The Wolf Of All Streets - Bitcoin PANIC At $87K As Lower Highs Set In! What's Next?
Episode Date: December 16, 2025🎙 Guests Tom Dunleavy - https://x.com/dunleavy89/media Andrew Parish: https://x.com/AP_Abacus Tillman Holloway: https://x.com/texasol61 Discover Bitcoin Yield: https://archpublic.com/...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bitcoin is now trading below $87,000 and the fear and greed index is back to historic lows
around 11.
Now, there's a lot of reasons to be optimistic about the future of crypto and Bitcoin with
tokenization narratives happening across the board, institutions and governments.
But honestly, everybody just wants to see price go up and that has not happened.
We're going to unpack all of that with Andrew Tillman and special guests, Tom Levy,
today on the show. Let's go, guys. It's going to be a great one.
Good morning, everybody, and welcome to the big city. You know, the big city vibes are important
to keep when Bitcoin is trading at around 87,000. So we moved the studio.
obviously to a big city. We've got Andrew, Tom, and Tillman here today. I feel like you guys
are in big cities too. Big city. No. Tielman, you're not in a big city. You're on the cast of
Robin Hood. I think Andrew said you had a strong Indiana Jones vibe, but I was committed to making a
best joke. Listen, I've got a whip right outside the camera view. And Scott, got your name on it, Scott.
To be honest, I heard some of this from Andrew's basement today. So I think the gift has a whip down there.
Rest and peace to Peter Green, who played Zed in Pulp Fiction. He died this week. Zed's dead, baby.
Zed is dead. So listen, I want to actually start, Tom. You had a tweet here that I want to talk about.
Why does it feel like we have less new and interesting crypto startups? One key contributing factor is less
capital deployed by VCs. Crypto VC funds raised $20 billion in 2021, almost 40 in 2022,
and now listed $5 billion for three straight years. What? Despite less capital being deployed,
valuations remain historically high and higher than traditional VCs. You must be really excited
to have started a venture capital fund not so long ago in the crypto space.
Oh, that's amazing. Well, in all seriousness, though, it's actually really good if you are
deploying capital and pre-seed and seed right now. The valuations are a bit higher,
But there is so much less competition.
So on the other chart you have there, you'll see that 2021 and 2020, we raised $20 billion and then $40 billion almost.
And a lot of that capital, almost all of that capital is deployed.
So all those vintage 21, 22 funds have really shot their load right now.
And then they're going and back into the capital markets right now and trying to fundraise.
And you've seen the inability of these folks to actually fundraise because you still don't have distributions.
you have crypto market prices now down.
So these folks aren't able to raise, which then comes into the broader VC markets
that they're not able to deploy because there's no capital.
So if you are still fighting in the trenches, there's still a lot of opportunity here.
But, yeah, valuations have still not come down to sort of make it that much more attractive
for the folks who are still left.
You're still paying a bit higher prices.
So what are you doing?
Are you just sitting on the sidelines and waiting for the right opportunities?
I mean, if valuations are too high and there's less money chasing them, it's just
basically impossible for projects to raise. I see a hell of a lot less pitches and I see the
opportunity to put a lot more money than I ever would into everything, meaning nobody else is
putting their money anywhere. Yeah, sort of in tandem with this, you're seeing much larger raises.
So the pools of capital that are remaining are sort of coalesced in series A, series B plus
and are firing in these huge rounds, right? You've seen Revolut for a billion, Crackin,
by, you know, mesh, zero hash, a ton of these,
polymarkets, bigger rounds.
So the ones that are left are really firing
into these more sure things
is they have clear exit pass now
in the IPO markets in the US.
Preseed and seed, it's just a lot less,
you know, capital being employed there
and then there's less startups,
which means, you know, less pitches on Scott's desk.
But, you know, in terms of what we're seeing
across that space, there's a lot of interesting areas
that, you know, are starting to come to fruition
now that we have a, let's call it,
more grown-up mindset in the space.
You know, there's a lot of speculation.
for a long time. But now we're seeing things like a lot of RWA products, you know, things like
Asapac securities, you know, MBS, you know, really, you know, nice cash flowing products that
really don't fit well in traditional markets because they may be a smaller size or starting to come
on chain in crypto in meaningful ways. You know, you have the things that folks are seeing like
prediction markets, which are, I call them legitimately real world use cases in terms of how you
can use them for hedging or whatever you want up and above speculation in sports betting,
which seems to be a lot of the driver of today, vault products, which again provide a level
of all world, real world yield and things like that. So you're still seeing a number of
interesting opportunities come, but it's taking longer for these rounds to get filled. There
are less VCs involved, and the timeline to the next phase and growth is much longer than it
used to be in 2021, 2022, even 2023. What I hear when I listen to that is how right I was.
I know you didn't say that specifically, but I've been saying for a very long time that
crypto-adjacent equities and IPOs have just replaced the interest in all coins and
launches. Like, people would rather buy bullish the day before it launches than they would
to buy a token that's going to unlock for four years. But, yeah.
100%. Would you rather buy, you know, draft kings right now at, you know, 13, 14 billion? Or would you
rather buy, you know, polymarket pre-equity, $15 billion.
You know, people are starting to have these conversations
when you have these enormous outcomes for these crypto companies
and they're comparing them to real businesses in the traditional world.
So I'm in Andrew, I think you just said that maybe these aren't real businesses.
That's what I heard.
Well, I think it's about time that utility is the dog and not the tail.
