The Wolf Of All Streets - Bitcoin Drops Below $88K Amid Gov Shutdown! Is The Market About To Crack?
Episode Date: January 26, 2026Bitcoin is trading in the shadow of Washington dysfunction as government shutdown risks collide with the stalled Crypto Clarity Act, keeping markets on edge. In this livestream, we break down how poli...tical gridlock, delayed regulation, and policy uncertainty are impacting Bitcoin’s price action, liquidity, and investor confidence—and why clarity in Washington may matter more than any chart pattern right now.
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Bitcoin dropped back below 88,000, and we have yet another government shutdown apparently on the way.
On top of that, we have potential new 100% tariffs on Canada, President Trump actively looking to acquire Greenland,
the U.S. Armada heading toward Iran, the DOJ investigating Fed Chair Powell,
BlackRock CEO is the likely next Fed Chair and President Trump calling for $2,000 stimulus checks and 1% interest rates.
And that's like half of the things that we have to discuss, because the biggest one is probably the never-ending rally.
by silver and gold and people's belief that that means we're going to see an inevitable
rotation into our beloved Bitcoin.
And we're going to talk about all of that and more here on Macro Monday with Mike, Dave,
and James.
Let's go.
Good morning, everybody, and happy Macro Monday.
You can see that we are here in snowy New York City.
And, you know, I've got Dave, Mike, and James all here today.
And the four of us would like to remind you all that you just move to,
places where you don't have to live in the snow.
You can just go to places with sun and no taxes.
Just avoid the whole.
The sun's not up yet, but yeah.
My wife and I were in the pool on Saturday.
And I said, you know, maybe we should send a picture of you enjoying the pool to your friends in New York.
It's not a good idea.
It was like 85 degrees in Tampa.
She's never gotten.
Yeah, we were sitting in an outdoor restaurant by the ocean eating oysters.
It was very, very, very.
very rough. But listen, as easy as living in Florida is the situation out there is a little more
rough when you take a look at the macro. Mike, I can't even imagine what your morning meetings are
like right now. Go ahead. Some good information. Starting with Anna, FOMC meeting, her quote
was the dissents might be most significant, partly because due to the White House and DOJ pressure
on Powell Waller is seen as more objective, but likely a minus for the
White House if he dissents, will he? And for an ease. So because if he does, doesn't dissent,
he's out of the race. So and then he does get chosen as for chairman. It's political. Okay, this is fun.
Gold loves that. But FMC has upgraded his growth estimates. GDP, fourth quarter, four percent,
not, it's not consistent with rate cuts. This is Fermanagh. Consumption staying strong to cite
shutdowns. People are dipping into their savings to sustain consumption. And
A key quote from her is only sustainable if the stock market continues to boom.
Durable goods should remain resilient.
A lot of that, she said, is related to the wealth effect stock market.
Ira Jersey pointed out, he's our interest rate strategists.
Gagbs are pushing up yields, but mostly about Japan, not so much here,
partly because what's happening in 30 and 40-year stuff is very illiquid,
and it's the 10, you know, it really matters.
Next Monday, he's Monday is our funding.
will be a quarterly funding announcement.
And sorry, next money, the funding is needed in a quarterly funding month,
announcements a week after that on Wednesday.
And he thinks there's a non-trivial chance that the Treasury could announce a reduction in tens and 30.
So this will be something for James to focus on later.
Trump administration wants lower yields and there's focusing on T-bill yield,
T-bill issuance.
So he said there's a potential for a bull flattening.
Now, that's just more of a probability.
Michael Casper, our stock market strategies, came a little bit less bullish this time.
Growth is the main concern.
Now, he pointed out how the Russell is very overbought.
The RSI measures were similar to the peaks in 2021 and last year.
So far, it's been a dud for an earnings.
He said about 8.6 percent, about expected.
Revenue is not much of a beat.
One base point above consensus.
Price reactions are skewed somewhat negative.
hopefully further beats will drive performance, which is his quote.
And the JGBB still off was not much of an equity factor initially,
but he thinks it was just temporary,
and that's obviously been addressed by the Bank of Japan and some buying.
Audrey Chil Freeman says she's a structural dollar bears have returned.
She's bulls to Swiss Frank, BayoJ invention,
B.O.J. intervention should increase loudilly.
and that is and she doesn't buy into the second Plaza Accord Outlook.
And I just gave my outlook.
I think there's potential peaking.
There's trickling down.
Potential peaking in silver.
Now that's different to short it.
Potentially peaking in copper.
Potential peaking in natural gas.
Obviously today is probably the high for the year.
And then still potential for that high in Bitcoin for this year to be a peak.
Back to you.
I don't even know where to start, James.
Should we go to Japan?
Because I think there's a lot of misdirection here.
I listed all of these things that are happening in the world.
And none of them were the fact that the 40-year bond in Japan has hit, what is it, the first, over 4%.
And for the first time in over three decades, I do have your newsletter here.
Yeah.
I mean, so Japan's, they've painted themselves into a pretty tight corner, you know.
And that's something we've been talking about for a long time, right?
We've been focused on Japan, even before August 8th of 24, when we had the carry trade implode on a bunch of hedge funds.
You know, we were, we've been worried about the fact that Japan's been the free money ATM to the world for decades here.
And it's clearly that that game is over.
And, you know, the punch bowl is being taken away.
And you're seeing a little bit of fits and, and frustration from markets about it, but it's just reality.
So that 40-year yield, it jumped over 4%.
And that's kind of a wake-up call because that means that Japan has lost the long end of the curve.
And they can't keep rates low.
they're suddenly in this phenomenon that the rest of the world has been experiencing, which is,
oh, my God, there's inflation.
And so I would, bond vigilantes is probably a strong way of putting it.
It's more just realistic outlook for bond investors to say that we need more yield than we're
getting because we expect there to be inflation now in Japan.
and it's it's pretty simple so what happens well on friday uh you saw a really sharp you you
you saw a sharp sell off in the dollar and you saw the yen get stronger meaning it's reversed
for everybody listening you know the yen's trading about 153 per dollar now and it and it had been up to
almost 159 just last week and that's a massive move in the yen for um for
for just a couple of days.
And that's the yen getting stronger against dollar.
That means the dollar's buying fewer yen.
And so there's a lot of speculation about what happened.
I don't know if there was actually any coordinated effort
by the Treasury and the Fed, the way it works is the Treasury will say,
we want to go support the yen or make the dollar weaker.
