The Wolf Of All Streets - Bitcoin & Crypto Dominate Washington As Gold’s Capital Rotation Begins!
Episode Date: October 25, 2025It’s another massive day in markets and crypto politics. Donald Trump has shocked the world by pardoning Binance founder CZ Zhao, a move that’s sending waves through Washington and the digital ass...et industry. Meanwhile, JPMorgan predicts the Federal Reserve will end quantitative tightening this month, potentially unleashing a flood of liquidity into risk assets — a move that could ignite the next leg of the Bitcoin bull run. At the same time, Bitcoin whales have moved over $3 billion amid surging BlackRock ETF trading volumes, signaling accelerating institutional accumulation.
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Bitcoin and crypto are dominating in Washington right now with meetings with Senate Democrats
and Republicans in the crypto industry and, of course, the epic pardon of CZ.
And right now, many are debating whether gold capital is rotating into Bitcoin.
We're going to talk about that and all of the key stories driving markets this week here on
the Friday 5. Let's go.
Good morning.
We'll pack and breakdown enthusiasts, huge fans of NLW worldwide.
Thank you for joining us today for the Friday 5.
We're a little late, and it's my fault this time.
We didn't send you a link.
Listen, I didn't even ask for the link until 9.05, so, you know.
blame. No, that 905 is early for Friday 5. Our wheelhouse is like 906 to 908, so 910 is
tragically late, unfortunately. But yeah, man, let's talk about what's going on. First of all,
I got to give a very quick honorable mention to CPI, which just came in slightly soft. I don't
think we need to dig into it deeply, but worth noting since it just happened. This was an improvement
in inflation. I love that, you know, inflation going up, but not as bad maybe as some strange
consensus for no reason. Apparently, that's good for markets.
And then the White House immediately said probably no inflation data next month.
Listen, I will take, I will take better than expected slightly going up at this point.
You know, we'll take it.
What does not lift a look at gift horse in the mouse when we have so many things that we have to deal with already?
Yeah.
And one of those obviously is the echo chamber narrative, perhaps not a widespread narrative of the gold to a Bitcoin capital rotation.
as you can see here gold to bitcoin capital rotation as bitwise predicts bitcoin could hit
242k if you're wondering where that came from this is based on effectively if three to four
percent of the gold money flows right into bitcoin you can see 1 percent 2 percent 3 percent
4 percent 5 percent gets us to 242 thousand three hundred and ninety one of course that is a very
specific number using I don't know how you get to a number that specific because you don't
know what the price of gold will be. You can have this rotation with gold still going up, right? So it could
be much higher or gold could be crashing epically and all of those numbers could be lower. Either way,
if we actually see this rotation or any evidence of it could be really, really good. Yeah, I mean,
listen, this may win the prize for shortest live narrative of the cycle. I think it was Monday evening,
a bunch of people got really excited about this. And then Tuesday for like 37 minutes, it looked like
it was happening and then all the charts it was like what's going one way what's happening and then
and then reverse hours and dumped right back to the same price yeah yeah i mean look i i think that like
to the to the extent that you're there's sort of you're moving beyond the very specific that specific
moment which i thought was actually kind of funny this week uh you know people are they have been tracking
that bitcoin has followed a few months behind you know pretty closely and so they're wondering if that's
setting us up for a cycle, you know, for another sort of big leg up, you know, it's just trying
to understand the relationship to Bitcoin and this or to gold in this new context. I think that's
the real thing here is, you know, Bitcoin and gold were both sort of, you know, non-mainstream
assets or at least sort of not out of the main financial discourse. You know, gold has always
had a place, but it's sort of, you know, it's for cranks until it's not, you know. And so I think
everyone's just trying to figure out what Bitcoin's new relationship with gold is.
as they try to figure out where gold goes next.
What I love is I've seen some of the same people celebrating the gold to Bitcoin
rotation, but in the same breath, excitedly talking about how Bitcoin follows gold by
90 days or 120 days.
And if you believe gold is crashing, that means we have 90 to 120 days until Bitcoin
tops and crashes.
So I'm not sure that that's something to celebrate either.
We're threading a real needle here between all the gold Bitcoin narratives.
Yeah.
Well, there is no one.
And I will be proud of this till I die.
Who's better at finding the positive side of two negative narratives like this community?
We just, we have that on lock.
I would also say that in many cases, we can find the negative side of infinite positive narratives.
Well, mostly, no, that's mostly about people.