You know, utility, I think in the 2007,
The last time I remember money really flowing was in the ICO craze and into the space.
And, you know, there was a lot of money to be made.
And I think there is a lot of money to be made still.
I think there's a lot more confusion.
I think, honestly, the whole meme coin, and not to cast blame, but the whole Trump coin, you know, fiasco.
And then all of the, you know, rug pulls that we saw from the Libra coin, you know, just that.
whole whipsaw that people had to endure at the front end of this cycle or, you know, several
months ago, I think it taxed everybody. It wore everybody out. And I think that the whipsaw above and
below 100,000, you know, the market does what the market does for a reason. It grinds you out
of your position. And how many times have we talked about people being bored in the market?
Yeah. Well, I mean, it sounds like the VCs are bored, too. It's like everybody's sitting on go waiting until there's a real, you know, a firing gun that gives the signal that it's the race is on again. And so there's no, it's, it says, sounds like it's a total, you know, buyers market. And there's more buyers than there are sellers. And, and, you know, that's, that's the same across a lot of fronts, to be honest with you. It's, so, you know, doesn't, doesn't shock me. I'm still.
very, very hopeful that what Coinbase did through the ICO launch, even though, you know, bad
timing and in a bad cycle right now, but other than that, I think it was a sterling example of
what we're going to see in the future. And I do think that is going to spark a lot of utility
driven conversation around these launches. And if you see a follow-through of users, you know,
going after that utility, I think Defi specifically has some examples of some opportunities that
could really unlock a lot of users and get a lot of money flow coming in very quickly.
But, you know, Pump Fund was an example of this.
There's still that desire.
I just think everybody's been burned so recently so many times.
It's kind of like, which horse do you pick on riding?
Because I'm sore from getting bucked off sort of thing.
Yeah.
I would say I hadn't looked at Monad.
So this is the one, obviously, that was the highly hyped launch on Coinbase, and I guess maybe not, it's not a full Christmas tree, so that's good, but clearly not the best performance.
Well, it's all relative, right? Compare it to the other alts, and it's done amazingly. Well, I think the ICO price, launch price was 25, or two and a half cents. So, yeah, we're down a little bit. But to be expected when everything else is down 12, 15, 20%.
too. I think I could be wrong. Tom, you might vote this and then we'll go to Andrew,
but I think investors were at like 40 cents or something, right? And then because there was
some like shock that the public sale was lower than one of the investment rounds or something
like that. Yeah, materially higher than the current price. So everyone's lost here. Everyone's
lost here. Good time. Andrew. Yeah. I would think that the initial charts that you showed of
the, you know, the reduction in, you know, VC money in the crypto space.
You could probably just do a different version of those charts that shows the increase in the AI commitment on the VC side, right?
So I would think that those charts would, I don't know if mirror would be the correct term.
But there's probably some meaningful correlation across the broader spectrum of VC money.
Crypto VC money is a real, you know, a niche of a niche of a niche, of a niche.
niche. But from a broader VC standpoint, you know, the just, you know, rocket ship of
investment that's gone into the AI space over the past two years, you know, that's a big,
big, big pivot. You go from $40 billion down to $5 billion. That money has gone somewhere.
That money has adjusted and found a different place that they find, that finds more interesting.
Now, will there be a time in place where, you know, the idea of AI and the idea of crypto maybe, you know, we'll meet again?
Who knows? We'll see. There's lots of theories associated with that. Or maybe there's a lot of hope in the crypto space that at some point, AI and crypto become best friends.
But in terms of, you know, the actual investable dollars, one would think, one would posit that,
the move in AI and it in it grabbing nearly all of the oxygen associated with just markets
in total would have something to do with the drop in in overall bc money into the crypto space
yeah i want to pivot a bit to the actual price because that's what people generally want to talk
about here i mean we got coin market cap of course looking at bitcoin around 86a the
Ethereum now back below 3,000, just getting slaughtered in the past 24 hours once again after
having a nice bounce.
But I want to zoom in more on this, which is that we're at the, well, that worked out great.
I'll just tell you guys, that's exactly what I intended that to do.
The Fear and Greed Index is at 11, right?
We were at Extreme Fear at 10 last month.
That's about as low as it gets.
Like I saw the stock one got down to six or seven, but we rarely ever get below 10.
So sitting here at 87,000, which I would argue has been sideways chop.
like well where's this extreme fear at this point coming from and is that are they right or is this a counter signal
well this is the point of the show where i lean into my faint kink okay um and tell us tell us how hot
larry think yes the last week here's the big difference between institutional money and traditional
institutional money and then crypto twitter right so larry think is out there saying nation states are
buying the dip on bitcoin i mean what what level of a sizable headline a ground-shaking headline would
that have been three years ago i don't know what it would have done to price but i'm i'm certain
that it would have moved it up into the right right like that literally larry think said that out
loud uh to to to the public so we have you know the world of traditional
finance, which has finally embraced Bitcoin and to a certain extent, crypto.
And they're allocating to it.
And they're in his words, buying the dip.
They see this as an opportunity.
And then we go to our funny little app called Coin Market Cap and the Fear Index is all the, you know, it goes on E almost.
So there's just this massive disconnect between the two worlds that, you know, and in that massive disconnect is probably a very, very unique.
opportunity in the medium and long term. Short term, different conversation. In the medium and
long term, at some point, those two worlds get back, you know, collide again. And, uh, and you get
price and your point. Do you imagine what this would have done to price if we weren't in this
miserable like side chop? Yeah. For those who can't read words, just in 11 trillion dollar
Charles Schwab, adds Salana Futures to its trading platform.