And then the Fed goes out and execute.
executes it for for the treasury executes that that trade for the treasury i haven't seen anything
on swap lines or to suggest that that occurred but just the mere rumor uh you know and uh just just the
the the possibility of it happening made traders reversed out and and uh and go long the yen versus the
dollar or cover trades.
And so that's kind of where we're at.
We're going to see what happens from here.
But why would they do that for everybody listening and saying, okay, that's all of,
that's great.
That's what happened.
But why would they do that?
They would do that?
Why would the treasury do that?
Why is the treasury even care?
The treasury cares because they don't want Japan selling U.S.
treasuries to get U.S. dollars to sell U.S. dollars to buy yen.
That's why.
It's as simple as that.
They just want to.
In layman's terms, since I'm a layman, you have the, basically the United States looking
over to Japan saying these guys are going to lose control.
And we need to effectively step in and intervene on the yen because of its implications
for global markets.
So much like we intervene in our own affairs going over there and buying yen to help support
the end, which obviously means spending dollars, which means dollar down, yen up.
Yeah, we can't have the Bank of Japan out there competing with the Treasury in selling bonds.
Like you just heard Mike say that the Treasury is considering not selling as many, what did you say,
10 years and 30 years?
So the Treasury is concerned about the long end of the curve here.
They know that it's impacting consumers.
the 10-year is the rate which every single rate is based off of, you know, car loans, you know, credit card loans, the mortgages are all set off of 10-year.
And the 30-year is kind of an indication of that.
But the Treasury knows that they can't have these rates spike higher and cause even more pain on consumers for the cost of borrowing.
And so, and they don't, you know, that they don't want to be in a situation where they're competing with Japan for the market, for, for buyers of these treasuries.
So it's pretty simple. It's not, it's not as complicated as it sounds. It's just the treasury is, it's defending itself. It's what's happening.
It sounds like they're defending the yen, but it's defending itself. Yeah, that makes perfect sense. And how, I mean, anyone can answer this, but this is sort of a.
narrative that's persisted because we thought that the
yen carry trade had closed last April, right?
Almost a year ago, we were doing the same story.
You'd have to imagine that considering the rates have been rising
this entire time that people would have closed that trade
and have not been looking to the yen as the piggyback.
I don't think there's a danger of the yen trade
carry trade blowing up like there was last year,
you know, a little over a year ago.
I don't believe that that's the, that's the,
that that's the danger it's just it's clearly um it's just clear that the that the bank of japan
has lost control of the long end of their curve and so that is what's giving people some some
pause here and and they're they're a little bit worried and what do you think that spills into
it spills right into the the carry i'm sorry the debasement trade where we're going to be printing
dollars here to shore up the yen to, you know, to make sure that we, we can sell more
treasuries and what do you want to own in that situation? You probably don't want to own
dollars. You want to own gold. It just leads right into the same debasement trade that we're
all, that we're all focused on. I have such a good meme for you. There it is.
When you're right about currency debasement,
Bitcoin instead of gold, silver, a copper.
Yeah, it's about, that's, that's pretty, that's, that's pretty accurate right now.
Yeah.
And it's frustrating.
It's really frustrating for, for long-term Bitcoin investors because they know that, you know, that Bitcoin is, there's, there's, it can't be debased.
That's so good.
They know it can't be debased, but the market is just, it's bucking that.
It's saying, no, this is a risk.
This is a risk asset.
This is not safety.
This is something that is, you know, out on the risk curve.
And so, and it's going to continue to be like that until the majority of investors understand it to be the opposite.
And it's just going to continue.
So in my mind, you know, it gives you opportunity.
Now, let's be clear.
The market is all-time highs here.
I mean, like this is, we are getting into some really kind of scary territory.
And if the market does sell off, I maintain that the Bitcoin will sell off with it.
I just, I don't see a situation where it won't.
I mean, unless there's some sort of banking crisis where people are worried about their
dollars getting, you know, getting taken by banks in order to shore up investors there,
like we saw back when Silicon Valley bank blew up.
but I don't see that as an issue for the United States here in the short term.
I don't see that as the Black Swan.
So, you know, I mean, for me, it's just, hey, if Bitcoin goes down 20, 30% from here,
that would be a tremendous buying opportunity, in my opinion.
But, you know, that's, I differ from Mike on that.
And he's been right on the gold versus Bitcoin trade in the short term here.
but we'll see what happens in the next three years.
I do expect on the other side of this
that we're going to get more debasement.
We're going to get more money printing
and Bitcoin will reflect that.
It's hard to say these things benefit from them.
It's not benefiting.
Gold is not benefiting from the dollar going down.
It's just reflecting it.
That's what's happening.
And the same thing with Bitcoin.
It will reflect it.
And so that's my expectation long term.
Yeah, I remember when Bitcoin,
surpass the market capital of silver and we celebrated.
Yeah.
And it doubled this market cap.
It's not on this top five and more.
So, yeah.
It's insane.
I don't,
you know,
now that what does,
what does concern me,
and this will feed into Dave and,
and Mike's understanding of long-term markets and,
and bubbles,
I'm starting to get text messages from people.
Should I be buying silver here?
God, and that concerns me, you know, because when you start having Normies come out,
and these are not dumb people, they're just not every, they're just everyday people.
They're not professional investors.
They're like, God, am I missing this?
Do I need to buy silver?
And it's that do I need to own Nvidia thing, you know?
I texted Emmy this morning right before the show and said, when we moved, did we give away
all of my grandparents and great-grandparents, silver?
And I want to go buy a nice dinner.
Right?
I have, yeah.
It says sell all the silver in the house.
Dave,
I know you've got a whole box right there.
Well,
I have a small little box right here that I put on the desk when silver went past 50.
And,
you know,
I tried to find out,
I mean,
just some,
you know,
some half dollars.
I mean,
you know,
we got these things,
you know,
the,
it's getting heavier,
Dave.
Yeah.
It's funny.
Look,
two things.
As far as silver is concerned,
there are two things to keep in mind.
Look,
the first time people talked about
and Vitty, it was about a fourth of where it is today.
And just so,
you know, yes, it is
when everybody's talking about it and doing it,
is when you're there.
I'm going to be blunt. I thought that
100 would be a little bit tougher a level
to get through that we would fail there
and retrace and then
make another push-up code 150, etc.