We just find the negatives about people.
The narratives can be fine.
That's true.
So listen, let's talk about something that also requires a bit, I think, of cognitive dissonance or bipolarity.
We've got the Fed Explorers payment account.
We can pull crypto into the heart of U.S. finance.
Of course, those who watched with us,
we had Waller here saying that crypto is woven into the fabric of the payment and financial system.
The TLDR is that we had a full thing from the Fed here,
basically talking about payments and crypto's involvement in that system,
which, I mean, just very hard to have on your bingo card at any point in the past.
And then taking it a step further and saying the,
activities that the Fed has participated in with Operation Choke Point 2.0, not giving the custodia banks of
the World Fed Master accounts, jumping way past that and saying, hey, stable coins, you can now
likely connect directly into the Fed settlement system. Yeah, I mean, I think that that's, you know,
the sort of layer one good news of this is just the continued sort of shift in rhetoric,
especially with, you know, one of the folks who's potentially being tapped is Jerome Powell's
replacement. That's nothing but good, nothing but bullish there, a kind of continuation of
some of the rhetorical themes that we've seen.
The big thing is this idea that they're actually looking into a way for not just
crypto, but a much wider set of fintechs and financial institutions to have access to
some moderated version of Fed Rails, not necessarily giving them access to all of the
same facilities that are able to be accessed by big banks and existing kind of large
lenders.
But I think that it makes sense for the Fed just to be in kind of a constant revision and review
mode about whether there are new types and categories of actors in the financial system that
need access to those rails as well, right?
Like it doesn't matter how much the bank lobby screeches.
There are new categories of players that are encroaching on their turf.
And if the goal of the Fed is to keep a safe, sound, functioning financial system, you know,
and market stability, they can't just ignore them because banks don't like it.
So, you know, robustly positive, obviously a ton to be figured out in terms of how it would actually work where the lines would be drawn.
But, you know, look, just look at Caitlin Long's tweets to get a sense of whether it's a bullish signal or not.
She was definitely for it and rightfully so.
I mean, she's been suing the Fed literally for years.
She has a fully backed, effectively narrow bank in Wyoming that is not fracturally reserved, effectively carries no risk and got denied for a Fed master account just because crypto.
Cracken has struggled with this as well, but the idea of plugging, you know, even
USC and such into the financial system directly is leaps and bounds beyond what most people
expected. I think going back to my original comment, though, the bipolarity or the cognitive
dissonance side is this is literally the Fed. Like if there's anything that Bitcoiners and
crypto people have rallied behind collectively is that the Fed is a corrupt private organization
and enriching bankers around the world and we're against monetary policy and money printing
and all these things. And now we're, of course, like the others, the APEC.
Yeah, I mean, you got to infiltrate, though, you know, it's sort of a build it from within.
Plus, you know, we, we, from the outside world's perspective, it's one monolithic industry.
Obviously, we know inside it that it is a wide array of different people and different stakeholders
with different perspectives on this.
I mean,
Bitcoiners alone are having a civil war right now
about cores and knots and forks and spoons.
I don't know because I can't.
But yeah, I mean, to your point,
there is the most disjointed, quote-unquote,
community you can possibly find.
But we do rally against things like Elizabeth Warren
and, you know.
It's by design.
I mean, you know, it is an extreme version of free market,
you know,
democracy in some way where the the it's supposed to be messy you know the the less mess there is the
more centralized it is so you know that is it's one of the reasons that although it feels
caustic sometimes these things are actually features not bugs and it doesn't mean that
everyone has to participate in every discussion obviously but it is you know it's designed to be
a place where loud voices are are sort of the idea so you know I always have to remind
myself of that, particularly when it gets real frenetic. Absolutely. And, you know, as we have in
the title here, Bitcoin and Crypto-dominating Washington, this is one of the big stories along
those lines. As the shutdown drags on, don't really know how that part is relevant, but Democrats talk
with crypto CEOs. Brian Armstrong obviously made comments and he believes that they have enough people
on board to get market structure done by the end of the year. But it sounds like it wasn't as
peaceful and kumbaya of a meeting as many viewed from the outside. According to this,
sources claim U.S. Crypto Policy meeting had heated exchange. Senator Gallego, Democrat from Arizona,
per two sources familiar told the crypto CEOs, I'm really fucking pissed about what happened last week.
Don't be an arm of the Republican Party. They used you all and your megaphones to fuck us.