Salana Futures on Schwab.
Like, this is stuff from Stranger Things Upside Down.
Breaking, JPM Morgan will now accept Bitcoin as collateral for loans.
And then you go beyond this and you see what the DCC has been saying
and what SEC Chairman Paul Atkins has been saying.
I mean, we're at peak adoption, at least of the technology and of the asset class
across every institution you could ever dream of.
And here we are.
$86,800. I mean, Tom, like, everything we asked for we've gotten, are we just spoiled?
Like, what's the deal here? Yeah. So, you know, there's a quote by Paul Atkins the other day. He said he
expects the entire U.S. financial market to migrate to block train infrastructure within the next two
years. Two years. What would happen? Two years. What would happen if Gary Gensler said that? I mean,
it would be an avalanche back in the day. So I think we're a more when Gary Gensel
said something bad than they do now when somebody says something good but go ahead yeah yeah so you know
we have these amazing fundamental underpinnings and i think unfortunately we're we're unfortunately or
unfortunately we're growing up as an industry and now these major assets because of how big they are
going to take time to move with the flows of traditional markets so you've had these very positive
momentum indicators not only from the institutions you mentioned but hey vanguard just said you know now you can
trade Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and I think Ripple on their platform as well. That's 50 million
users and advisors who are opening up. Bank of America now allow advisors to have up to
three or four percent allocation in their portfolios for crypto. But the speed of which those
institutional flows move is not at the speed we're going to move at in crypto. We move at quick
leverage 100x per paces. These guys move over quarterly meetings. So it's going to take a few more
quarters here, but I think Q1 and Q2 are going to be fantastic, given all the underpinnings we've
seen here. And you have people right now kind of window dressing their portfolios and the
Troutfi side for the end of the year. Hey, I bang the, whatever, 15 to 20% of my portfolio.
Like, I'm not going to throw in this crypto thing last minute. Guess why? We're going to wait
until Q1 after I book my numbers. So I think Q1 and Q2 are going to be fantastic, and you're
just seeing all the underpinnings right here right now.
I would totally echo and agree with that. I think that, you know, the,
it's no different than turbulence in an airplane i think the the passengers feel the turbulence
but we're up in the gulf stream and we're making incredible headway and and picking up a lot of
time because the prevailing winds are behind us and blowing us to our destination
we're going to get there quicker than anybody thinks and the reaction to that arrival is going
to be bigger than anybody thinks and i think the reversal is going to be bigger and you know if we look
at any other cycle, including this one, 30, 40% pullbacks are mainstay. And so what's the difference
between this cycle and any of the other ones? Wall Street wants a position. And it takes
longer for them to accumulate a position than the previous cycles. And so they're going to shake
the tree harder than they ever have. And you're seeing, like I said this to somebody the other
but hey, if you really took the temperature of the markets when we broke $100,000 the first time,
it was kind of laissez-faire about it.
I mean, I don't know if y'all remember, but we waited for that day for like a decade.
And then when it came, we were kind of like, let's throw a party, 100,000 party.
And then we went back down, we were like, let's throw another $100,000 party.
And this $100,000 mark that we waited for for so long that in a lot of people's mind,
the big bagholders was the first stage of exit liquidity.
Like, that's where they wanted to take some money off the table.
Well, I think psychologically, that's too good of an opportunity for the large buyers to pass
up, you know, yanking us back and forth over that pricing threshold and creating the resistance
and or the foundation off of that pricing level to really build a foundation and go higher.
So it doesn't surprise me at the same time, obviously I was sitting.
there cheered it on when it broke 126 thinking we were going to 135 and like thinking it was an inevitable
you know thing but the markets have a way of making a fool out of all of us and you know if you're in
leverage during periods like this this is what is what makes leverage dangerous is boredom and
you know ranging prices that whipsaw you back and forth into losing lots and lots of those
trades but i mean we have this guy buying a bill a week
wearing your vest if we're being honest
I mean
what if we didn't have sailor buying a billion a week right now
where are we sitting
in the entire market right now is he just
you know yeah we need to get some
Tom Lee means that look like that too
but somehow
somehow it's his hair that's fighting the bear
you know what I mean like that's that's what we
for the markets to really spin up um i mean listen the banks that are funding the process with
sailor and strategy are like you know as happy as they've ever been and i would assume that the
guys running those particular uh desks slash divisions in those banks uh are going to have a really
sizable bonus year uh giving the amount of business they've done with sailor and the the capital
that they've uh made available to him so um
Yeah, I mean, where would we be, you know, this year without, you know, Sailor's work and in the amount of size that he's done on the Bitcoin side?
I think 2026, you know, as per Tom's comments, is going to be significant because you're going to see the fruit finally sort of come to bear with the amount of scale associated with Tradfai.
and the quote unquote product that will be created around Bitcoin
and Ethereum principally.
You're going to see, again, the options markets,
the structured product markets, all the stuff
that Wall Street likes to do to generate meaningful fees
really, really start to take off.
It's been a conversation and it's been a,
we're doing this.
or we're going to do this, you know, sort of process through the second half of 2025.
But then you're going to see all of that happen and see how it's going to affect the other
crypto markets for real in 2006. It's going to be fascinating.