I don't know what to make of the fact that we're sitting at
110 right now. I'm not,
it's gone past where I
I thought, look, I still think that silver will get to a silver gold ratio in the mid-30s at a minimum
and probably touch 30 in the crust of the earth.
That could be gold coming down.
Oh, in the cross-the-air.
Okay, yeah, I was going to say that could be going down and not silver going up.
It could be, it could be.
But look, the truth is that silver relative to gold in the earth in terms of recoverable reserves
and for literally thousands of years traded somewhere around where that was, which is 20 to 1.
They're both, you know, it is, that's just the truth.
So, you know, that's, it's the great, the greatest stat arb trade in history,
but you have to go back a little bit longer before Bloomberg existed in order to get that data.
So I do think that that is true.
I think that is where it will get to.
And supply demand does tend to win in the end.
You know, we learn that in econ 101.
And there is way more demand for the available supply of silver right now.
that is not likely to change for a decade.
And honestly, given the use of silver, it may very well continue.
At the same time, there are still people out there who said,
aha, remember, silver's money.
And those people will come out of the woodwork.
So look, I do think that that trade will happen.
Now, the problem is that we keep talking about the dollar as if the dollar isn't moving.
And as a good friend of your show, Mario, Mauricio, sorry, from Leden is fond of saying,
when you buy houses, it's not that housing prices are going up,
but the dollar is going down.
Well, that's what James was saying.
When James says it's being reflected,
what he's basically saying is, listen,
we're printing more of this frigging stuff.
And so everything that isn't moving,
it's that question, it's a Copernicus question, right?
You know, what's moving, the earth or the sun?
Well, the truth is we know from data that it's the earth,
but human beings for most of recorded history
thought it was the opposite,
I thought the sun moved in the earth sky.
Well, the truth is, is silver and gold may not be moving,
and they are because they're getting used.
I mean, silver in particular, but it's really the dollar.
It's really all the fiat currencies, the entire complex.
And so that is what's going on.
So you have to normalize it by the amount of dollars in creation,
which is 8 to 10% a year.
I think silver is essentially was a beach ball being held underwater
from multiple times, and they've just lost control of it.
And so now the question is,
is how far under the water was it?
Was it a mile below the surface?
Was it 10 feet below the surface?
Was it five feet below the surface?
So we're gonna find out.
And so supply demand will win in the end.
All I could say is a couple of facts.
So here's an interesting fact.
Go on atmex.com, largest dealer of precious metals
in the United States.
If Mike was right, and this was the clearing price,
that everyone was pulling their silver out,
they'd be screaming by by, by, et cetera.
No, what they're saying,
unprecedented demand and you know and and and they had to lengthen their schedule in terms of how long
it takes to get to get it but the truth is is that there's a lot more people buying it than then
it's bringing out the buyers not not necessarily the sellers now that will equalize at some
point we're going to get a correction it has to happen but understanding supply demand matters
now that's silver japan people who talk about the carry trade
Most of the carry trade people who talk about it in the crypto world are tourists.
And they don't understand that 95, probably 98, maybe 99% of the carry trade is yield,
are bond managers playing yield strategies.
James is not as he knows what I'm talking about.
So when you talk about the ATM to buy risk assets, that is a teeny little part of the carry trade.
It really is.
It's not what it's for.
It's not what people do.
because the same people who are speculating in different rate differentials between Japan and China.
And by the way, I don't know, you know, historically if we have any data when Japanese rates were
significantly higher than Chinese rates, which is where they are today, you know, on the 10 year.
So it's what, 60 basis points higher.
It was 60 basis points lower.
What a year ago?
You know, that's a huge move because what these hedge funds do is they lever up a lot, right?
because yields are theoretically a more stable product, and they trade that.
That's what long-term capital is doing.
So it's actually stupefying to me.
I am stunned that we haven't heard of hedge funds blowing up because they got on the wrong
side of that particular trade.
But none of that has anything to do with Bitcoin.
Frankly, it doesn't have a lot to do with the stock market either.
What it does have to do with is the plumbing.
And some of those hedge funds are the ones who used it to buy U.S. treasuries.
and that demand that comes out of the Cayman Island,
which is our largest, you know, largest buyer has softened.
Meanwhile, Treasury.
The reason that it's the largest buyer is because that's where most hedge funds are domiciled to Cayman.
Right.
Exactly.
So, but the point is that with that as a backdrop in the yen at this level,
the fact that the Treasury yields have backed up what?
Ten basis points?
I mean, basically nothing through all of this, Mishigas.
is really fascinating.
It tells me that there's some other stuff going on.
I don't know if it's yield curve control.
I don't know what it is,
but there are people out there who are trying to do that.
Now, Mike has been a bull on treasuries.
So maybe it's just that there are natural people
who agree with Mike that the treasury is the best port in the storm, right?
And there's truth there because, you know,
we keep asking the question,
why should the U.S. have to be higher,
have much higher yield than the rest of the world?
why, you know, then the euro region wants.
And the answer is only because the dollar is a reserve currency.
But what if what's happening is the dollar is being strategically weakened and more people
are going into gold.
And yeah, the dollar is the currency, but we're not holding it anymore.
Well, then you would expect yields around to normalize based on debt to GDP or stuff like
that. And that has not happened.
Wouldn't you expect Bitcoin to be flying with the dollar dumping?
I think that people, markets, we always say markets are irrational.
longer than people can be solvent. What we really mean by that is human behavior follows predictable
cycles. And we have, we've had the same thing going on now for, we're over six months,
or around eight months into it, of rotation from people who made their money in Bitcoin
and are selling to new people in Bitcoin. That has been happening. We have the entire cryptosphere.
I mean, crypto, the greed and fear index being at 20 should tell you something. It is, people are
terrified and the differential between stock greed and fear at 50 and crypto greed and fear at 20 is as
large as we've ever seen it. Why? Because the people in the cryptovirce are panicking,
pulling their money out and it's getting bought. We're in a trading range, right? You know,
we've been saying it. I didn't want to get too excited when Bitcoin got to 95. I'm not going to
get too despondent when Bitcoin gets to 85, but we've been in that range until it breaks that
range with authority where we are.
And that has, and it's defying septics.
I mean, one of the things I thought was hysterical on barchart, you know, dot com, they have
high volatility and low volatility indices.
Ibit is considered a low volatility index because Ibit's volatility implied is, and realized
they're both in the 30s.
