The Wolf Of All Streets - Bitcoin SMASHES $81K As $114 Trillion Just Went On-Chain!

Episode Date: May 5, 2026

Bitcoin is back above $81K, Strategy stock is up 50% in a month, and the crypto industry is riding a massive wave of momentum — but not everything is bullish. Coinbase just laid off 14% of its workf...orce, blaming AI and a down market, while Aave is locked in an emergency legal battle to unfreeze $71 million in ETH tied to a North Korea hack. Meanwhile, the CLARITY Act is closer than ever to becoming law, Circle exploded nearly 20% on the news, DTCC is piloting tokenized securities trading with BlackRock, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs, and crypto exchange Bullish just dropped $4.2 billion to acquire Equiniti. We're breaking it all down live. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I know speaking with digital asset treasury companies. I think this week on the agenda for us, we're again trying to pitch the bigger borrowers in the market. But I'm also really excited. I'm speaking with a lot of folks in the tokenization space, bringing real world assets on chain, whether it be credit or, you know, we're seeing this news with the DTCC as well. So I think that's going to be a big theme. Yeah, so for people who didn't see it, it's up here. DCC basically has said they're going to pilot in July. I think it's every institution you can possibly name as a part of this pilot.
Starting point is 00:00:31 I think they said over 50 institutions. And this is in line with Paul Atkins with Project Crypto, saying he thinks everything would come online. And then, of course, the DCCC last year when they got that no action letter from the SEC said we're going to tokenize everything. This is happening fast. Faster than anyone expected, I think, given the speed at which these larger organizations normally work. But I guess it shows that they're kind of feeling to hate the competition from crypto. So it's a bit of a race, contrarify, tokenize equities, and bring crypto traders back to those venues before the crypto exchanges start offering the tokenized equities and winning the traditional traders. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:11 So you were in Vegas last week, right? Yeah. And before we, I mean, I think we all get the signal into DCCC. Yeah. Everything's coming on. Everything's coming. Like whether what that means for us as guys who own random tokens, I have no idea. But I thought when we were talking before, you said when you were in Vegas, you were effectively out there, you know, pitching treasury companies and miners on, you know.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Yeah. Go ahead. Maple is the, you know, we are the second largest institutional lender globally now behind Tether. And so we were there pitching miners to borrow against their Bitcoin, use that to fund, you know, CAPEX expansion as they move into AI, as well as the digital asset treasury companies. I mean, some of the interesting observations, I think, you know, though the treasury sector has been a little dormant for a while, these firms are still out there. They're still looking to do deals. And from the miners, just the focus on AI was, you know, was unequivocal. These guys are all in on that sector. Some of them are selling their Bitcoin. They're making acquisitions in the AI sector. So they are, you know, they are really pivoting. It's interesting that Bitcoin has been able to push to 81,000 when you actually find out that there has been a seller. I think a lot of people were asking who is possibly selling at this point, right? All the way a wallet's dumped and they've been accumulating. But Mara had the news, I guess, last week.
Starting point is 00:02:30 Yeah, they made that acquisition. So, you know, they're making a big push in the AI sector. I mean, we've seen a mix. Some of these miners are selling their Bitcoin to go all in on AI KAPEX buildouts. I mean, our position and our pitch has been, look, well, while Bitcoin's still quite a ways away from the all-time highs, it makes sense. to borrow against your Bitcoin. You know, rates are reasonably cheap at the moment.
Starting point is 00:02:54 You can borrow for 6% or less and hold your Bitcoin until we get closer to the 52-week highs and then sell, then take some off the table. But right now you can fund these buildouts pretty cheaply by just borrowing against your Bitcoin. But as an individual, if you took a loan against it here and it went up to the all-time highs, that's kind of a loan you can never close at those rates. Some people, right? They take it sort of, I know that that's the model for instance, for, individual retail lending, it sort of becomes a snowball that pays for itself if price goes up.