Well, I think the story that everybody, if you're in the space, it's always been hard to do
crypto. Pick anything. Just name something. And I can tell you,
big pain in the side or thorn in the side that plagued that specific experience from a user
interface or from an ease ability or from interconnectivity like if you some a lot of the days in the
old days you'd have to get into a specific coin to do anything now a lot of those you know interconnectivity
points have been built and now a lot of the innovation that i see that's most exciting
allows users to participate in Defi and not even know that they are, right?
It's integrated at the exchange level.
You couldn't do that as an exchange, you know, until now.
This time is very unique.
And so you see these large, large on-ramps that are going to be utilized.
Why are they going to be utilized?
Well, because they give the user a lot more than anyone else is giving them.
They give them a higher yield on their deposits.
They give them more lending options and more functionality as a bank
themselves to make money and arbitrage opportunities off of their money, all of those things
are being woven into the fabric, right?
They're not ready to go until it's easy to use them.
If there's one thing that I've missed in every single cycle, it's the, I grossly underestimate
how easy something has to be for mass adoption, right?
And so if you look at some of the things that we've been claiming and hailing is to be,
of disruptors and huge market movers in the crypto space and how they translate into the traditional
markets. A lot of them have been really hard to use until now. And so I just see this wave
of adoption coming. And even on the purchasing side, right, you see this natural buy pressure
from Wall Street that's coming in at even a paper level, at a product level, like micro
strategy or strategy now. Like all of this buying pressure is not
is now systematic. It's almost like the 401k 1% volume every day in the markets. It's just this
constant buy that lifts everything, and it's really attached to the inflation curve or to the
inflation of the dollar. We're starting to see that type of rising tide floats all ship activity
in the crypto space, which means it's going to change the way the four-year cycle works. It's going to
change everything we know about the market, because now we have a new master, essentially. And
time will tell when they let it pop again and we see price appreciation go where it is.
But, you know, I would venture to say that, you know, if you look at the gold and the silver
market over the last 20 years, you could see some unique products being built like ETFs.
And you saw a lot of price manipulation based upon the fact that you have counter levers
in the market that now can be used for those purposes.
And I see the same thing, the maturity and the adopt.
of crypto is bringing those types of products and those types of levers to this market.
And it's exciting. Why? Well, because it guarantees volume. It guarantees flow.
Like those types of infinite money loops where people can make bets and offset their bets
and they're doing it in tax advantage vehicles or according to their charter rules to the extent
their exposure allows. Like those are all things that, you know, I saw that CME is now doing spot
Solana pricing, right?
So this integration, the CME, is now doing that.
So, you know, if we're talking about, like, the innovation on the crypto exchanges,
they're like light years ahead of that, like Coinbase and those other ones.
But you're even talking about the CME and the NASDAQ and these kind of traditional spaces
having to adapt and adopt this technology.
I mean, here you go, NASDAQ moving forward with 24-7 stock trading.
expect to have 24th trading on weekdays by Q2, right?
I mean, I had seen another story 23 hours, so there was one hour of maintenance,
but speaking of being light years ahead, right?
But I guess the problem, though, is like once we have stocks 24-7, 365,
once you have, as Tom said, polymarket public, now available to the United States people,
like, we need crypto to be a lot more than the thing you can speculate on when other markets are closed
and with higher leverage
because now you're going to be able to bet
on the weather. I would even say
there's going to be a time when you can bet
on the weather with leverage, because why not?
Oh, 100%.
And you'll be able to bet on options 24-7, 365.
So what's left for us?
We don't need meme coins.
Yeah, we're already seeing a ton of markets,
particularly in prediction products.
So things around inherent leverage
that you can utilize to juice
up your bets. We're seeing parlays, which are coming in from traditional sports betting,
which they've renamed. I think combos or something Kalshi did, which is like hilarious.
We're also seeing re-hypification and utilization of positions to actually use as collateral.
So, for example, if I bet on, you know, Trump decides to run for a third term and wins or something
like that. And the outcome is not for another three years, but that position all of a sudden
went from one cents and then he announces it and all of a sudden it's 45 cents and i made all this
money can i use that position as collateral and some of my other investments now another recursive
loop of leverage here but you see this in traditional finance all the time right i have an asset i want to
find a way to actually utilize that and you know put it in another position or de-risk or whatever
and you're seeing a lot of interesting things around prediction markets now i think we do have to be
careful though because the prediction market activity in particular right now is largely driven by sports
betting 65 to 70 percent. And that is predicated on some recent regulation in the new, you know,
big, beautiful bill by Trump that made it very punitive, you know, very cost prohibitive to actually
do sports betting on these other platforms and have another, you know, a number of other tax
advantages from doing our prediction markets. But, you know, that is very fragile. If that changes,
and all of a sudden that flips back, these platforms do not look as interesting as they used to.
Yes, there's inherently a number of other things right now. But I think we're still in the euphoria phase.
how we're all excited we found that you know what does look interesting in
2006 is what are what's the consequences good or bad of significantly cheaper money because
we're going to get it all right we're going to get meaningful reductions in in interest rates
and you know a prediction that i'm you know very comfortable making is at some point we'll
see consolidation in the crypto industry associated with exchanges um you know i'm reminded
that Morgan Stanley bought e-trade for $13 billion,
I think right around five years ago.
That's an interesting number, right?
Who's to say that there isn't an exchange here
in the United States, fully compliant across the board,
given the regulatory environment that we find ourselves in,
where there is a purchase by Morgan Stanley.