That is a sitting United States senator saying that apparently with maybe cameras and mics on.
So what is going on here?
I mean, this is one of those situations that's enormously difficult to know from the outside.
So it is certainly the case that this was not a kumbaya.
It was a heightened emotion meeting for sure.
You know, Kristen Smith, basically reputable sources who were there like Kristen Smith,
formerly the blockchain association now of Salana Policy Institute, you know, made it clear that there was, you know, tempers running high.
However, a lot of the other folks have also kind of come out after the first wave of coverage
and basically said that the tension part was way overblown because it was a hot story
and that there was actually still much more productive room.
And so you can, you know, even if those comments, those comments that those comments that you
just read were the specific kind of like the hot button comments.
And on the one hand, you know, I got a little feisty about this on my show and I basically said
you know, you guys stop trying to sneak in backdoor bands of entire segments of the industry
and we'll stop leaking your dumb, you know, your dumb proposals, you know what I mean?
Like, come on, man.
But at the same time, here's the other read, though, if you want to be generous and give them
the benefit of the doubt, which at this point, I would not forgive anyone for not giving
the Democrats the benefit of the doubt when it comes to crypto policy.
But if you want to be generous, you've got a set of Democrat senators who are desperately
in the minority in their party.
who are trying to find a way to threat,
talk about threading a needle, you know,
and God damn, we haven't even talked about
as the president pardon CZ,
these senators are trying to find a way
to have enough cloud cover
to themselves support something
and then also get just enough folks on board
that this can move through.
And so I think that there's the other way to read his frustration
is basically like,
look dudes, we are trying in a very difficult situation,
And I know that the party isn't great for you.
But like if you just basically he's, you know, the other way to read this is he's saying
if you turn it into a just Republican thing.
If you lean as the industry all the way into the partisanship of this, it just means
that the Democrats, no Democrats are going to be able to get behind it, you know.
So I think that there's a different way to look at that frustration.
Again, if you're inclined to give benefits of the doubt here.
But at the end of the day, stop sneaking backdoor bands into your bills and then we'll
stop being mad about it, man.
Yeah, I mean, this had such tailwinds.
It seemed like a slam dunk before that letter from these effectively same 11 senators
kind of undermine the entire thing, right?
So I guess it's encouraging to see them back at the table and that their tailwinds once
again and optimism that this will get done, but it's hard not to be skeptical.
That said, to your point, I mean, this is just an impossibly difficult situation for them to be in.
I can't imagine the pressure they're taking from the Elizabeth Warren side.
and such within their own party.
There ain't that many Democratic senators, right?
I mean, you're like, yeah.
Chuck Schumer was at the meeting, which is if you want, like, you know, sort of like
signals that don't have to do with what was said, that's a good one.
Yeah, I think that's a good one for sure.
Actually, I very rarely listen to the All In podcast, but I saw they had an interview
with Joe Manchin and listened to it while driving my kid to school.
And if you want an idea of just how fundamentally broken and difficult it is to get policy like
this past, it's an incredible.
conversation definitely worth listening to because you'll remember he was kind of the one standout
holdout that blocked a lot of things. And he talks a lot about the Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth
Warren side and how difficult it is to deal with them. Definitely a good listen. There's a quick
plug there. I think it came out today or or yesterday. But I do give these few credit for
trying to fight upstream. I really do. Yeah. I mean, look, it's it would be a, like I said,
it would be a reasonable position at this point to say, I'll believe it when I see it and just
sort of say, you know, I'm done with that entire side of the aisle. But the people who are
trying to do stuff in Washington don't have that luxury. So this is what we got. This is what we got
to deal with. And, you know, we are we are staring down the barrel of another election cycle that
could change things dramatically. And once again, as hard as it is to cheer politics when it comes
to crypto, it's really important that we get the Clarity Act passed in some form because it will not
last forever, this Goldilocks moment we have for the industry in the United States on executive
orders and grand statements. We have to see it quantified into law so it can't be immediately reversed
and it will be. We need things that get policy locked in that make it hard to change and that allow
for other institutions that don't give a fig about us one way or another to come participate in
the market such that it becomes even more hard to reverse. Like that's the game. And I still think
as many companies and crypto natives have returned to the United States, there's still
a skepticism that it will remain this way. So I don't think that we've gotten all the
companies back that left. Hell no. Or that we have near any level of certainty that you are
safe to build. No, absolutely not. I can't imagine at this stage going all in on the U.S., you know,
it's just, it would be nuts. Yeah. So the next story we have here, Bitcoin Wales execute
3 billion ETF trades with BlackRock for portfolio benefits.
