The Wolf Of All Streets - Bitcoin Skyrockets As Crypto Starts Massive Rally
Episode Date: February 9, 2024This week concludes with a significant surge in Bitcoin and the broader crypto market. We will delve into the top 5 crypto news stories of the week: BlackRock's successful Bitcoin ETF launch, the Fede...ral Reserve's decision to maintain interest rates, Solana's outage, the market rally, and updates on crypto regulations (including the potential for a life sentence in Korea). Friday Five is THE show about the main news in crypto. Join me and Nathaniel Whittemore as we delve into the main topics that moved the markets. Nathaniel Whittemore: https://twitter.com/nlw ►► JOIN THE FREE WOLF DEN NEWSLETTER, DELIVERED EVERY WEEK DAY! 👉https://thewolfden.substack.com/  ►►OKX SIGN UP FOR AN OKX TRADING ACCOUNT THEN DEPOSIT & TRADE TO UNLOCK MYSTERY BOX REWARDS OF UP TO $60,000! 👉 https://www.okx.com/join/SCOTTMELKER ►►TRADING ALPHA READY TO TRADE LIKE THE PROS? THE BEST TRADERS IN CRYPTO ARE RELYING ON THESE INDICATORS TO MAKE TRADES. USE CODE ‘2MONTHSOFF’ WHEN VISITING MY LINK. 👉 https://tradingalpha.io/?via=scottmelker  ►►THE DAILY CLOSE BRAND NEW NEWSLETTER! INSTITUTIONAL GRADE INDICATORS AND DATA DELIVERED DIRECTLY TO YOUR INBOX, EVERY DAY AT THE DAILY CLOSE. TRADE LIKE THE BIG BOYS. 👉 https://www.thedailyclose.io/  ►►NGRAVE This is the coldest hardware wallet in the world and the only one that I personally use. 👉https://www.ngrave.io/?sca_ref=4531319.pgXuTYJlYd ►►NORD VPN GET EXCLUSIVE NORDVPN DEAL - 40% DISCOUNT! IT’S RISK-FREE WITH NORD’S 30-DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE. PROTECT YOUR PRIVACY! 👉 https://nordvpn.com/WolfOfAllStreets  ►►COINROUTES TRADE SPOT & DERIVATIVES ACROSS CEFI AND DEFI USING YOUR OWN ACCOUNTS WITH THIS ADVANCED ALGORITHMIC PLATFORM. SAVE TONS OF MONEY ON TRADING FEES LIKE THE PROS! 👉 http://bit.ly/3ZXeYKd Follow Scott Melker: Twitter: https://twitter.com/scottmelker  Web: https://www.thewolfofallstreets.io  Spotify: https://spoti.fi/30N5FDe  Apple podcast: https://apple.co/3FASB2c  #Bitcoin #Crypto #FridayFive The views and opinions expressed here are solely my own and should in no way be interpreted as financial advice. This video was created for entertainment. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision. I am not a financial advisor. Nothing contained in this video constitutes or shall be construed as an offering of financial instruments or as investment advice or recommendations of an investment strategy or whether or not to "Buy," "Sell," or "Hold" an investment.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bitcoin is absolutely flying, currently trading at $47,500, up almost 10% in just a couple of
days, leading us to inevitably ask why. But that's not all that's happening this week.
We had Jerome Powell on 60 Minutes. We just had CPI data come in. We have regulators cracking
down on the crypto space. And of course, Solana having their first outage in quite a while. It's the Friday
five where NLW and I break down all the biggest stories of the week. Let's go.
What is up, everybody? I'm Scott Melker, also known as the Wolf of Wall Street.
Before we get started, please subscribe to the channel and hit that like button.
Guys, we're pretty much on time today.
It's like catching a unicorn on Mars or something.
We did it.
Yeah, this is the royal we.
I appreciate you taking credit for the lateness here.
Hey, man, we're a team. One of us is late, the other one is late. We just basically schedule
it for 9.08 every week. But Bitcoin is flying, man. Bitcoin is flying here. I mean, just a quick
chart for people who are looking at a classic sort of pattern here. But yeah, I mean, we're
pushing towards 48,000 rapidly, closing that sort of gap we had when we had the ETF pump on the first listing.