So Morgan Stanley, I know a bunch of guys there
from, you know, my trad-fied days, there were whispers of a, you know, some sort of crypto
opportunity that Morgan Stanley would jump on. And those continue. And that's that has everything to do
with just the customers that exist at that exchange and adding millions and millions and millions
to the Morgan Stanley ecosystem. It also should be noted that Morgan Stanley is one of the, you know,
only, you know, principal money management firms that has, you know, has retained global reach,
right?
So a lot of the money management firms, whether it's Merrill or some others, they won't, you know,
they basically consolidated and sold off all their assets everywhere, but the United States.
Morgan Stanley didn't do that.
So the ability to service customers on a global scale and bring in, you know, 50 million new folks,
you know, associated.
and have access to Morgan Stanley and Morgan Stanley has access to.
That's the only reason they bought E-Trade is because Morgan Stanley effectively went from
three million customers to, you know, five to seven X that number when they purchased E-Trade.
So the same thing could happen with our crypto exchange given the, you know, big, big wide lanes
associated with the regulatory space and real clarity there, as well as cheap money and the
opportunity to go out and make an acquisition to the tune of, you know, 10, 15, 20 billion
dollars. I probably don't need to name the exchanges that would fit into that particular slot,
but there's a couple of them. Yeah, that makes sense. I like what Tom kind of said about the
fragility of a lot of the things we can currently do, right? I will see what happens, obviously,
with the polymarkets, but I think one of the biggest ones worth discussing, obviously, is
this that the Senate Banking Committee confirms Bitcoin and crypto market structure bill would not
advance in 2025. We know what the prize is here. I think we've got like three more days of the
government pretending to do something, which is like three minutes of actual action, right?
Like they're the opposite of crypto years. Like a, you know, in a normal year is a year
in crypto, it feels like 17. There they just like do three months. But now this is getting punted
to 2026. I'm old enough to remember at the beginning of the summer.
when this was going to be done in August,
President Trump said it had to be on his desk, right?
Listen, we know the government's slow,
so I'm not criticizing him specifically, obviously.
But the point being that this keeps getting kicked
and the further gets kicked,
the further we get to midterms,
the further we get towards the odds of this not happening,
and talk about fragile, right?
I mean, if we don't get legislation,
all it takes is, you know,
a new head of the Senate Banking Committee
or a new SEC chairman,
even in a couple of years, and all of a sudden we have the pendulum swinging back the other way
and everything that we've seemingly built starts to come apart.
So I think it is worth noting how fragile the current Goldilocks phase is, I think is why it's so
frustrating to people that we haven't seen Price move in this beautiful Goldilocks face.
Yeah, this is very big.
So what are the remaining issues right now?
Stable coin yield, who's going to get that and why?
AMLKYC for Defi.
It seems like we're almost there on that.
Who's going to have the jurisdiction over crypto, SEC, or CFTC?
And then finally, which seems to be the biggest sticking issue,
are Trump-related profits on crypto and how, you know, going forward,
his associated entities can potentially profit from the space.
So that's a few things to still work through right now.
It seems like we're at the finish line here.
There's a lot of agreement, but it's going to take some time.
and the priority when we come back from recess here is actually going to be the government shutdown
bill, which they can shut down again in January. I mean, let's go. Let's do it. Shut it down.
But yeah, I mean, Tom, you're right. This is, it's going to clearly go further down the list of priorities.
It is, but at the same time, I think the genie is out of the bottle. I don't think you can put the
cat back in the bag. I think that if you just look at the innovation and the rate of innovation,
that Coinbase alone, I could take you through a litany of things that they've done in the last six months
that are so disruptive and so inclusive and rewrite the rules as it relates to invitations of IPOs and public offerings
and yield on defy. You can participate in yield farming through defy without even knowing what defy you're using.
All these access points with 130 million customers, if I just take anything from the
past, look at every other administration, look at any other period of time. Coinbases are always
gotten the past. I mean, yeah, they've had to fight a little friction here and there, but for the
most part, they've been the golden child that can do no wrong and that has gotten a bit, you know,
given, been given the green light to do all of these innovative things. You can't stop that
because the rest of the world has already got the recipe. So I think at some level, all
the politicians know that this is going to keep going with or without us.
And so all you're doing at some point is hurting, you know, the U.S. economy from being able to
participate in it.
And I don't, I don't see any legislation.
Yeah, we may not get clarity as soon as we thought.
And yes, this may drag out a little bit.
But I don't see anybody stopping innovation because there's, yeah, what we can and cannot
do, right?
Obviously, you said the golden child and I thought of this movie.
Do you guys remember this movie?
It was so good.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
It's hilarious.
I want to know.
Yeah.
Please.
Yeah.
To Tom, before we let you go, like, let's just talk market once again really quick.
I mean, will any of these things be a catalyst?
And what do you expect, like, in your mind as you're handicapping it, nobody has a crystal ball,
but 2026, right?
There's the four years side.
We have to talk about this every show.
mandated for your cycle crowd says top was in in October see you in I don't know like 2036 or
something I don't know there's yeah and then there's the 2026 is going to be amazing yay
crypto yeah I'm I'm sort of a permable so this is hard for me unfortunately but you know
structurally bullish but you know what are the issues that caused this crash it was Trump
talking about tariffs on China 100% tariffs on 10 10 and then all of the structural leverage
and online that came from that, still working its way through the system. And then we had this
whole Japan currency yield sort of crisis, again, trad-fi sucking liquidity out of what is now
a huge macro asset. These things are going to clean themselves up next year. And the four-year cycle
is completely dead. If we're going down next year, it's not because of that. It's because
of things like politics, the Clarity Act not being passed. Midterm election years are generally
challenging for risk assets. So all of those things are structurally much more important than
of Bitcoin emits a fraction of a percent less on markets.