Starting point is 00:03:28 Yeah. I mean, for retail lenders, it's a little bit different. But, you know, those folks who borrow on the retail side, typically they want to use it for a big lifestyle purchase. Like a deposit on a house or something like that, a holiday for the family. So on the institutional side, then I think it's interesting. So for people who missed that marathon deal, basically they made a huge acquisition, but when you looked under the hood, they sold a lot of Bitcoin and they paid. paid off the convertible note. And just last year, they were trying to be strategy. They were like, not only reminding and holding our Bitcoin, we're going to raise a convertible
Starting point is 00:03:58 note to do what strategy is doing and buy more Bitcoin. We want to be a Bitcoin miner and a Bitcoin Treasury company. What does that say right now about the Bitcoin mining space and Bitcoin treasury companies? They exited that entirely to go full AI. Well, you've seen, yeah, I mean, you've seen the Bitcoin treasury companies, you know, ProCap pivoted more towards AI. So, and, you know, a lot of them were trading at discounts for a long time. So it suggests the equity markets are not rewarding them the way that they were initially. And so hence, they've need to change up their strategy and whether that's shifting towards more of an AI focus.
Starting point is 00:04:30 I think the miners have picked up that equity markets are giving bigger multiples to these AI plays, whether it's Iran or, you know, Iran or any of these others that have made that push. And hence, they've just made a sort of calculated rational decision that it's better to be selling the Bitcoin and get the equity multiple appreciation of being seen as an AI play. So they're basically AI companies that buy Bitcoin. Yes. And not Bitcoin mining companies anymore. But that means there's going to be very little reason to hold a balance sheet.
Starting point is 00:05:04 Unless it's true. But I mean, maybe, you know, we are seeing, you know, some of the digital asset treasury companies, like there's still a few large ones out there that are looking to either borrow to buy Bitcoin or, you know, still have the conviction of holding their treasuries. then there's also sailor out there still buying. So it may just be that the marginal buy pressure on the market to kind of push up the price of Bitcoin just isn't coming from minors holding anymore. It's coming from either the Dats or other plays. So I guess the downside for that, you're basically pitching them, hey, take a loan against this humongous.
Starting point is 00:05:37 Yeah, I mean, hey, put it to work, buy more Bitcoin. So they're good as long as we don't go back into the 50s or 40s if they do that, right? Exactly. I mean, I think we're very conscious that these guys don't want to have a public liquidation price. because they feel like they'll get punished by the equity markets. So, you know, what we do is we pitch them like conservative LTVs. We can be flexible in the marginal arrangements. We ideally don't ever want to force them to liquidate their Bitcoin.
Starting point is 00:06:02 We want them to borrow and in future borrow even more. So the pitch from us has been, hold on to your Bitcoin while we're closer to the 52-week lows than 52-week highs. Buy the AI equipment that you need. Get that rewrite from the equity market. markets and then continue holding your Bitcoin and sell it later at a better price. It's better, better outcome for shareholders. Yeah. So you mentioned strategy before, obviously.
Starting point is 00:06:25 He's like the whale in the room. You didn't buy any Bitcoin this week, which I think you know that STRC is about to go above par and he's going to buy like $2 billion next week. But their shares, this story is their shares are up 50% as Bitcoin tops 80. I think nobody's surprised by that because high beta, high beta Bitcoin. But do you think that there becomes a time when he does what you're talking about? You know, like Sailor himself, if he says, hey, we're going to put a lot of this to work in the lending market. Is it a function of not understanding the counterparty risk?
Starting point is 00:06:56 That's what he told me in the beginning. When I asked him years ago, 2021, I said, you know, why aren't you, you know, taking loans? He said, I don't understand the risk. He said it, you know, but now he's got SCRC, all these things. Like, isn't there, couldn't he take 20% of it? Well, I actually think it would be a good idea for him. I mean, I know earlier on they had, I believe it was an SVB. loan facility, you know, when they're much smaller in size.
Starting point is 00:07:18 200 million, something like that. Now, I think if you look at its capital structure, the cost of capital on STRC is somewhere around the 10% mark. So, you know, if you can borrow against your Bitcoin, you can get a cost of capital somewhere closer to the 6% marks. I think ideally that's going to be accretive to common equity in strategy. So I would advise to do it. And, you know, it can be a relatively conservative loan to value ratio too. So there's very minimal risk. of him getting liquidated. And even still, today we look at putting in triggers like instead of a pure liquidation cap,
Starting point is 00:07:54 an enhanced margin call. So it's just a margin call on a shorter duration than normal. If you normally do 24 hours, you're enhanced one, it's maybe six hours if price continues to drop. So there's various structures we can put in place that are friendly for publicly listed equities that have concerns around the investor optics. but I would definitely advise them to do something like that. He's got to have hundreds of thousands of unencumbered Bitcoin, right? Yeah, at least.