I mean, this is going pretty crazy right now.
What do you make of the price action?
You can even look at these articles.
And like this morning, it's like Bitcoin crosses 46.
And by the time the article comes out, Bitcoin had crossed 47.
A day ago, Bitcoin could hit 48K in days.
That was yesterday.
And here we are knocking on the door uh propelled by historic chinese new year gains we love chinese new year narratives
that is like the sneaky like perpetual narrative every uh every year we love talking about that
it's every year it's like wall street bonuses, Chinese New Year, although I thought Chinese New Year was
supposed to be bad because then everybody sells to get the cash to give presents. So I'm confused,
actually. Yeah, I think it's a thing to talk about. I mean, listen, you know, one of the
things that we had been observing kind of in the lead up to the ETF was that it felt like there
had been a, you know, there was a long period of price discovery where we finally priced in the ETF, right?
We got to where we got at sort of 48, 49,000. And then we had a little bit of a sell the news
effect right after. But even more than that, there was just a lot of sell pressure, right?
You had miners who put a billion dollars onto exchanges the day the ETF launched
to sell into that market. You had grayscale outflows, which have slowed down to a
trickle at this point, I mean, a trickle, relatively speaking, you know, 10s of millions of dollars
instead of a half billion dollars a day. And at the same time, the sort of inflows into all of
these other products have continued. And so in some ways, it looks to me almost like, what was
the real break in the pattern was the sort of the outflows that happened in the immediate wake of the ETF.
And we're now just resetting to where we were, which from a psychology standpoint makes sense
because no one was really stressing all that much other than Twitter folks who wanted something to
talk about around the price changes in the days following. There were so many good explanations
having to do with actual market dynamics for why
Bitcoin was going down. It wasn't like someone all of a sudden got scared or nervous or there
was some new FUD or anything like that. It was just people were selling a lot of it because it
was the first time that it was open. So it kind of just feels like a resumption of where we had
been going into the ETF a little bit to me. And I think to some extent, the bigger question is, once we hit,
you know, we get to a sort of a new high for the year, right? If we hit like a $50,000 level,
do the news articles start again, that, you know, actually gets retail to start looking? Or is it
going to take actually hitting a new all time high or getting into the 60s? Before, you know,
regular retail consumers start looking at that.
That to me is kind of the more interesting question from where we are right now.
Yeah, I guess we'll see what happens. I love that explanation. I mean, we, for the first time,
had a very clear-cut fundamental reason for price to be going down. And we're now seeing it lift,
and it's going up. So I don't think we need to be talking about the year of the dragon or any
of these things. I think that we simply are seeing more buying than selling again.
I think I also saw that there had been eight consecutive weeks of inflows to exchanges. A
lot of that was miners, as you said, and this is the first week that we've actually seen that
outflows from exchanges. So I think very, very obvious what's going on here. And a lot of it
has to do with story number two, because we can't go a week without talking about ETFs. First mover America's BlackRock's ETF demand
ranks among top five. That's for 2024 and comparing it to the biggest ETFs in existence.
You're talking about like IVV, which has a whopping 428 billion of assets under management.
Number two is VOO had 11.1 billion in inflows so far, but that has 398 billion in assets under management. Number two is VOO had 11.1 billion in inflows so far, but that has
398 billion in assets under management. I mean, what's happening with these Bitcoin spot ETFs is
astounding. We could just pop through a couple of tweets from Eric Valchunas. Normally it takes
five to 10 years for a newborn to get even close to toppling a category as liquidity king. I bit
did it in under a month trading more than both GBTC and BITO.
Here's a look at the top 25 ETFs by assets after one month on the market out of 5,535 total launches in 30 years. IBIT and FBTC in league of own with over 3 billion each, and they still have
two days to go. ARKB and BITB also made the list. I find it curious, by the way, BITO not here.
So we talked about BITO
being the most successful launch ever because that was the fastest to a billion, but it didn't
get to three. So it doesn't make it onto that link. You can just basically like repeated,
repeated tweets and clear evidence here that this is just a monster success and it's continuing.