Now, my view is clarity gets passed after we go through the government shutdown issues
that we have to resolve in January.
The next item on the docket is certainly crypto, and that will be barring any other black swans.
That will be the focus.
Once we have that, there have been projections out there from grayscale and other big
providers, Coinbase that are looking at $300 billion plus on the sidelines waiting to come in.
once we have legislative clarity on if these things are commodities, securities, and what they
can actually do with them, because that trickles down to not only the actual traders and folks who
want to hold the assets, but the custodians, the record keepers, all of like the financial plumbing
that still exists. You still have real challenges with these assets. So, you know, structurally,
I think the second half, you know, Q2 onward, very, very strong for crypto more broadly.
And you're likely to see another, you know, continued influx of easing, whether that be reduction of QT, like we've seen quantity of tightening, further injections of liquidity.
Bessett just came out right before the show and said, hey, we're given one to two K stimulus checks out.
Like, whatever your view is on inflation, that can't be good for it.
But hey, this is what?
He did.
He did.
I realize that.
Wow.
So there's, you know, there's a, there's a lot.
Yeah, he said, you know, one to two K tax refunds in Q1, 2026.
And we also, Trump also said, we'd raise like 18 or 16 trillion in tariff revenue or something.
I was like, dude, you pay off half the debt in six months.
Good job.
There's no way these guys.
How are they going to do $2,000 stimulus?
Yeah.
But if I have the printing press.
Yeah.
This is where it's, you know where it's going, right?
So you still have this broader backdrop of financial nihilism, which people feel like
the only way to make it is 10 leg parlays or crypto.
So guess what?
If you're getting money in your bank account, these, I feel like an old man.
younger kids, younger generation is like, I can't buy a house.
I'm just going to give it a shot here.
So let's see what this Bitcoin thing can do for me.
I've heard it's going to hit a million.
I think you're just going to see a lot of the formal flows.
And that does happen in the back half of cycles, which I still think this is one broad cycle.
You do see 20 to 30 percent corrections across bull markets.
And I think this is just that.
Good news.
I found a clip.
We're good.
It doesn't have music, actually, but I'm not going to play it.
But kids, I don't really know how.
But yeah, I mean, listen, I think everybody here is more optimistic about 2026 and less concerned about the cycle, right?
But I can't speak for everybody.
But that's certainly I feel.
I think Andrew and Tillman and I have discussed that enough.
So Tom, man, thank you very much.
We're going to let you jump and go about your life watching TV and waiting for something to invest in to pop onto your desk.
The WC's work as hard as the government now.
a lot of good
Netflix shows out there
for the
I'm sure
the VCs are sitting on
lots of cash
and the government isn't
so yeah
that's great
well guys give Tom a follow
at Sun Levy
89
it's right there
I even brought up the names
thanks thanks
thanks
see you Tom
what's up guys
you what's up
you know I tried to
Google
I used the Google machine
to look up Tomley's hair
when we were doing
the bear thing
And you just get, like, Tommy Lee from...
Yes.
Oh, man, I didn't realize there's some...
There's one of him.
There's in all his glory.
He made it in.
But even as you...
Yeah, there's one.
Tommy Lee's hairstyles throughout the years.
There's another one.
And now we're getting that one.
You know, I saw a few, a few weeks back.
It was slicked back a little bit.
I was a little disappointed.
Got to be honest.
Send him a note.
Yeah, we got to poof that thing up.
Yeah, the market can only be as...
It can only go as high as Tom Lee's hair.
You know what I mean, somebody that can do one of those, you know, one of those tweets that says,
for every 100 likes, I'll make Tom Lee's hair higher, right, and bigger.
And so, yeah.
And then at some point, it's so big.
There's, like, one of those little weird little white, green little wossies like poking out,
looking, you know, from the hair.
Wossies, I haven't heard that term since the last.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That weird little community still.
is somewhere.
What do you want to talk about this?
Yeah, let's talk about it.
Let's do it.
Should we try Archpublic?
I totally misquoted last week
and then I went on a tweet tirade
after the show on Tuesday because I was wrong.
I said on the show, I was like,
I think I'm down like 11, 12%.
Of course, Bitcoin was like, you know,
up in the low 90s.
And then right after the show,
I saw a cell trigger on my Eiff.
Yeah.
I called you guys.
I was like, what the?
And I was.
back above cost basis on ETH, literally up on the ETH position when it was like a 3,300-ish.
Now the cost basis is lower again. So at that point, I was down 6% on Solana, up 0.6% or something
on Eith and down 7% on Bitcoin. Now I think we're back to about down 10% and buying again.
Like, nobody has ever cheered for Bitcoin to go lower probably than me or anybody else
using Arch Public. Like, I'm so here for this.
sideways thing. Somebody posted a tweet that showed like a chart with a huge green candle,
like up to 185. And it was like, Bitcoin does this tomorrow. What do you do?
Everyone's like, Lambo, exit. I'm like, cry.
Cry, exactly. It does change your emotions.
More money eventually coming and I would like to buy it now instead of it 185,000.
Yeah, no, it definitely changes the way you approach the markets and in a good way.
I think traditionally you react to the markets as price goes up, you feel the euphoria and you chase that price increase.
And you really, you know, if you read any books of any significance, if you listen to any of the professionals in the space, they'll tell you to counter trade the market, right?