Just think about that from where we were.
So you have a situation where people in the crypto world are, are beyond,
And frankly, some of it, as Mike and I agree, is necessary.
There are lots of, there's lots of people in the crypto world who value assets that have no value.
I mean, literally none.
And then there are others where you could see some, but it has multiples that make your head hurt.
Right.
You know, and that's just, that's just true.
And that's always been the case.
Bitcoin is a different beast.
You know, we don't know what, and we do should talk about Ethereum.
We don't know if what Larry thinks comments over the weekend about one chain to rule them all.
Now, he didn't say one chain to rule them all, but that's how the cryptoverse talked about it.
But if they're talking about Ethereum in that guard, it's, there's a lot that's happening under the surface.
But understand when half the country or half the world even says, oh, associates Bitcoin with Trump and we have this kind of political division, you don't expect.
I mean, no one associates gold with any political leader.
If Trump was considered king minus, gold would be at $4,000, not at $5,000.
It might even-
Notting a lot.
What?
I mean, so there's a lot of stuff going on.
But last thought on Japan, when hedge funds get hurt, when you get a move, I mean, we saw it last week.
So Friday, for those who weren't watching, it was just about to touch 160.
I forgot one of the, who is it, the governors, someone,
from the BOJ basically came out and talked about it.
And whammo, it dropped to 157.
Then over the weekend, it dropped to 154.
Now, that's a big move for a currency.
You know, we tend to think, oh, 6% or 5%.
That's not that big of movement.
Currency, you've got to think about currencies.
Like, currencies are ocean liners, man.
It is very difficult to get them to change direction.
That's why you get 100x leverage on 4x pairs.
Correct.
You need to have a big enough move to care.
That's right.
For people understand, for you to trade a billion dollars of a currency is usually just, it's not that much.
It's like, okay.
We could call up a desk, you know, and you just trade $100 million of a currency like you're done.
It's not even like, okay.
Almost a choice price.
Yeah.
It's like these things are massive liquidity, massive.
People don't understand that a 5% move in a currency, when the Japanese yen is more volatile over a weekend than Bitcoin is, that is saying something.
When it's more volatile than, well, not than silver, because silver actually outperformed it.
But you get the idea.
It is a massive move.
And so that is showing you something about this market.
And Mike is always fond of talking about risk managers.
risk managers will care.
So, and we've seen this before.
You know, I made the comment literally last week, I'm pretty sure I said, well, look,
if it gets close to 160, people are going to be afraid, more afraid of the Japanese
yen strengthening because that's what hurt the head.
Well, that's what happened.
So we don't know what the results of that are.
That's not necessarily bad for risk assets, but it is certainly interesting.
And I think that you have to look at it that way.
Okay, Mike, I've teed you up so many different ways.
You did in a good way.
So let's, let's just pick you.
Dave, show that stack of the Silver Eagles.
You have that?
Can you show that again?
These are, I, this was just.
Silver beagles.
These are, let's see what, let's open one of them.
One of these that are open.
Yeah, these are all sealed ones.
These are just the half dollars.
Okay, so I, so I, I love that because from my wife and I are both some big family.
So I always had stacks of those.
And there's always events, I'd always give out one of those silver eagles,
their average price is 20 bucks the last 15 years and at the end of last year i thought they
said what an idiot mike you should have given them a token for some kind of bitcoin or something
because it was just stuck maybe it went up 2x i thought some of these young kids when they turn
adults and they would find that silver in there on the war drawer and saying it went up 15 20x or something
but that's a problem they've already gone up a lot and that's the key thing the point is you
have to have the pain the pain was forever i had calls last week with people i haven't spoke to
about medals in two decades all they talked about was what to sell
and where because they've been on that trade forever and finally got some money back. So the key thing
I want to point about silver, you point out there, there's a couple ounces of silver. Right now in
ETFs, there's 844 million of ounces sitting in silver ETFs. That's dropped 2% this year. People are
selling. That's what's different from 1979 when we had a similar high-velocity rally in silver.
You did not have that massive overhang of supply. And I challenge anybody to take a supply in the
model from any point in time and not shift it.
completely the other way where supply kicks in demand declines because prices went up parabolically.
That's what people miss sometimes. The answers have just changed. So the key thing I want to point
about silvers, right now at 3.8 times, it's 60-month moving average. There's only three months
in history. Okay, I'm going to go back to 1954. That's 855 months that it closed at a stronger
rally than this. And that was the average price of $32 and the 79 up to February 70. It got the 50 and it
dropped down to four bucks in 1993, and it was $28 last year. That's what's going to happen in silver.
I don't know what from level, but we're probably going to be putting a peak this year that'll
last for maybe decades. Just know what happened in the natural gas. It just peaked around six.
That's probably going to last for maybe a year or two because the next price it's going to buy
Friday, you're going to see the price is $3. It got to six. The switch in contracts. The key thing I'm
pointing out is don't underestimate the elasticity in commodities when prices go up. Now, gold's
a least elastic. And that's why I just look gold and I look at gold as just purely frightening. It has
never rallied at this velocity with stock market volatility, inflation, and crude oil staying this low. Never.
I look at that. Thank you. That's been a great trade. You've probably not supposed to overweight
that now. Your wrists are great. And the key thing to me that really happened last week was I'll
end with what I think's happening because I'm seeing potential peaks in copper. It's getting a little
bit stretched. And the key thing also I'll remember, I remind you, Dave, is if you're long silver
versus gold, that gold silver ratio, you're buying silver at the most expensive ever versus crude oil,
at the most expensive versus gold in 15 years. And there's one key thing that needs for you,
for you need to happen for you to succeed is a stock market royalty has to stay low, and the stock market
has to stay up. Almost always when the stock market goes down, silver way underperforms gold. We know
the obvious reasons why. But the key thing I want to roll over, and then with this is my base case
this year is we're going to have a pickup and stock market volatility because it's too low.
Stock market at some point is going to go down. It's just going to follow the lead of what
the crypto's been telling us for almost a year now. And the bottom line is treasuries might be the
next big trade. So to me, the key thing I fixed it in last week is can that 30 year get above 5%.
It can't do it. Every time it does, I hear about more of the duration people finding ways,
excuses to buy that 30 year and selling other things to do it.
So now I see it at 480.
To me, that's the next big trade.
By this time next year, I think it's more likely to be at 380 than 580.