You know, one of the things, one of the stories that it tells is just how big the
existing audience of Bitcoin buyers are, you know, and sort of the people that were right on the
edges of that, because we haven't sort of seen any of the thing that I think some people were
hoping for or expecting, which is, you know, some mad rush of retail into this now that they can
invest. And we talked endlessly about why that is and where advisors are with all this sort of thing. But the reality is, is that Bitcoin has
had 15 years to grow an ever stronger, ever more committed, ever smarter market. And it's sort of
flexing that a little bit right now. It's showing how much dynamism there is just in the existing
crypto buying audience. And frankly,
they're TradFi allies that have been recruited over the last couple of years as part of that as
well. And I think that it's a very common tweet structure that you see, a bullish tweet structure
to basically say some version of, wait till the other folks actually start rushing in.
That's kind of what's actually being shown right now is,
you know, if this is what it looks like, just with the folks who were already trading Bitcoin,
already interested in this asset, or maybe this was the one thing that pushed them over the edge because they were real close, you know, imagine when it starts being a much more mainstream thing.
Now, I do think that we have a much bigger wall of skepticism to climb this time than we ever have before,
thanks to a variety of folks from the last couple of years. But it's a pretty profound
statement on the state of the markets, just to see how these products are doing already.
Let's talk about that skepticism in context. Still the same story to me. J.P. Morgan survey
shows over half of institutional traders don't want crypto exposure. The bank survey of over 4,000 traders found that 78% of the
participants do not plan to trade cryptocurrencies, while just 12% plan to do so in the next five
years. These numbers are down massively from the same studies two years ago when we were sort of
peak bull market or heading into the bear. Back then, it says 7% now of the survey
participants see blockchain as an influential technology, falling from 25% in 2022. So clearly,
even to your point with these ETFs, with all of this happening, maybe we just need to be at all
time highs for people to get interested again. Maybe it's going to be dependent on the price
action, but institutional traders still don't want to participate here.
I mean, listen, one of the things that we had talked about, or the industry had talked about in the wake of particularly FTX collapsing, was how many years it was going to set
things back. And we sort of use that term vaguely, right? In the sense of, it was sort of just broad,
it referred to everything. But I think that what we're seeing is where we got set
back the most was around sort of these questions of trust, of sense of legitimacy. And the way that
that's playing out is that there's a starker demarcation between the people who are still
interested in crypto and those who aren't. There's kind of not a big middle anymore, right? There's
not a lot of folks who haven't made up their mind in the way that there perhaps was a couple years ago.
And I think that if you look at sort of bull cycles, a lot of what has happened is the folks
who are somewhere in the middle who don't really have strong feelings, just start to kind of go
along with their friends. Well, what's happened now is that many, many of those folks have had,
you know, their worst sense of the industry confirmed.
This whole crypto is just for criminals thing, that narrative had started to finally dissipate.
And then we saw some of the most egregious financial criminals that we've had in decades.
And so the downside of this is that a huge number of people just will not pay attention at all.
And it's going to take even more this time, I think, than new all-time highs. I think people will be able to cynically write off as, you know,
sort of gambling games and things like that. You know, I wouldn't be surprised if the dynamics
feel a bit different this time around. The good thing about this, not to be too sort of, you know,
Pollyannish or optimistic about it, is that having a little bit of counter pressure to the frenzy that tends to happen
when we start to get into the price part of the cycle, I don't think is necessarily a bad thing.
I think the fact that it's going to have to prove itself a little bit more to get a lot of regular
people, a lot of advisors, a lot of traditional investors back and interested probably means that
when they do come back in, if they come back in, they're going to be coming back in for at least slightly better reasons than they might have otherwise.
Yeah. Next story is Solana. We had an outage on Tuesday. It had been seemingly forever.
Everything was fixed. This could never happen again. No worries. And on Tuesday, they were
down for about five hours, still trying to parse kind of what happened.
The price dipped a couple percent, but flew immediately after.
Almost no price impact.
And Matthew Siegel from VanEck, this tweet basically went viral.
Solana outage, what happened?