Starting point is 00:08:22 We also see, we also actually see some borrowers looking to borrow to put on a stretch carry trade. So borrow at six, put on position in stretch. Yeah, yeah, exactly. And just ride the positive carry. So that's been a popular trade as well that we've seen. So I tweeted that recently and I got a lot of shit. So I said, like, if you deeply believe in STRC and it, Bitcoin because that has to be the caveat that, you know, in theory, Sailor one day could just say, no, we're not, you know, we're not, we're not, we're not paying it anymore, but there's no reason he would do that. But I think Robin Hood I saw probably not in great size, but I know Schwab under five percent. You can take loans against your portfolio. Yeah. You have a portfolio. You can theoretically take a loan under five percent. By STRC for 11 and a half, you use the loan to buy more STRC. I know it sounds Ponzias, but I mean, that's the carry trade. Yeah, but I mean, a lot of traditional finance does carry trades. I mean, look, you know, there was the Japanese yen. Yen
Starting point is 00:09:14 carry trade for decades. But we've actually seen, you know, we've seen interest from various parties, whether they're hedge funds, family offices, or even some of these digital asset treasury companies that like the positive carry trade and it allows them to generate returns on their treasury, where otherwise, you know, there's usually not a whole lot you can do to generate yield on your Bitcoin without taking significant counterparty risk. Yeah. I think that's how we're just going to see them becoming more and more creative. But The thing is, it's interesting, as much of a disaster as the digital asset treasury space has been, if prices go up 50% from here, they're cheered.
Starting point is 00:09:52 Yeah, exactly. I can see a recovery in that space. And what we've been advocating for the digital asset treasury companies is just run a very conventional, just run a very conventional strategy. So we've suggested that when they trade at discounts, borrow conservatively against your treasury holdings, buy back your shares, which is like buying the underlying asset, itself at a discount and then just de-lever a little bit as it gets more towards 52-week highs. Sell a little bit, just have, you know, certain installments where you sell a little bit and pay off your debt. And then because this is a cyclical space where we go up and down,
Starting point is 00:10:27 then just rinse and repeat next cycle. I mean, it kind of looks like what strategy was originally doing. Yes. Like before he created all these instruments, you know, just kind of engineer your shares. A hundred percent. And I think, I mean, unfortunately what we saw is I think some of the digital asset the treasury companies lacked the patience and the conviction to carry out that strategy. And then they pivoted in different directions. But I think if you just had a, if they just had a clear sort of North Star that they were going towards, which is, you know, Bitcoin per share or E for share and they just ran a very simple financial engineering strategy.
Starting point is 00:11:00 I think, you know, eventually the share market would reward them because it's easy to understand. You don't have to predict what they're going to pivot to in two or three months. How low do you think rates can go as this market becomes more efficient? I mean, six and a half, you said six and a half. I mean, we were at 10, 11, 12 for a long time. Yeah, not that long ago. And not even that long ago. You know, early last year, probably around February, I think we were seeing rates, you know, close to 10.
Starting point is 00:11:23 I think we are going to get closer to the asset back security market. I mean, if you look, you know, where RMBS and ABS trade, it's typically in the low fours, you know, maybe it's like so far plus 100. I think over time, we will get closer to that level as the market gets more efficient. I mean, we are already seeing, you know, we've seen the first crypto. loan-backed ABS deal come out from Lennon earlier this year. Right. And so I think the market will get more efficient, the cost of capital will get cheaper. But, you know, it's worth noting, I think the space is still relatively undersupplied. I mean, all the major lenders at the moment are all crypto-natives.
Starting point is 00:11:58 It's us, it's tether, there's galaxy, there's Coinbase. There's not a lot of traditional money in this sector. And that's, you know, that's keeping prices where they are today. Yeah, I mean, Levin got an SMP rating. They did. So did it's a great year. I think on STRC. It wasn't the best, I think, but still the fact that it's even being rated by S&P, right?
Starting point is 00:12:18 I mean, they're the first. And, you know, the first rating was always going to be not that great because S&P has, you know, these ratings agencies have reputational risk when they rate a new asset. But I think over time, it's going to correct. And I think those ratings will get better and better. I mean, how's what you guys doing not rated better than U.S. government debt? Come on. We were running that thing up.
