.
And by the way, it's a tool that isn't just a one-time tool.
Like, hey, it's November.
Let me use this tool once.
Blip, and then we're good.
No, it's something that can be used on an ongoing basis
associated with all sorts of different crypto assets
because of the rules associated with it.
And again, so like anything else,
you can set it up as part of your overall strategy.
and it's worth having the conversation with us, of course.
But a tax loss harvesting type of tool like this is super innovative.
It doesn't exist anywhere else.
And I think the best thing to do is talk to your CPA and ask him, you know, I'm a crypto guy.
Do you know about the, you know, tax harvesting or tax loss harvesting that can be applied to crypto and see what they say?
And then this can be a great, you know,
impetus to start that conversation.
I mean,
sailors doing it.
Like that was part of the selling conversation.
It's like,
I can take high tax to cost basis Bitcoin and sell it a little.
Well, listen,
if you Google tax loss harvesting,
every major financial firm on the planet has written white papers about it
and,
you know,
integrated into their high net worth,
the vision of strategy.
It's just,
again,
software's making it more personalized
and bringing the threshold down to where
these types of strategies can be applied down to the normal person versus, you know,
just the super high net worth that traditionally take advantage of this stuff.
And again, it's there's a uniqueness to the crypto part of it, right?
So you can you can sell an asset and buy it back in the next nine seconds.
Um, and that's legal.
That's allowed.
Whereas on the equity side of things, that's not the case.
Yeah.
Um, so it's there, it's a strategy.
It's a tool that allows you, uh, to either use it.
in a very targeted way or set up different,
you know, what's call it strategies
that are working in the background
where on a quarterly basis,
you're intentionally generated some types of sorts of losses.
Again, with the volatility associated with, you know,
all digital assets, all crypto,
the opportunity to do this is effectively always there.
Well, volatility to the upside can be harvested in yield
and volatility to the downside can be harvested in credits.
And so both sides,
cut effectively towards your benefit if you have tools in place, right? If you know how to
know how to harvest that volatility. You know, I can't stress enough. When we talk about this,
I get so fired up. People that are listening to us that haven't tried out our products,
please do. If you haven't, you're falling behind. I'm serious. You're falling behind.
Two years from now, everything in your world is going to trade.
24-7 and you will be forced in some way, shape, or form to begin learning these tools.
And people that are learning it now are going to be meaningfully ahead of you, meaningfully
ahead of you.
So please engage.
I'm serious.
Please engage.
If you never use anything but our free version at $100 every three months because you're just
trying to learn, just do that.
We want people to learn this and stay ahead of the current.
because the curve is coming very, very fast.
Just ask yourself these questions.
It starts with simple queries, right?
The simple query that started it for me was,
am I trying to trade based upon my availability?
And does the market care about my availability?
And when you get to the answers of those questions,
you realize that you should never trade based upon anything.
we're, you know, involving you being available in the moment to respond to volatility.
Because volatility creates emotion and you never know when it's coming.
So how do you prepare for that without just sitting in front of your keyboard 24-7?
Well, to Andrew's point, most of the volatility or a lot of it's going to start in the overnight
sessions when these markets go 24-7. Why?
Well, because it's when everyone's asleep and it's the thinnest traded period.
And volatility occurs when volume dries.
And so having tools in place that monitor that market's volatility and act on your behalf when it fits the bill for you,
that is something you will need to address here in the short order.
And I don't know of an easier on-ramp to address it than a free product with a lot of human guidance and, you know, attention along the way.
We're trying to tackle it in the easiest way possible.
Template up to 25,000 customers.
Yeah, exactly.
A number for customer service.
Yeah, well, and I think the exchanges that we've been able to integrate with
and the excitement that we've seen in their eyes as it pertains to these tools sparking customers' excitement about markets again,
I think we're on the bleeding edge of that.
And I think that as prediction markets and as Kashi and all these different things have proven to us that people have a desire to have their money work for them in markets,
this new digital age of instant settlement built on the back of cryptology or blockchain.
It is like we said at the beginning of the show, the cat's out of the bag.
It's happening at breakneck speed.
And it's only a matter of time before you're using it and you don't even know you're using it.
And it's already happening.
Like if you had told me a year and a half ago that people were going to be using defy
natively integrated into central exchanges and there was going to be this holy marriage of
centralized exchanges with decentralized exchanges, I would have told you in no way,
but it's happened and it's here and it's only going to happen at a quicker rate.
Yeah, agree.
And yeah, I mean, any of the other of the algorithms that you want to specifically sort of highlight
before we go. I know they developed some new ones. Yeah, we have a wave strategy that is a new way to
monitor the, the Margaret's. Andrew, I know, I'm going to let you chime in. The wave strategy
has gotten a lot of great reviews from the people who have been kind of implemented it so far.
So if you want to look at that and have a conversation about that, we'll be happy to demo it for you.
Yeah, we, last week we did a concierge sort of Zoom call with a few hundred people,
and we specifically went over the release of the Market Wave setup and algorithm,
which again, you can set up a thousand different versions of it based on the inputs and all that stuff.
And the stock version that we talked about, you know,
we had our highest-end clients just basically reaching out and saying,
hey, can you have so-and-so reach out to me and just do that?
I just want to do what you guys just showed.
Can you just do that?
Because the differences, especially in bare markets or sideways markets,
that's where our strategies really shine because the deltas between what's happening
to people that are just buy and hold versus what our strategies do is truly significant.
like really, really significant.