BPF loader, the Berkeley packet filter, which is the mechanism to deploy, upgrade, and execute programs on Solana, failed.
So we can get into that more deeply, but Solana went down and that was something we thought would maybe never happen again,
begging the question whether it is fundamentally sound, whether this is really a blockchain at all,
if they can potentially just turn it off and turn it back on, blow on the cartridge,
shake it and hope for the best. What happened here? I mean, so one, I have no idea what happened
is way, way, way beyond my way above my pay grade. Yeah, sorry. Not even not even coming close to
knowing anything about that. But listen, I think that the the thing that people miss
with this discussion is that there is still an active market conversation around trade-offs when it comes to decentralization
and what the appropriate trade-offs are and what people are willing to bear, whether there
is one answer, whether there are multiple answers for different types of applications.
And in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana, we have three different answers to those questions.
And if you ask people who don't think that the trade-offs of one of those chains are
the right ones, they're going to viciously argue that the other ones are wrong, whereas their approach is best, right? The
Bitcoiners think that Ethereum is a cabal that Joe Lubin and Vitalik are going to turn off at
any given time, or that Inferra is going to make everything go down because there's centralized
infrastructure. The Ethereum folks look at Solana and they scoff and point to these individuals and
the ability to do things and downtime and things like that. And the Solana and they scoff and point to these individuals and the ability to do
things and downtime and things like that. And the Solana people think all of those people are
dinosaurs because the functionality is so fast and they feel so affirmed in the choices that
they've made. I don't think that this changed anything about where any of the folks who have
those feelings are. I think that we are still figuring out and it is undecided. The market
has not
awarded a single winner yet when it comes to the question of how decentralized is appropriate for
these sort of different applications. And so it doesn't surprise me at all that we saw a tiny
little nervous dip and then right back to it because the people who are excited about Solana
aren't going to be thrown off by this. I think that they don't see Solana as its fully mature
state. I think we can be cynical from the outside about the sort of designation of it still being beta, but the folks who are building on it are not
cynical about that. So they're much more willing to deal with this stuff. So listen, to me, it's
just a great indication of how many, these fundamentally different categories of belief
about how blockchain should be structured and what the trade-offs that should be made are,
that still exist in the market right now.
I totally agree. I think that they're moving fast and breaking things. And in the previous times when it went down, they didn't have the passionate community,
the development, the hype that they literally have right now. Prices were lower. So it was
easier to be cynical. When the price is high and everybody's excited, it goes down and they say,
of course, man, we're pushing the envelope. The envelope was good. It's good.
This is great.
You know, we're really testing what's possible here. And price goes right back up.
I think that this is going to end up being a nothing burger.
And if they have other outages for four or five hours, the people who hate it are going to continue to hate it.
The people who love it are going to continue to love it.
We have to pivot a bit to macro, although nobody ever wants to do that.
We've got Jerome Powell on 60 Minutes. This is the interview happening right here, full 2020 for 60 Minutes
interview. But this was actually pretty interesting because Powell said some of the quiet parts out
loud. I think the one that to me was the most shocking, although obvious, was when he was
talking about the U.S. fiscal trajectory. He said it is unsustainable. I don't think that's at all controversial. And I think we know that we have
to get back on a sustainable fiscal path. But I think you're starting to hear now from people in
the elected branches who can make that happen. It's time we get back to that focus. But I mean,
he said a lot, but he definitely admitted that we had some major problems and that what's happening
with policy can't last. And there's nobody who's
going to pivot. I don't know what he's talking about, but nobody's going to be changing that.
I should probably also highlight, by the way, that there was a lot of fear about CPI numbers today,
and they came in basically in line. Seasonal adjustment was fine. So that was another
nothing burger in line with this. Yeah, this is interesting to me. I mean,
so the core function in some ways of this interview was to reset market
expectations around how fast we're going to get rate cuts and how big they're going to
be this year, right?
The market was pricing in six rate cuts before the interview, and then it was pricing in
three after.
And so it seems to me that that was sort of the, you know, when it came to why he would
do this, right?