Starting point is 00:12:38 Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. I mean, past 100 percent debt to GDP. Come on, man. Yeah, yeah. I, uh, well, yeah, look, I mean, I think this stuff should price cheaper. I think, uh, you know, investors and allocators are getting a great deal with rates where they are at the moment.
Starting point is 00:12:51 You know, you can get, uh, so far plus two to 300, uh, over, uh, by, you know, allocating and lending in Bitcoin back stuff because it's underappreciated by the market and because it's not, uh, well adopted by traditional players yet. But that's the, that's the opportunity for us. And we've got to grow and kind of scale bigger before the, uh, the big private credit shops come in. How much do you think the Clarity Act theoretically passing would impact all of this? I think I think it helps. I mean, already I think the Genius Act helped usher in new stable coins coming from traditional players. I think the Clarity Act, I mean, what I hear from all these,
Starting point is 00:13:31 you know, these partners, whether they're traditional commercial banks or investment banks, is that they are looking for clarity as kind of a sign to push further ahead. A lot of them are still running projects in the crypto space, but I think that will really accelerate the number of projects and the amount of adoption you see from them. And you know, you got to remember that RIA money has still yet to come in. Like there's RAAs are not doing defy allocations. They're not doing allocations to crypto-backed loans. And once clarity comes in, I think those, you know, those investment advisors and wealth advisors will start to put more client money into the sector. That's interesting because I guess everything's slower than you would anticipate.
Starting point is 00:14:08 Yeah. So when, when the ETFs were approved, everybody said, all right, will just say, you know, 5% into Bitcoin, everybody will buy them. But we're still at the point where they're still at the point where we're just ramping into getting, they're ramping into getting their customers comfortable just buying an ETF and having some sort of exposure. So you're saying that eventually RIAs could be fully in D5. They could be allocating to D5 volts. Do that carry trade for you. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:31 I mean, BitWi, you know, BitWise is called vaults, you know, ETFs 2.0. And, you know, I very much think that way. I think a lot of players are getting into the Volt curation game. and I have no difficulty seeing that maybe three years from now, RAs could be allocating their clients into vaults. I think clarity is going to bring some rigor and transparency around reporting standards and custody and segregation of user funds. But yeah, I think, you know, volts are going to be a huge trend for years to go.
Starting point is 00:15:02 I don't think still most people know what vaults are. No, no. Well, the way you can think of volts are it's not a fund, but it performs similarly. but it's on chain. So it's effectively you are allocating stable coins to a strategy run by typically an investment manager that will do either lending or trading or market neutral arbitrage.
Starting point is 00:15:24 And it generates a yield directly to you, the depositor in stable coins that you can withdraw typically at very short notice. It's like having your own little funds. It is. It's like having your own fund. It's very easy to access. You can choose from any number of different strategies. and it's, you know, it's a simple interface to allocate you.
Starting point is 00:15:43 So I think it's going to be very disruptive to what we've traditionally seen. I mean, the user experience in traditional wealth management and investing is terrible, as you know. But they're used to allocating by risk level. Right? So like, you know, the first questionnaire you get when you sign up for e-trade or something is, what's your risk appetite? What are your intentions? Yeah, high risk, fast growth.
Starting point is 00:16:06 So if you can give someone 50 volts that are labeled, in a manner that they are used to, right? Just by risk. They don't need to know that you're high risk, high return, water, balanced, conservative income generating, for sure. Yeah. So let's talk about the state of defy again. Obviously, I think you were on last, was it last Tuesday already?
Starting point is 00:16:25 I mean, maybe only a couple of weeks ago. Oh, okay. I was just saying either six days or like 13 days ago. So now we've had this crazy turn in the Aves situation. I guess I agreed up. But we had the Kelpdow hacks, obviously, the toxic debt that went across defy the ave bailout in defy united and then we have this crazy twist where arbitra basically went to return the hacked funds yeah and lawyers claim that those assets belong to people
Starting point is 00:16:50 whose families had been killed by the north koreans years ago yeah they have nothing to do with this they're just saying any money that's uh basically siphoned out of north korea belongs to these people first and now ove is trying to get an emergency injunction basically to get that money released it is a crazy unexpected yeah i mean you know you you couldn't you couldn't write this stuff so as as you said Scott, Arbitrum froze about $70 million. And of ETH on Arbitrum that North Korea had stolen. And these relatives of folks who have been killed by the North Korean regime got a freezing order. So in the past, they'd won an order for something like 600 or 800 million in damages from North Korea.