Large investors leverage custom UTF creations gain liquidity, tax advantages,
and regulated exposure through BlackRock's innovative crypto offerings.
Can you unpack this for me?
This one wasn't particularly on my radar.
Yeah.
I mean, the short of this is that one of the big sort of downward price pressures throughout
this cycle has been whales selling into the market.
We've known this for some time.
And one of the reasons for that is that with this, basically that Black Rock is enabling
those whales to effectively deposit their Bitcoin and get ETF shares back.
So they don't have to deal with the tax implications of selling and then converting it into it.
So it's a way to get more sort of traditional financial market liquidity and all the
benefits that come with it being inside the traditional system without, again, without sort of
having that big tax hit. This is something that we've known as been going on. It's been well
followed. In fact, it's been one of the biggest sort of downward price pressures throughout
this cycle. And this is just sort of confirmation about how much of that has happened.
Black Rock came out and basically said that it's, you know, about $3 billion worth at least
have done that. Yeah. So it's very clear. We've even had some of the bigger Bitcoin
And we all say, hey, I'm converting a lot of my holdings into ETFs because it just makes a hell of a lot more sense for estate planning.
It's easier to hedge.
Yeah.
Tax advantages of putting it into their retirement portfolios, whatever it is, there are now, if you're not fighting a libertarian fight and believe that you're going to need to hold Bitcoin as a hedge against government collapse.
There are a lot of reasons that even some ardent supporters would rather hold or partially hold ETFs than spot Bitcoin.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's mostly an interesting sort of little footnote sort of story and the mechanics of things.
I think that this is a, you know, crypto is a combination of extremely clear price catalysts and lots and lots of subtle, less clear price catalysts that we spend a ton of time pouring over and trying to understand.
And throughout this cycle, in that second category, I believe, has been a lot of the sort of whale selling, whale movement shifting around, you know,
like you get to 100 and you got to cash some out. And so this is sort of more of a,
I think it's not like a big game changing announcement or anything like that. It's more
just sort of understanding what's going on behind the scenes and how that might be impacting
things that you're seeing sort of more in front of our faces. Absolutely. And outside of Fed
Waller basically saying that they're going to weave crypto into the financial system, I would say
this is the biggest story of the week. Trump pardons convicted Biden's founder, Chang, Peng, Zao.
We all know that it happened.
Of course, the industry largely celebrating it, Trump himself saying that CZ was effectively
targeted by lawfare from the previous administration should have never been in jail in the
first place and that he's writing a wrong.
Critics will say that all the bad things about Cizzi, right?
That he was a money launderer and criminal allowing Hamas and North Korea to use finance,
that he was fixing markets.
And then, of course, many saying that he basically bribed his way to this pardon by a $2 billion,
circular circuitous investment through other entities into world liberty financials usd one a lot going on
here i'm definitely in the glad cz is pardoned camp also the dude already did his time and was free
anyways so this seems like more of a symbolic gesture than a lifting him out of jail and sending him
home situation but a lot to unpack here yeah i have i have a hard time getting real uh
about this. I mean, look, CZ, he went to jail. He did his time. I don't care.
I, as someone who is rather close to this, a lot of what happened for the last three years was big
bullshit billionaire big dick games. CZ wouldn't have sold FTT into the market if Ryan and
Sam from FTX hadn't made fun of him. It's all just big fucking ego. And so I don't really,
whatever throw away the key in my estimation i don't think he's good for crypto i don't think he helps
crypto binance is doing just fine without him couldn't give a shit about what happens as easy for the
rest of his life so i don't care that he's parted i don't think that it's i don't have any sort
of particular need to see him punish forever but you know whatever the dude admitted to you know
financial wrongdoing like what i find interesting yeah what i find interesting about this
is you're supposed to effectively be banned from finance and the
and he got out of jail, it seemed like in everything but title, he jumped right back in.
I don't know how that happened. And maybe that's what the pardon allows.
That's what it. That's what it allows for. And again, I don't, I don't even particularly care.
Like, CZZ is very good at running Binance. I don't mind that. I think it's a big useful.
I think it's been a net positive institution when it comes to crypto adoption around the world.
I think my issue with this is that it's so, so easily painted with the brush of corruption. If you cared at all,
as this administration about the perception of whether you were corrupt or not.