To me, that's a huge trade, and that's what I'm looking at for this year.
And I want to sign signs I'm wrong.
First sign I'd be wrong is let's see Bitcoin stays above $100,000.
Okay, that's a bit of reflation.
Let's say copper can stay above six.
Yeah, okay, that would be great.
Volatility and stock market has to stay 180 days is 11.7%.
The average annual 10 years is 17%.
It always goes there.
So to me, this is still a great trading environment.
Bitcoin's probably peak, but prove me wrong.
I have to see markets prove me wrong.
Keep that 10, that 30 year above 5%.
You know, keep that stock market volatility very low.
And it's staying there and still resilient, but how long is they going to last?
The gold to me is just purely frightening.
I've got some very clear evidence that you might be wrong about silver.
Jim Kramer says he's a huge old bug, but he's not a silver bug.
What he's really saying is over to 300 and then we can talk.
I do need to point out a couple of things in here.
I mean, I do want to ask you about natural gas.
We're going to come back to that because that's the most interesting move.
I mean, that's a 50% move in a week, 50% in a week for a commodity.
Clearly, there's some short-term pain because of the cold snap that came in,
and they're just trying to flush out where the supply was.
And I think that that's a, well, to me it feels like a pretty obvious trade selling it at six.
but, you know, that's a different thing.
Natural gas has blown up more than one hedge fund
than in my lifetime.
So, oh, I'm not, I don't know very much about it.
Oh, yeah.
But there is a huge, huge difference between oil and silver.
And that is that oil is incredibly elastic to supply in the earth.
Silver is almost totally inelastic to supply in the earth.
They can still produce.
it for the average cost of production for silver is still in the 30s.
Oil cost of production is very close to the price that it's at right now, and there are
tons of mines, tons of rigs and fracking setups that become profitable as you go 60, 70.
So there is a lot of supply there where the marginal cost of production is what drives
it. They can turn it on. Silver, it takes a decade to get a new silver mine. A silver mine
on a decade, literally 10 years, in terms of permitting and getting it started. So it is very
different in terms of the elasticity of below-ground supply. Meanwhile, oil has almost no elasticity
to above-ground supply, except for maybe the strategic petroleum reserve or whatever, and silver,
as we've talked about, you got people who have silver that they bought when it was at $4,
saying, hmm, is this a time to sell it or not? I mean, I find it, I keep this on my desk for a reason,
It's a tiny amount.
But I keep it there to remind me that my cost basis for silver is cheaper relative.
My appreciation, my total return in silver is higher at this point than it is than my Bitcoin
that I bought around the same, or not around the same time period a little bit later,
because I got to Bitcoin later.
Curiously, when I sold gold for Bitcoin, that trade is still okay.
That's done fine.
Had I sold silver for Bitcoin, it probably wouldn't have been, but I didn't because I
that silver would outperform. Lastly, you keep talking about 15 years in silver. Remember,
the structural demand for silver has shifted over that period of time. When you look back at the
80s, that rally from whatever it was to 50, at least 80% of that was the Hunt Brothers trying
to corner it. It had nothing to do with natural. Dave, I just got to warn you, the things you're
saying in silver stuff that medals, people like me said 10 years ago. Finally, we got it. That's
what just thank you. It's just 10 years ago. It was 10%.
The percent of demand with solar?
It's a way to go to 20.
Now it's 20.
I want to make it clear that when you look at the charts,
you need to understand a few things.
The Hunt Brothers bit for years.
And I mean years,
silver was produced as a byproduct of copper mining.
And so there was no point in even opening a silver mine.
I mean,
I don't own Pan American silver in one of my accounts for,
I mean,
30 years?
I don't know,
a long time,
you know,
whatever.
I mean,
that's still a small position,
still in one of my IRAs,
whatever.
And so I used to read all the silver and gold newsletters.
and I understand this.
Silver was not even mined.
And so, yeah, it would rally, but the reality was there was a lot of capacity to bring
online.
We've blown through that.
The demands drivers for silver are things that didn't exist 20 years ago.
You keep missing the point.
That's changed because we've blown through the price.
The price will shift that supply demand curve.
Oh, there's no doubt.
There's no doubt that if you could produce silver at 30, that in 10 years, as new mines,
I am sure there's got to be a lot of venture capital money flowing in.
to find new silver reserves and we'll figure out where equilibrium is all i'm trying to tell you
is the one major thing to keep in mind is gold surged above silver because of its money it demonetized
silver it did and and we we can't ignore that that demonetization matters and so when i when i'm calling
for gold to silver to get back to 30 doesn't doesn't mean that i think gold loses its monetary
value just i think its monetary value as an overstated part of it that's all right because 30
is still 50% higher than its ratio in the earth's crushing.
I think we got to move on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But one thing we have not talked about at all is oil.
And so I wanted to get your thoughts on that, Mike, because, you know, with geopolitical
tensions kind of everywhere, you know, it's surprising where oil is right now, where crude is.
however you know that you're you're looking across the world that demand and and economies and
so it's uh it's it's it's far more complicated than just a geopolitical play it's a me bear market
i think the key thing to remember is the key thing i pointed out when i was dead wrong
and oil for a few years and 22 calling it for to go to 40 one and went above 100 is the
last he's kicking in dave nails that the last case is kicking in and now
what's also happened is the paradigm shift with now the Western world, led by the U.S., Canada,
and now we go all the way down the Venezuela and Argentina is now the price maker, used to be the
price taker, and the leader of the rest of the world wants lower prices.
And the bottom line, it's holding up all these industrial, number one, crude oil is the number one
industrial commodity in the planet that's been replaced, partly because Russians invasion
in Ukraine, that shift the incentive to be placing it with technology.
And the bottom lines, it always bottoms around 40 anyhow.
So I think it's reentered that range.
Before COVID, it was 42 to 40 to 65.
WTI maybe get to 65, but if that happens, producers are just waiting to sell,
keep that curve in backwardation, saying bring on more supply.
It's a fair market.
And when we do get little pickup and stock market volatility, it'll probably be the final
catalyst for crude oil to get to 40, for copper to peak.
And that's my point is we're so dependent on the stock market staying resilient now.
And crude oil's already flunked that test.
It's heading lower.
Bitcoin's already flunked that test.
It's heading lower.
Copper's doing okay, but you see the dependency.
It's the most in history.
That's why maybe we live in interesting times.