Starting point is 00:17:35 But of course, good luck getting that. And so what they've said is, well, these assets are the principal. property of North Korea. So since North Korea has us damages, these are actually our property now, which is, it's pretty wild because it raises the obvious question. If somebody steals something, is it actually their property? If they have control over it, does it become the property of North Korea? Is it the property of the person it was stolen from? So, yeah, I mean, a lot of people are watching this. If I United can't even do what they want to. Yeah. Until they have clarity on. Yeah, I think we need clarity on this. I mean, hopefully, you know, my hope would be that it goes the way of Defi United rather than the, rather than the families in this case, obviously, you know, very sympathetic to them, having had lost relatives to the regime.
Starting point is 00:18:26 But I think it would set a very dangerous precedent if you said, well, somebody who's stolen property, that property now belongs to them and can be awarded to other third parties and damages. It's interesting because this to me is funny in the context of all the pig butchering and the strategic Bitcoin Reserve of the United States because those are all confiscated tokens. Which belong to somebody at some point. Like the October pig butchering, I think they got 15 billion in Bitcoin. Nobody said that we're going to go out and find the 10,000 people that were scammed or 100,000 and give them this money back. The United States government. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:00 And also, you know, how do you decide to prioritize? you know, the people who might have judgments against North Korea are the terrorist regimes. I mean, I'm sure there's many thousands of them. So who do you put at the top of the queue? And why should they be above the people who, you know, originally owned the property? Yeah, it's such a crazy situation. How do you think that this all shakes out for defy? I haven't, you know, we had all the initial stories about kind of capital flight.
Starting point is 00:19:27 I think it was 10 to 12 billion somewhere in that ballpark. Has that updated? Do you know? Like, I mean, for us, we, you know, we processed about eight or nine. 900 million in redemptions in the first 48 hours following the big help doubt hack. Then by the end of the week, we'd start to see, you know, that had stopped. We saw inflows of maybe 30 mil in that first week. But by the end of the second week, we'd had, you know, net another 300 to 350 million come in. So for us, for us, it started coming back where we're back in the black in terms of
Starting point is 00:19:56 your guys were kind of, this wasn't directly you. Yeah, we weren't directly. Yeah. in sentiment, right? I mean, it wasn't anything to happen. Yeah, correct. Correct. So, yeah, so I think, you know, maybe we pick up some market share,
Starting point is 00:20:10 given that we have, you know, what I would call pretty conservative strategies with just institutional Bitcoin and large cap-backed loans plus T-bill allocations. I think for broader defy, there's still probably going to take a little bit more time for the dust to settle and for sentiment to return. I think, you know, DFI United was, you know, was a great move and a great outcome for them. the absolute best thing they could have done was to fully repair the hole and not have to utilize the umbrella module or any of the other mechanisms. So hopefully sentiment returns quickly. I guess my big question is what if that hole had been $5 billion? Then I think it would be a
Starting point is 00:20:47 very different conversation. And I think, you know, I think that that would have been a real body blow to defy and, you know, might have taken its 12 months to recover as a sector. So, you know, That would have been on par with, you know, FTCX for the DFI space. So you think that most people who pulled all those funds, that Capital Flight, were sidelining to see what happened and not basically making a move that stated, we're never participating in DFI. Let me take this off and see what happens. No, we didn't see many people who said they're just never going to participate in DFI again.
Starting point is 00:21:22 I think a lot of them went to just passively holding cash. Some of them reallocated it to places like us. And also, you got to remember that some of it was. looping, they just got unwound. There's kind of like a multiplier. You have a fund that loops six times, well, that's like, you know, six times the TBL is going. So, yeah, so, but on the question of, you know, if it had been five billion, I mean, I think fortunately, you know, that there's not really an asset that's got, you know, say, five billion of collateral. That's a synthetic derivative asset. So I think that is, you know, that that helps to limit the risk factors. But it has forced us as a
Starting point is 00:21:58 sector, now anytime you deposit your protocol, you effectively have to underwrite every asset on that protocol. And, you know, that's, I think that ups the, you know, the resourcing required to do defy allocations. As I think, you know, you should expect to see either risk premiums in defy need to go up or the TVL, you know, won't quite rebound to the previous size ahead. It's interesting that you kind of laid out how looping could increase TVL sort of manufacture TV. It does. It's like a multiplier effect. It's like, you know, when a dollar goes through. the central banking system. Isn't that what we were here to?