There's not a universe in which you would do this right now.
There's no need to do this right now.
Nothing changes about CZ except maybe things that he wants to do right this moment.
You could do this later.
You could do this away.
Whether it is an example of corruption or not, it makes everyone in crypto who's trying to do
anything in the system, it makes our jobs enormously harder.
This makes it so much harder for those Democrats to do things.
And yes, you can be all pissed off.
that Elizabeth Warren said that he did the wrong thing on Twitter.
It's Elizabeth Warren.
I'm sorry.
I did that.
I'm sorry.
No, what do you get it?
I did push for the community note, though.
I had to.
No, you should.
I'm fine with that.
Fuck Elizabeth Warren.
I'm so, you know, over that.
But ultimately, that is just exemplary of the problem that all the people who are trying
to quietly get things done are going to deal with.
This is a move that does nothing.
Period, full stop, nothing to help the crypto industry.
and makes it enormously harder for meaningful change to happen.
So, you know, I don't care if I'm in the minority on this.
I don't think you are.
This sucks for crypto.
I think you're saying the quiet part out loud.
But whether it sucks for crypto or not, this is actually just one tiny drop in the bucket of the Trump in crypto story.
Yes.
Right.
It's the bigger story.
Well, I don't know what it is.
I'm just saying like World Liberty Financial, Trump meme coin.
I'm just saying like you, you know, people already believe it's a,
grift in crypto with him. So it's just reinforcement to those critics, obviously.
It's a whole different level to pardon criminals, which is what the rest of the world sees.
That's a next level. Like it is, I think it is meaningfully different. I got so many text messages
about this yesterday when that news broke. It is anyone who thinks that it's not different,
you're diluting yourself. It's also a bit wild that this happens. And I don't think that Cisi,
I don't know, I'm not saying Ciz had anything to do with it. But the timing of this right after the
liquidation event on Binance with all eyes on that particular exchange at this particular time
also makes to your point the timing a little brutal. Yeah. Well, listen, to be clear, I am not
actually accused. I'm not in the camp that this is definitely an example of corruption. I have no
evidence of that. I don't, like, I don't think it's that clear cut. I'm strictly in the camp of
this creates really pain in the ass things. And I don't particularly care about sort of helping
CZ out. By the way, the other thing is, if I'm CZ,
I'm using every tool in my toolkit to try to give myself maximum mobility.
I have no, no, no hate for him playing the cards that are dealt to him either.
It's just my take is that it's bad for crypto.
That's all.
Polymarket has an SBF pardon at like 16 or 18% now.
That's when I quit, by the way.
Yeah, I know you, you 10 times more than me.
Like I don't know what, what cave you'll decide to go live in to turn off social media in the world if that
happens, obviously, with having been at FDX, but.
that would i'm actually i mean to the extent that you do think that this is an example of corruption
uh i'm a little bit less worried about that because boy don't have no money anymore cz never never
really gave up his uh his his capital access at least so yeah it's he he says there overestimations
but i'm still saying like 87 billion 90 billion depending on the given price of bnb on any given day
so listen i think most people watching and here would go to
through everything CZ went through if you knew you would come out the other side in his exact
situation. Like four months at Club Fed and a presidential pardon to change the optics and you get to
keep your $90 billion. He gave up four, you know, $4 billion, I think, and a fine. So
things have worked out pretty swimmingly for CZ. It's crypto, baby. What if Trump wasn't president?
Would we have SBF out and CZ in jail? I don't even know.
I don't know.
There's not a lot of political will, I think, around Sam, considering how many people have been having to run away from their association with him.
So it seems a little bit harder.
All right.
We're going to wrap it there.
There's a bunch of, like, ancillary stories that I don't think are too worthy of digging into.
I think we covered the bulk of it.
And we'll be back for another Friday five where I will actually send NLW the link to show up, which is useful.
I mean, I have people for that, but we collectively sort of blew it.
And otherwise, I highly, highly recommend once again
that you all listen to the breakdown, read the breakdown newsletter,
check out everything else that LW has
because he will keep you far better abreast of what's happening
in the market and the industry than I will.
So thanks, Ben, for that.
It's really the best, best show.
Best show on radio?
I don't know what we say.
It's pretty radio-ish.
Radio, radio on internet.
Have you ever thought about going video?
No. Not on that show. I got video for the AI show.
Awesome. I know you do. All right, guys, that's all we got. See you next week. Thank you.
Later.