Buy when people are fearful, sell when people are greedy.
You're supposed to be doing the opposite.
And it's hard to do that.
The emotions of doing that, you know, you're too in love with your money to do that.
without it be consternation and so automation helps do that and automation gets you disciplined
about keeping powder dry you know i if you talk to anybody right now there's kind of two schools
of thought well yours where it's like yeah keep going lower i've got dry powder and i want to keep
accumulating at a lower cost uh versus somebody who you know doesn't have dry powder and
has a cost basis up at 126 because they purchased everything up there
you know that concentration risk is hard and all those treasury companies yeah what so
great point um and so there is a way to de-risk volatility and you know you hear scott talking about
in a down market that there was a sell event well that sell event according to his software that he's
programmed can only sell when it's in profit so it's keeping track of his cost basis on a specific
I can I show you this while you're talking because I just want people to see it because we fixed the chart.
See all these longs below cost basis?
We got above cost basis, which by the way, you could also be selling below cost basis and it still helps you.
Yeah.
Because you're selling something you bought lower.
So it's not really like it's a potato potato.
It's how you want to approach it.
It literally got above cost basis and just unloaded profit from all of these longs and then just started dollar cost averaging again as it went lower.
I mean, it's insane.
Well, to the point that you're saying, if you've heard from anyone, volatility is an asset,
but you have no way of really using volatility as a means to make money.
This is what they're talking about.
It's like markets are moving up and down.
There is volatility in both directions, even when it's directional in one way.
Like if you're in a down market, right, and we've been in a down market for the last couple of months,
it doesn't mean that there's not going to be short-term volatility upside that can be harvested.
And so to the degree that you're sitting there watching the market 24-7, you can take advantage of those things.
Or to the degree that you want to take advantage of them while you're living your life, automation can take advantage of those opportunities.
And so what happens in those events?
Well, you're taking profits off the table and you're reloading your account with new fresh liquidity,
then you can be buying at a lower cost basis when the price starts to return.
trace again, which you can see on the chart. It did three additional purchases. What's interesting
and what I just want to point out, like, if you look, so every single one of these longs is the
dead snipe of the bottom of a big candle. So if you were manually just timing this and you're like
every one of these days, I want to buy, you might have bought here or here or here. You're buying
the dead bottom of that period that you've set. This happens to be on a six hour. I also have a daily
ETH running, right? I mean, we can look at all the things I've got going over here, right? These are all
of my Algos. But so, but I mean, it's just absolutely snipes the dead bottom of every one of these
candles. So yes, like price went lower than here, but I wanted to buy that day. And I got
well, and let's talk about if you want to accumulate a position in something, whether it's
invidia or Bitcoin or Eith or whatever it may be, when should you be buying? What, what is
the best time to buy into a position? Number one, if something's volatile and you're making a meaningful
investment, you should be spreading those purchases out so you get a healthy exposure to a long
period of time. That's called getting a healthy exposure to a cost curve. You want a cost curve over
the longest period of time that you can stomach right before the exponential move or the move
that you're planning on capturing. But, you know, when, let's just say you have six months to place that
capital. Over that six-month period, when should you buy? Well, you should buy when you have
the most liquidity to buy. Well, when do you have the most liquidity to buy? When there's more
sellers than buyers? So when are there more sellers than buyers? On big red candles. When are you
getting the best price? On big red candles? When can you measure market exhaustion and turnaround
so that you can make great bottom buys on big red candles? And so the software, again,
to Scott's point, you know, it's going to do things that you as a manual trader are not going to be
able to do, which is only buy on big red candles. So it's very disciplined about that. It's not
going to chase. If there's a big green candle, you're never going, oh, I've got to get in,
it's programmed. You're telling it only buy when there's a discount in price. And if you take
that mentality and you do it systematically in small chunks over a long period of time,
you can set it and forget it. And it's just a system. You know, as price goes increases, there's
more dry capital and more profits that have been harvested.
As price goes down, there's more dips.
And the only time you really have to think about it is when there's prolonged dips
or prolonged movements up, you know, you may find yourself rich in cash in light in position
or rich in position in light and cash.
And there's, you know, rebalancing efforts that you can do on your own inside the software
by just changing the settings.
It's all user driven.
So you can literally change any of these settings to make, you know,
You know, your purchases larger, your purchases smaller, your sales larger, your cell's smaller.
You know, you can time, you can create a, you can say, okay, I want to buy on a red candle that's this big, or I want to buy on a candle that's this big.
And you can make it exactly the way you wanted as the bottom.
I would just like to remind people that, A, my goal is accumulation, not necessarily like having more dollars.
So that's kind of irrelevant.
But if that was even your goal using my strategy, which is not a strategy built for that,
I started buying EF with this thing when it was $4,800.
And last Tuesday at $32.90 was even.
Yeah.
Okay.
Like, yes, it went lower than that.
But, like, I top ticked the beginning of this strategy, like, to the day on all of these assets and still was making profit on a sale a week ago.
When you start trading something is the timing.
And no one can time the market.
There is no one out there.
If anyone's telling you they know exactly what's gonna happen
in the future, they're lying to you, they're guessing.
And so anytime you're guessing about something,
you have to actually create strategies
that protect you from yourself, right?
Scott's biggest risk when he came to us and said,
hey, I wanna put some capital into some positions,
And I want to, I'm going to top buy.
Well, he, he was flat out saying, I want 50% of my capital placed at 126.
And when we broke that all time high, he was FOMOing like I've not seen him FOMO before.