And the metals, the precious metals, most normally are gold, are telling to be careful and watch.
But the key thing about crude oils, get a rally to 65, you sell it, you get a dip to nil 42.
And you buy it. It's stuck in a range. It's a bear market.
I want to talk about two things. There's two topics. I want to make sure we get to.
A, I want to talk about the government shutdown because we're seeing it now at a 75% chance.
We just did this dance a few months ago. They obviously did not come up with a permanent solution.
and many would argue that actually the Bitcoin bull market was stifled by the government shutdown
because obviously that puts a pause on liquidity and data and effectively everything else.
And the second one is I actually want to have a conversation about if gold and silver top,
regardless of when, where that rotation goes into.
But let's talk government shutdown first and what that means.
James, I don't know if you have thoughts on that, if you've been quiet.
Well, I mean, the government shutdown, surprise, surprise.
I mean, like if anybody's surprised that we're talking about this, you just haven't looked at the government calendar.
You know, I mean, this is yet, it's just more posturing.
And, you know, obviously the situation in Minnesota has been an absolute powder keg.
And it's just getting worse.
And so, and, you know, it's become fully 100% political now.
and whether that is because they want to dial up the temperature to deflect,
meaning the leaders in Minnesota want to dial up the temperature to deflect all the attention
away from the fraud that has been going on in that state, who knows,
but or whether or not they just hate Trump so much and they just cannot stand the ice being in there
and taking away their voters.
who knows? I don't know.
But they're going to use it as a political hot button.
And they're going to say, we're going to, we're not going to fund the government if D8, you know, if Homeland Security is going to be funded in there.
If ICE is going to be funded in there.
And so it's going to be a showdown.
And, you know, but that's, I'm not, there's in no way, shape, or form I belittling the, the fact that two people were.
killed out there over this, you know, surge in the hatred between the two camps.
Like, there's no belittling that.
But this is just yet another reason for them to fight about the budget.
And, you know, we've talked about this ad nauseum for years.
and the one thing that doesn't happen is they don't stop spending.
So where that money goes and how it moves around is is going to be a political fight,
but the Democrats are going to try to get the Republicans to agree to spend less on things
that their constituents want and vice versa.
And that's where we are.
It's no surprise.
How does that affect us?
Well, you know, I mean, it's just yet another just it's just,
it's just yet another reason that all of these ratings agencies have downgraded U.S. debt.
It's not because they think we're going to hard default on our bonds.
It's because of this nonsense, you know, and that you could have a technical default on bonds
if we can't get spending measures in place.
And so who knows what happens in four days.
But here we are again.
surprise surprise it's like the same movie that's been on the same channel since you were a child and you just can't change the fucking channel and here it is mic or dave i mean quick takes on the shutdown
i think the weekend was fascinating it went from on pa on polymarket uh the odds of the government shutdown went from let's get it right here uh 9% on 24th
at 7 a.m. to 80% at 7 p.m. 9% to 80%.
Because of the coin was the only asset open was the only way you could play it other than
just betting on the outcome one way or another, which is prediction marks.
So that definitely has taken some of it. And Bitcoin dropped more or less 2% peak to trough.
And nothing else was open. Markets opened and Bitcoin.
state, they recovered about half of that. So it wasn't in the 86, now we're at 88, whatever.
But, you know, we recovered about half of where it was, give or take. Polymarket hasn't budged
at still at 81% of a chance of government shutdown. So what do I make of this? What I make of this
is I think people in the broader markets are like, oh, these guys, boys will be boys,
are just going to fight. We don't give a fuck. Markets, I've said this before, the stock market,
likes gridlock. They like nothing happening because the bids dominated by the large companies,
the large companies more or less have the regulations they want to block smaller companies.
And so they like that. What's the most obvious problem with the government shutdown is,
is crypto because you're not going to get a clarity at. It's not going to happen. It means that
even the SEC and FTC and CFTC getting together and talking about coordinating rules,
won't actually be able to do anything.
It means that we're stuck in the situation we are today.
So if you're an industry that needs the government
to either do something or get the hell out of the way,
it's not that they're out of the way with the shutdown.
You literally are stuck with uncertainty.
Or if you're in every other industry, you don't really care.
And so you're seeing it.
So it's not crazy that Bitcoin and crypto dropped more
because they're more sensitive to it.
I think that that's true.
The liquidity side is fascinating.
The other thing people forget is that before, before we got to the political theater that's going on over ice.
And by the way, the data comparing the number of people, the error rates between Obama and Trump and all the other stuff.
I mean, there's just no there there. James is right. This is theater and this is stupid theater.
All the leaders that are crowing about this and one side and another are all morons.
And I'm talking about both sides.
I mean, it is a tragedy.
So the people on the administration saying, oh, well, this is, no, it's a tragedy.
Let's understand what it is.
And the people are saying, oh, well, this is because they're doing more and more.
It's like, no, Obama actually had almost exactly the same statistics and arguably a higher error rate.
And it was in Politico, I think.
I can't remember, but it was a left-leaning source that basically talked about all that stuff.
So we were seeing massive amounts of histrionics.
And that's covering up for something that happened that no one's talked about,
which is earmarks.
We saw five plus billion dollars in earmarks in the budget deal that the House actually
passed.
And what are those earmarks?
They are everything.
They are thinking all the shit that no national political audience would vote for.
But though each congressman would get their own pet project, a library here, you know, paying
for some.
I want to hear from the politics of it.
And I'm trying to the government, I mean for markets.
The reason I quoted that.
that is and I don't have it up, but Lynn Alden made a really good post about this, about the
earmark stuff and saying, this is why nothing stops this train. And it was very, very concise.
And she had a whole, there was a whole list of them in the thing that she quote tweeted.
That's the point, Scott. There is nothing that's going to change spending. It's a unit party
out there. And so everyone who thinks that we're going to get all this fraud, we're going to get
$500 billion fraud out of the budget and we're going to live within our means, that will only happen
if they're forced. And that's really the point. And so that's why markets are reacting.
That's why gold and silver aren't looking at this fraud story saying, oh, well, you know, look, the fraud's going away.
And so we're going to spend less.
That's not happening.
And a shutdown just delay is just a beach ball under the water.
It doesn't change anything.
It just delays it, right?
So that's what's going on.
But that's why Bitcoin reacted more to the shutdown than anything else.