Starting point is 00:22:32 Yeah. That's what we're here to stop. But in, you know, in true fashion, we, you know, you kind of live long enough to, to adopt some of the elements of the thing you want to disrupt. So do you think that maybe some of those more risky strategies will take a long time to come back or may die? I think that, you know, the composable Legos part, I think, has seen a major blow more than defy itself.
Starting point is 00:22:55 Yeah. I think so. So the, yeah, I think the. Yeah, I think the composability will probably be suppressed for a while. I think folks will not be doing, you know, as much in the way of aggressive looping strategies as what they were doing before. And also, you're just going to get paid a little bit more now for doing conservative stuff because the risk premiums will come up.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Folks have come out. So the supply of capital has reduced, which is pulling up the prices of allocating in defy. And we've already, I mean, we've already seen some funds who were previously borrowing from defy platforms and thereby taking the small contract risk on their collateral now pivot across and put in requests to borrow from us because they just decided they want their collateral to be held in a custodian. I remember you and I having conversations where I would bring up like RWA.xYZ or something. It was the really early days and it was kind of this race you guys, Franklin
Starting point is 00:23:45 Templeton and VDL came up, but it was just tokenizing treasuries. Yeah. Doesn't feel like it was that long ago. That's all RWA was. Yeah. What are you guys building now? I guess, you know, and where do you see institutional adoption happening first as we head towards DTCC 4.5 quadrillion settled a year, right? We are, so we're looking at other forms of RWA credit. So you're quite right. RWA just began as T bills on chain. What we found is, you know, our primary specialty has been allocating to Bitcoin back loans, ETHBAC loans, Salonback loans, XRP back loans. But now because that borrower side of the market was slower,
Starting point is 00:24:25 begin the year, we've actually found that we, it's pushed us to look at more direct RWA allocations. So we have been looking at, say, fintech ABL programs, like could we lend to a cards issuer or a lender of, you know, home loans or small business loans, SMB securitizations, but we are looking, what we're looking for is things that are conservative asset-backed, bankruptcy remote and have a, you know, a conservative risk-adjusted return. And so we're now looking at could we be the funder to some of these web 2 fintechs who are just breaking into the securitization markets we want to come in and offer them more competitive cost of capital than what the big private credit shops are doing what you know victory park or blue hour or any of these others
Starting point is 00:25:10 are doing and those guys have their hands full frankly with software back now like uh they have a lot to worry private credit looks worse than defy yeah yeah so we want to be conservative we only want to go in asset back stuff we're not going to be doing software backed private credit type um type lending, but we think this is a real opportunity for defy to start to bridge into traditional finance. And, you know, really, we're going to see for a long time, people have asked, well, why do this on chain? Well, we're going to show that you can actually offer these players much more competitive financing that's more attractive than what they can get from traditional finance. That's interesting. So do you see the timeline now accelerated from what we thought because of all this
Starting point is 00:25:52 project? Last year, I think last year. Last year. I would have said the timeline was two or three years out. Now I can see it happening this year. I mean, we have a KPI to do our first FinTech ABL loan within the next six months. Wow. So I mean, this everything on chain thing is actually going to happen. It's happening and the DTC is pushing from the other side on equities and we're doing fixed income. It's crazy to me.
Starting point is 00:26:18 Anything else I missed before I let you go explore this conference here? No, no. I think we covered everything. Awesome. I really appreciate always having you on and you're willing to show up. Fun to do this in person. For us, we'll be shooting a lot of content and we'll be doing this show at 9 a.m. and the noon Yahoo show right here. I've got today Paul Greywall from Coinbase on at noon. So that'll be an interesting conversation. All right, everybody. We'll see you at noon for the Daily Wolf. Sit. Thanks so much. Thanks, everybody can find him on the internet tag below and we'll see you at noon. Bye.

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