Well, who's his worst enemy in those moments?
He is his worst enemy, right?
So the software and those parameters are a governance that allows you to go, okay, I'm not afraid of missing the boat.
I've got a system.
I've got automatic strategies that are watching the market.
They're going to respond on my behalf.
I don't have to sweat it.
And then you just let time take care of itself.
And time does take care of itself.
Why?
Well, because the price moves.
And you have rules in place that have activity attached to that movement.
So when it moves, you get to see your program actually execute.
And those trades take place.
And that's a very powerful notion that once you see behind the curtain,
and this is kind of the, you know, the final point here is that once you have,
have seen automation and you've used it and you've controlled it and you know you can control it
and you can maintain control of your money, you'll never turn back. It provides you a freedom
and a comfort. And it's not like you're betting on anything other than the tried and true
methods that mathematicians and market analysts have been using since dawn of time to manage
volatility, which is dollar cost average. This is just the next level of dollar cost
averaging. Yeah. Well, well, it's just the next level. Dollar cost averaging is going,
I'm going to spread out my purchases. Well, great. If you spread out your purchases,
the question becomes still, when do you buy? Is it Tuesday at 9 a.m.? Well, there's no,
there's no market data that's driving that decision. It's you just picking an arbitrary time and
date to enter into that position.
That's a very unintelligent way to dollar cost average.
An intelligent way to be a dollar cost average is what I talked about earlier.
Picking very big dips across that curve and entering your position on all of those
dips and spreading out the capital across all of those dips.
So you get the exact opposite of what Michael Saylor gets, which is big orange dots on the
tops of every candle.
You just want big orange dots on the bottom of every candle.
And a lot of people would go like, well, you think you're smarter than Michael
Saylor? No. Michael Saylor buys the tops because he gets the most amount of debt at the tops.
He gets to borrow against share price. His share price is highest when Bitcoin's highest.
So when is he going to buy Bitcoin? When he has the most amount of money to buy it? When does he have
the most amount of money? When Bitcoin's at its highest. So it's not, he's not buying it because he
wants to top blast every candle. He's buying at that because that's when he gets to buy the most.
you get to buy the most unless you have a public company that can raise debt like that
when bitcoin's at its cheapest you know don't follow michael sailor's example is by point on when
you when you dollar cost average into bitcoin he's literally buying the tops of candles
Andrew yeah I mean i know i know you're riveted
but yeah listen what we hear from our customers is
our tools um just dramatically shift the way they think about the process of allocating to crypto
and there is no there is no end to what our tools can do if you want to scale out of a position
there's 40 different ways to do that if you want to scale into a position there's a hundred
different ways to do that if you want to arbitrage a position to increase another position
There's 50 different ways to do that.
And then most importantly, at least from my advantage point, it's one thing to have tools,
but you can hand me a toolbox, and I'm not going to know what to do with 97% of the things
that are in that toolbox.
That's just the way that I've gone about my life.
That's the path he's chosen and he will not deviant.
Same thing with automation.
You can be handed tools for free.
we give all this stuff out for free but our concierge's program teams you know have the ability
to dial what it is that you want to get done perfectly they know how to use these tools at infinitum
and scott's gone through that journey right it's like started here and then maybe i want to do this
but i want to do this and what about this and okay i feel really comfortable with this now i want
to even dial it in a little bit tighter and you'll have the same exact experience and they'll
never stop getting on calls like this with you to discuss it, adjust it, and talk to you
about how you can make the changes you need to make to get exactly what it is that you want
from all the tools that we provide people. Yeah, I think that about sums it up. We got
archpublic here, archipublic.com. You guys can check it out. Go participate. Available on Bracken,
Gemini, Robin Hood, Coinbase.
We're coming.
Yeah.
We also are going to be at the Bitcoin Investor Week in February with a bunch in New York.
It's Anthony Pompeiano's Bitcoin Conference, if you will.
And super excited about that.
If you're a customer of ours, we'd love to have you out there and love to meet you in person.
It would be very similar to what we did with the Bitcoin Conference.
But we'll have absolutely.
Yeah, there's definitely.
There's no doubt about it.
I find out enough when you guys find out about it, really.
I mean, I love my audience, but maybe tell me first.
We could have told you 10 times and you wouldn't have heard us.
Whatever.
There's a squirrel.
Because I'm looking at Tom, when he's there.
Yeah, we're going to do some really cool stuff at that event.
We've pretty much taken over the entire VIP experience at that event.
We're going to do some special, you know, they call them activations for that group there.
We've got a bourbon thing.
We've got, you know, all sorts of stuff that we're going to be doing that's going to be really, really unique.
And people are going to love.
So, yeah, it's going to be a good time.
Sounds amazing.
I'm going to come.
It's going to be amazing.
What are the dates in February?
I've always wondered.
February 13th.
Listen, you're coming, even if we have to show up and club you over the head
and drag you up there like...
Like Gary did.
No, remember Gary did that for the Bitcoin Conference.
Your car broke down or a flat car and he...
He's sitting on the highway staring at flames.
Yeah, yeah.
You turned through Paines Prairie in Alachua County.
It's a good time.
The alligators and wild Mustangs is a good time.
Yeah, it'll be a blast.
All right, guys, that's all we got.
Obviously, I run to Crypto Town Hall.
Tillman, Andrew, and I'll be back next Tuesday for sure, and I will be back tomorrow.
That's all we got.
Thank you, gentlemen.
Check out Archpublic.com.
Later, people.
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