And honestly, when you're looking at all the numbers, you're talking about moving around a chair, deck chairs on, you know, chairs on the deck of the Titanic.
Like, it's just, you're not, you're not talking about the big numbers.
numbers, which are Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and, you know, the interest on the debt,
and then defense spending, which is a trillion dollars. Like, they're not talking about the biggest
pieces that would actually make a dent. And nobody's going to cut Social Security. We're
just going to keep, you know, piling on debt to take care of it as long as we can.
So it's, that's the point, right? Scott, like, it's just, it is.
Lynn Alden's meme that she now owns.
Nothing stops this train.
Nothing's going to stop this.
You know, we, there's not, there's not enough, there's not enough, there, there aren't
enough chairs to move around to make a dent in the weight of the Titanic.
It's just not going to happen.
So let's talk about what you do about it.
I mean, we can all make statements, you know, as we point out, it'd be awesome to be
right about things, politically anything, but being right about markets is a lot harder.
So the bias last year, I, exactly.
I still stuck with, you know, last year was obviously gold.
Now you look at what's happened to obviously gold and treasuries.
Now I only have left is treasuries.
I look at that ratio of total holding of treasuries in price divided by gold.
And you can gold is the most expensive since 1982 versus a basket of treasuries.
So to me, that's all priced in.
As of this time next year, when we say President Trump, we're using a word lame duck in the same sentence, probably.
Particularly if inflation stays hot and the way things are tilping towards the midterms,
you can see it's a normal shift in and people are just getting tired of him as most people are
and it's tired of the can't we just sleep without his name in the headline all the time so that's
the key thing we're thinking about and I think the bottom line here is the only thing that matters
is when you hear and see that yeah the government death suspending is pumping up things we've seen
the failure in bitcoin we've learned that lesson that's not the right trade for running it hot
let that market let that market cycle its way through I think it's far from the low just
get some of the purge out, probably two thirds of the way and things like Dogecoin,
just drop another 20 billion, we'll be done.
Gold, the part of that trade's mostly done.
That's why I said is sometimes it just stand back and say sit in treasuries,
maybe even look at that long bond.
If it can't stay about five, it's going to four or three.
To me, that's the trait.
I want to see signs of being wrong, and that's the bottom line is just all this nuances
from Mr. Trump.
Yeah, gold loves him and maybe it's love's gone a little bit too much now.
Okay, so let's with a few minutes left talk about where the money rotates,
if any of these all-time high assets.
Yeah, let me share this.
And you'll appreciate this, I think, Mike.
Let me see if I can share this window.
Is this working?
Yeah, coming.
Which window do you see?
You see that?
Okay, great.
So this is TLT, this is the long,
this is the, for those people who don't know,
this is the, basically the long bond.
This is 20 year treasuries, you know, 20 to 30 year treasuries.
and when it goes higher, that means that rates are going down.
Okay, so when, you know, when we entered 2019, 2020, this was a phenomenal trade, right?
So rates went to zero because we had, we had COVID, like everything went straight to zero because you had, you basically, this was the risk off move right here.
This is what Mike is talking about, that if we have some sort of geopolitical event,
We have a global meltdown.
We have an economic meltdown.
Yes, people will be diving into the U.S. Treasury as safety.
They're not going to be diving.
Like, gold may or may not benefit from that.
In the front end, it's already benefited, I think, is that this is the issue.
So people will go into this, but then look what happened when we started raising rates.
And this is the back end of it when we started printing money.
And so this is the.
the reversal of that trade, which is what we're talking about in the long term, that nothing
stops the train is it reverses out because people like, oh, my God, here comes inflation.
And, you know, when you're staring down 9% inflation, you do not want to be holding 10 year to
20 year to 30 year treasuries.
You know, that's just not where you want to have your money because you have basis risk.
And we saw the largest reversal that, you know, the 60, 40 portfolio got absolutely demolished
in this period because of that.
So for what Scott is asking is we're talking about two different things.
You're talking about a trade where you have a meltdown of the economy and this happens.
I'm talking about a position of a long, long term.
Talking about a position of a lifetime.
That chart looks like platinum did a year ago.
Coco did two years before.
Stuck in a narrow range.
But the key thing to point about that chart is for
that to stay like that. Remember, that's,
TLT made 7% last year, almost 7%
despite the fact the stock market went up 17%.
I look at TLT as a put that's appreciating
with zero time decay, and the minute the stock market
corrects, TLT is going to drop right up to that 120
level in a heartbeat.
That's my point. That's the only thing that matters
now for that. Yeah, that's my point. You're going to go right
back to this level on a shock. Now, what happens
long, long term, though, Mike? What happens 10 years from now?
Well, it's one bridge at a time.
That's a good problem to worry about.
Right.
So the point is that it's not free.
You are being debased, you know, and that's the point.
So it's a trade.
It's not, you know, it's not like, I would not say go buy 30-year treasuries and stick them in your retirement account and go to sleep on it.
Like that's not, to me, that is not, that's not.
Okay.
So that's what I want to point out is I really important, enjoyed at the Economic Club meeting, I think.
think it was in December with Michael Saylor. He says, his quote, was, we put money we can afford to
lose into Bitcoin. That's going to go down in history as the biggest taunt of the market gods ever.
You're supposed to put that in bonds and yields. I'm just saying that's the way it used to work.
And when I see a stock market, the most expensive 100 years in bonds, the cheapest versus gold in almost 50 years,
that's not a trade. It's when it gets started. It's my point is we're looking at starts trades that
might be getting started. Maybe Bitcoin peaked around 100 grand just a couple weeks ago.
that potentially, if it continues down, that's getting started.
My point is if you just drop 10% in the stock market and stay down,
that's severe deflation we haven't seen in 100 years.
My point is the market's already looking ahead of that.
Bitcoin's already rolled over.
Microstrategy rolled over.
NASDAQ peaked in December.
I mean, the stuff is, it can keep going,
but the other markets are telling you let go that that's not going to be a trade.
It's going to start as a trade.
And then it's contention.
But right now I don't care about that.
It's one trade at a time.
It's just one year.
Absolutely. If you're looking for signal, it's one trade at a time. Absolutely.
Where does the money rotate, Dave? We got three minutes.
Bitcoin did you roll over. Bitcoin correct it. And I think that you have to look at the magnitude.
A 30% correction when you had the smaller rally relative to its previous rallies is more or less end.