Very, very big variances and differences.
There are case studies on our website that show that,
show the actual inputs for the algorithms that are being used for the case studies
and what the outcomes are.
And so, yeah, it's meaningful of Vandalay Industries.
Yes, that is correct.
Jojo and you want to be my latex salesman.
okay i mean you know um yeah andley it hit Seinfeld in the last few minutes it's not
but i bet you guys have i bet scott you like that suey pop that we've seen here in the last uh
ohly a little uh yeah i i'm enjoying that um for sure he's one of those things that you know a lot
of people were introduced to i think there's some major influencers here over the last few years and
it just shot way up and it came way back down but you know i think it was up 51 percent in the
last week or something but pretty major by the way the the adjustment in quote unquote influencers
over the past three to five years in the crypto space you know i don't know if we've noticed that
but those influencers now wear suits and work at corporations and those people that are at consensus, right?
So, you know, the Kobe's of the world, the Anems of the world, they've basically gone.
Kobe's sold a product to Coinbase that never got used for like $400 and something million.
Right.
But who's listening to those people?
I wouldn't influence anything after that.
That's true.
I just go away.
I go influence a yacht.
To that point, though,
the suits bought Kobe's influence effectively.
Listen, nothing.
Ask anybody, any billionaire that has a big yacht like that,
nothing will make you feel poorer than owning a yacht.
If you don't have substantial future cash flow
to count on the maintenance.
Rent it.
You better have some good interest rate coming in.
I'll just say that.
Those things are the most famous Wall Street adage.
I do not ascribe to this.
It flies, floats, or the other F word.
Yeah.
Yeah, but read it.
Yeah.
Lease it.
All right.
Vandalea Industries.
I was just watching STRC up to 740 Bitcoin today.
It's like 10 a.m.
Archpublic.com.
Check it out, go do all the things because I've decided to start harvesting some losses while I got them.
Yeah.
We'll get you set up on that.
Maybe gains very soon, if this market keeps going, I'm going to have a gains problem.
Yeah.
Yeah, we're pretty excited also.
I will mention this.
And we're going to talk about trying to highlight this more on air.
But we have been serving a lot of enterprise clients with our software.
and specifically corporations, small businesses that just want to systematically add Bitcoin to their balance sheet
and do it in a way that's risk adverse and, you know, that sets them up for success in the future.
And we've seen such a growth in that area and such, you know, such success stories that we want to kind of highlight these small businesses
because I think it's meaningful for the Bitcoin community to see small businesses adopt this.
because it sets a good precedent, sets a good example. I think, honestly, if I was going to be
truthful, it's the only way we rebuild our middle class. Or it's the quickest way we rebuild it is
by having small businesses and entrepreneurs invest systematically in Bitcoin. And so we're going
to start bringing more attention to those people because we think they're pioneers. We think
they are forward thinking. We think they're great examples to set for the rest of us.
And we get to see behind the curtain as to what their convictions look like because those
convictions are then being prescribed in our software. And so it's, it's incredibly exciting. We love it.
And so we're going to talk about bringing some business highlight time to our podcasting efforts
so that we can highlight some of these businesses and kind of show you what it's doing.
Love it. 753 Bitcoin for sale or so far.
I would love someone just put some music to this so I could just vibe out to it.
Like, while you take a look at the spikes, right? I mean, this is.
mid-month in March, all of a sudden a massive spike.
You know, this trades around when it goes from below 100 to above 100.
Obviously, there's massive volatility.
People try to get in for the dividend by the end of the month.
Look at April.
I can't even imagine.
I mean, April's right here.
That was 13th to 17th.
Now I checked May 12th.
I did the same part of the month.
This thing's better.
Well, it's exactly, you could play this game,
exactly the way you could go onto Gemini right now and play their prediction markets.
Where is Bitcoin's price going to be in the next five?
minutes. It's the same game. It's just a different, different field. And everybody's moving to that.
The volatility is a feature. Yeah, it's gamification of finance. It's not slowing down.
There's no question. It's not slowing down. Like, Scott, you're intrigued by that, you know,
that, that quote unquote, game version of what Sailor's doing, right? And that that website,
that screen that you're looking at is effectively the game of,
of what he's playing out with Stretch and Bitcoin.
And you know what?
Probably a lot of people watching it.
Because it's interesting.
It's more interesting than just listening to another podcast with Sailor talk about it.
Well, it feels like alpha.
It feels like you're getting inside scoop or like it's an indicator or predictor of future events.
It really does feel that way for me.
Yeah, I watch it.
You're like, well, I guess I should have bought Bitcoin right before he's.
telegraphed. I don't know that that'll actually affect price, but it's wild that you could just
got to see it in real time. Yeah, very cool. How many Bitcoin? I wish I had bought 757 Bitcoin since
we started this conversation. What am I doing here with you guys? What are you doing with your
life, buddy? All right. Well, we've made it to 10-01. Tillman, Andrew. Thank you. Everybody,
check out Arch Public. Follow try Arch Public on X.
And yeah, I'm going to be launching some new portfolios soon too.
I've just been lazy.
But now with all the new products, it's time to showcase all these other strategies.
So it really gives us something to do with a second portfolio that's not at all redundant.
So it could be awesome.
All right, guys.
Thank you.
Everybody give Andrews, I'm going to follow.
Check out Archpublic.
And I'll be back tomorrow.
Bye.