He hasn't done one of these, you know, this high profile in interviews since around the
COVID times. You know, when it comes to that, that almost like
throwaway comments on the US fiscal situation, it feels a little bit more personally mediated
than, than sort of like, you know, Fed policy. I think Powell staring down, you know, either we go
into a second Biden administration, or he, you know, goes into a Trump administration where, you know, Trump has sort of made clear that he's not keeping Powell around. And so I wouldn't be surprised if we start to see, you know, Jerome say what Jerome thinks a little bit more here and there, especially when it's not stuff that the Fed is necessarily expected to control in the immediate term. So weirdly, it was on the one hand, the most illuminating or interesting part of the conversation
to us, certainly, who are thinking long term, but it's also fairly irrelevant to the traders
who are going to make decisions based on what he said for Monday morning.
Yeah.
And you talk about the political side of it. Powell
emphasized, as he has repeatedly in the past, that Fed officials do not factor politics or
elections into their policy decisions. We never do. And we never will, he said.
What do you think? Maybe? I mean, perhaps an unpopular opinion relative to the crypto crypto crowd.
But like, I think that history will judge Powell fairly impressively when it comes to
resisting outright political pressure during during his tenure.
Now, that doesn't mean that there weren't sort of concessions to that here and there.
But, you know, I think it's preposterous from what we've seen from this Fed that somehow he
was going to try to throw the election to Biden by doing more aggressive rate cuts. It's just so
that there's nothing to indicate at any point in his thing. Listen, I think that where history will
judge Powell harshly is for continuing to keep rates so low when inflation was clearly coming.
They will rightly recognize that the Fed plays a major, major role
in causing the sort of the depth of inflation that we experienced. That'll be the biggest stain.
But the issue will be that, not sort of kowtowing to political pressure in some way. At least
that's my perception of it. So you're saying that inflation was not transitory. It was just on a five-year scale,
you know, after the highest rate hiking in history.
Yeah, coincidence how that happened.
I'll give it to you that he's not
bowing to political pressure.
I mean, I think Elizabeth Warren
was very aggressive even in the past week
saying that the Fed needs to cut rates immediately.
You don't see any response to that.
And frankly, when you listen to Waller and the other members of the Fed, you can see them
constantly reiterating, there's no reason for us to cut yet. Everybody thinks it's March. Everybody
thinks it's May. I wouldn't be surprised if it's not till the end of the year, if then.
Nothing would surprise me at this point. One of the other things that's been fairly remarkable about the Fed for the last few years is how lockstep in general
they have been and on message at every single point. This is not the historical norm where
you have every Fed official saying the same stuff basically every time. Now, there was a little
period last year where you started to kind of see a divergence between the hawks and the doves. But even that was really, really minor,
relatively speaking. And we are right back to full court press of the same message once again.
And it's pretty interesting to see. Yeah. The final story that we have today is this
slight regulatory crackdown or legal crackdown on the crypto world in South Korea and in the United States.
The first story, and I love the headlines.
This one's a bit less hyperbolic, to be honest.
But South Korea to enforce tougher crypto law with potential life sentences.
The other headlines I read made it seem like if you committed any crime related to crypto, you do not pass go, do not collect $200, go directly to jail
and for the rest of your life. But clearly, Korea is outlining some higher level offenses that could
get you more severe penalties, including life imprisonment. But man, it would have to be a
hell of a crime for that to be the case, I think. Yeah. I mean, listen, I think that you have a toughening of the posture vis-a-vis crypto
around the world, but it's moving back to enforcement related rather than what we saw
in the immediate wake of FTX, which was sort of proactively trying to kill the thing.
You're seeing this in Hong Kong too, right? Hong Kong came out with much more permissive
regulations than we thought
were going to be. Towards the end of 2022, we anticipated that Hong Kong was basically going
to officially outlaw any sort of trading for retail. And instead, they painted a very clear
path for what types of assets retail could be involved with, what you had to do if you were
in exchange there. The exchange requirements weren't particularly easy. And right now,
there's still a very small number of people who have been actually licensed under that regime.