So we are now in what I call time-based capitulation. I do not expect anything to happen anytime soon.
but when it happens, it will happen. And that is, and that matters. The sentiment matters,
new money matters, all the stuff matters. When you talk about things as happening when they've
already happened and we've been in a range and we stay in a range, you don't, you'd get there.
So if silver stops today, I have no idea where it goes because I don't think it stops today.
I think that this market's going to be volatile and it's going to capture people's attention.
And I think we have months left. But when it rolls over or when people,
are looking for it, the people who are buying silver aren't jumping into TLT.
I think that you will see a rotation and it will depend on what the macro
jump into Bitcoin. That's the question I was really trying to ask.
Well, I believe it will. I think that silver is foreshadowing Bitcoin, but I think it
people are so impatient in this world that until you get, until the leverage money is
made and people get actually hurt and actually liquidated, not once, not twice, but
multiple times. Think of how many times people have played Bitcoin breakouts and gotten their noses
smacked by the newspaper since, you know, since just even since October, right? It's a lot.
We had a massive shock on October 10th. It was very much the same size as Luna. And that took over
six months to clear. We're not at six months yet. I've been saying it. And someone reminded me
over the weekend that on Macro Monday, right after the October 10th, I said that expect to see a similar
time. I haven't changed that. So I'm not going to sit here for the next eight weeks and say anything
different that I've been saying for the last four months, which is I don't think Bitcoin is going to
recover until that shock has cleared and we have a new narrative. And we may very well have a new
narrative, but that is what it is. I also don't think that silver trade is going to change
anytime soon over the next, you know, a couple of months because I do think that you're going to
see volatility. One place, Mike and I agree, and I love your comment on your post. This
this weekend, which you wanted to say people who go along get killed, but you knew enough to say
the both along and the shorts are going to get, are going to get hurt.
It's the devil's medal.
It's going to be some fun trading, but devil's metal is going to just.
If you can bring up this, I shared a screen.
This is a 10-year chart on silver.
So that's just not normal.
It's a weekly.
It's not normal.
It's not normal.
So be careful out there.
that's it
just be careful
yep
yeah I mean
that is a beach
hard to lie
and the question
is is it above the water now
and about to start
falling back to the water
I mean that's not even a banana
that's going to turn into
you know a boomerang
so yeah it
there's no way
that moves like that
I don't mean I want to be clear
I don't mean that's going to go back to $20
I mean it's going backwards
it's oh it's
it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it
it's it's it.
trees don't grow to the sky.
We all say the same thing.
We all know it.
I mean, traders can do whatever the hell they want to do
and you can make money in these things.
But, you know, understanding,
is it a fundamental reset or not?
Are we unwinding about,
since when was William Jennings, Brian, 1870?
Are we unwinding 150 years of monetary history?
Yeah, I actually think we are.
So there's a reset going on.
But it's still that kind of a chart.
It doesn't end there.
It doesn't go like that.
And then just that one.
You probably, you might be right.
And I still think you might get a chance to buy silver around 50 of history is a guy.
That's just, it's the devil's matter for reason.
I'm not arguing with you. I'm not arguing with you.
I'm telling you, I think we are seeing a reset.
But I also think that you have to understand that the, and the amount of margin, people forget,
we, I'm going to, I said something a few weeks ago.
Remember when the CME raised margin requirements and it went from 80 down to 70?
And I said, I don't think it's going to.
do what they think it's going to do because, and I said it at the time, and I'll repeat it,
the size of the Contract for Differences market, which trades on as much as 100x leverage,
is larger than the CME futures.
And therefore, the CME futures are being used quite often by the market makers that are
making markets in that CFD market.
And so by increasing the market, you need, you, the CFD is trade by the 100 million.
They don't trade by a million dollars.
There's a lot, but there's also a retail component to that.
You can't make a CFD trade for a lot.
less than like a hundred million.
Well, yes, you can.
Yes, you can.
Not in the United States, but you can in, in, in, in various places all around Asia,
the Middle East and Europe.
Yeah.
And so that market is huge.
The market makers had their liquidity constrained, meaning moves get magnified, which is
exactly what I said would happen.
So we now, so the CME effectively made because they thought there was obviously, they did it for
whatever their reasons were.
They, you know, they, they could see how much margin the market makers have and they
want to do it. They actually made the market less liquid. Less liquid markets don't, doesn't mean
go down. Doesn't mean go up. It means magnified volatility. And that's exactly what happened.
And I agree with Mike that silver bulls and bears are going to get their faces ripped off.
That's right. If you're playing on leverage, you're, you are, if, boy, it's like how many times
have we seen it? Bitcoin levels, it's the same thing. It's the same freaking thing. You know,
we're in a range. We can't wipe out this weekend. We're playing breakouts or breakdowns generally get
their noses smack with it with a rolled up newspaper. And unfortunately, it's, it's just, it's just,
you need to understand when we get to the point where there is a, a directional market in Bitcoin
or in fact, in crypto, it will look very different than it does today. Right now, the sentiment is
crypto winter. I will, I will continue to say it. Crypto market is like your background on your
screen, even though you're actually sitting in Florida. No, no here. What? That's real no.
we'll know what you're talking about.
Yeah, I mean,
Bitcoin may only be down 30%,
but if you look at the rest of the market,
it's hard to argue that it's anything,
but this weather or worse for the crypto market right now.
Great conversation, guys.
Next week, we will be celebrating an existing government shutdown
instead of just pontificating about one that will likely come.
We may be on.
Who knows what will be happening in Minnesota,
and we'll have 7,000 percent tariffs on Canada,
may or may not be
by that.
So.
And don't forget aircraft carriers
going to the,
going to the Middle East,
yada,
yada,
yada, yada, yada.
And silver at $300.
By next month.
Here to hear about.
Yeah.
No.
Okay.
We do unfortunately
have to leave another great macro Monday.
Thank you.
Mike,
James,
and Dave.
and I go continue the
conversation on what we've dubbed
smelting.
Town Hall.
You can't even talk about.
There's just nothing to talk.
It's, yay, clarity act.
I mean, that's basically the substance of any crypto power.
Of course, you'll drag to a halt if the government shuts down.
Which, Mike, the Clarity Act today was on my D.I list.
I had the story pulled up.
I'm going to deliberately ignore this one right now.
All right, gentlemen.
That's all we got.
We will see you, of course, next Monday.
Thank you, everyone.
Bye.