They're starting to crack down. But what we've heard from them over the last few weeks is all
about the penalties for non-compliance and being kicked out. Now that they have had that sort of
the olive branch of this is a thing you can do, they're shoring up the other side, which is
basically like, but if you don't play by our rules, we're going to hit you even harder.
And I think that that's kind of what this looks like to me a little bit as well.
Totally fine. They should do that. That doesn't anger me or surprise me in the very least,
if that's all it is. SEC adopts rule to have stricter oversight over dealers,
looping in crypto and DeFi. There's a 247 page rule that I obviously
did not read. The part that was interesting was with the exception of having assets less than
$50 million. So a lot of people shrugged this off and said, who's got more than 50 million bucks in
this market that doesn't apply. But I've actually heard some lawyers have some very concerning takes
about what this could mean and how this could be extrapolated. Can you dig into this at all?
Yeah, sure. I mean, so a couple of things to note. One, this is not a crypto specific
rule. In fact, I think the original draft of this was 197 pages, so it got 50 pages longer.
And in that draft, crypto was referred to only once in a footnote. The issue with this is that
we are once again in a situation where because the relative posture of this as it relates to crypto is not articulated, people are left guessing.
So in a lot of ways, this is actually more targeted on hedge funds, on certain types of high-frequency traders.
In fact, at one point, there was a sense in the high-frequency trader space 2022, that this type of rule adoption could be
an existential threat to the industry. They were fighting against it pretty tooth and nail.
When it comes to crypto, if you kind of read, for example, Hester Peirce's dissent in the SEC
decision, she really reinforces the same thing that's happened over and over before, which is,
you know, we pretend as the SEC that it's as simple as coming in and registering,
but it's not. And anytime we get into a situation where we've imposed the new rule, that the result of which is
come in and register, but it's impossible for a new category of organization or structure or
whatever to participate in that, we've just set the market up for failure. And so this is once
again, a situation where we have a new rule that
leads to less clarity, not more clarity. And, you know, we're seeing that the response and the
frustration to this, you know, the House Financial Services Committee Republicans wrote a big letter
about how this was, you know, deployed, you know, poorly, and it's going to end up in legal
challenges and things. But I mean, at this stage, really legal challenges are the only thing left because the rule is on.
This seems like when we saw the reports of the $10,000 rule that if you sent or received more
than $10,000, you had to gather the KYC and report it and the IRS was going to come after you and
they were going to put you in jail, not the IRS. Of course, they don't put you in jail.
And then a few weeks later, it was like, dude, these rules can't be enforced at all. We're
going to look at this again. These are rules that just can't be enforced to your point. They can make
as many kind of ideas and share them and have these rules as they want, but there's just no
way for anybody to even report on these things. Yeah. I mean, listen, the big thing that keeps coming up is that the US regulatory establishment has not meaningfully dealt with, frankly, they haven't even meaningfully thought about the implications of DeFi, right? They're just putting their heads in the sand saying this isn't a thing. And one of the possible outcomes, of course, is that they say, nope, we're right, you're not allowed to have this be a thing, you know, and the ways that these things are organized, you're just not allowed
to participate in them at all. But we have a sort of de facto version of that right now,
where it hasn't gone through a process where that's been the decision. It's just de facto.
And until we deal with that, you know, we're going to continue to live in this weird,
challenging in between where no one knows
anything about what's going on. But listen, if we can't even get stablecoin legislation done,
the likelihood of the US political establishment dealing comprehensively with DeFi seems pretty low.
Yeah, it ain't happening. Even if they pass the rules, they don't even have the staff or
understanding to actually enforce them. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't push back when the rules are wrong.
Dude, we did it.
By 9.30 a.m., we managed to finish the Friday Five.
Guys, follow NLW, The Breakdown.
You can check this out on his channels, of course, and on The Weekend.
Anything else I may have missed?
Are we done here?
We're done, man.
Let's go have a weekend.
Awesome, everybody.
Have an amazing weekend.
We will see you back on Monday for Macro Monday. Thanks, man. Bye, guys. Let's go have a weekend. Awesome, everybody. Have an amazing weekend. We will see you back on Monday for Macro Monday.
Thanks, man.
Bye, guys.