The Wolf Of All Streets - "Bitcoin Will Be MUCH Higher In A Year" - Matthew Sigel
Episode Date: July 5, 2026Matthew Sigel from VanEck breaks down exactly how his Node fund has outperformed Bitcoin by 100 percentage points since launch, why he's been overweight miners pivoting to AI and underweight exchanges... and altcoins, and why he believes Bitcoin will be materially higher a year from now. He explains why the OpenUSD consortium of 140 companies threatening Circle and Tether will likely struggle because consortiums historically fail without a clear business driver, reveals that Bitcoin's hash rate is in its longest decline ever without making a new high as listed miners exit for AI data centers, argues that alt season already happened in crypto equities rather than tokens, shares why he respects the four-year cycle and tells clients to have their full position by October, and makes the case that strategy DATs should carry a living will that forces an unwind if they trade below MNAV for too long. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Odds are that Bitcoin will be trading materially higher a year from now, not my words,
but those of Matthew Siegel from Vanek.
Matthew is one of my favorite people to talk to when I want to break down exactly what's
happening in markets.
And he has the resume to prove that he's been right.
You can look at his own fund node to see how much it has broadly outperformed Bitcoin and
the crypto market.
We talked about OpenUSD, the new stable coin consortium.
We talked about his fund and how they're positioned.
We talked about Bitcoin miners moving over to AI and basically every relevant topic in the crypto market right now.
You're not going to want to miss this one. Let's go.
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advice, offers subject to Kalsi's terms. All right, there's a lot to talk about that happened this
week. I think one of the biggest stories, obviously, was the announcement of OpenUSD,
a consortium between 140 of the biggest, I'll just call them logos. They're companies,
but for me right now, they're just a lot of logos on the announcement to compete effectively
with Circle and Tether. So I would love broadly your thoughts on that announcement.
Yeah, I think if you look at the portfolio that I'm managing, we've been overweight the infrastructure and underweight applications.
And I would say, you know, stable coins are an application.
And so, you know, we have some exposure to circle, but this is just, this news highlights that the barriers to entry are relatively low in the space when it comes to tokenization, when it comes to stable coins.
and, you know, that could weigh on margins.
So that's what the market was pricing in the other day
when Circle fell 17% on that news.
Now, launching a product and achieving network effects and scale
are two different things.
And so the history of these types of consortiums
is that there's nobody who's really incentivized
to drive business activity and sales.
And so, you know, you can be,
you can hold those two thoughts in your head
at the same time, that the consortium will struggle,
but that it's not great for Circle.
And that's where we are.
So we added a little bit later in the week
after the stock had already kind of cratered.
So I think the risk reward at this level for Circle is pretty good.
This news doesn't change their earnings
for this quarter or for this year.
It may impact kind of the terminal value
that people put on the business.
That'll be to ask you this question, then as a continuation, then we'll circle back specifically to open USD.
I think what does meaningfully impact the bottom line of a stable coin would be interest rates coming down, right?
I mean, we know that the bulk of the earnings for Circle and certainly Tether, but they're not publicly traded,
so you don't have to be concerned with their stock price is being attached to how high interest rates are and how much they cost to the cost to the model effectively for stable coins is monetizing to float.
Right. The USDC is the product, but the business is a float.
And OpenUSD is effectively going to split that float among everybody who uses it as opposed to keeping it as the issuer.
So, I mean, how do you kind of play that when valuing a stock like Circle or any stable coin moving forward if the float model changes?
Yeah, a couple things.
So first of all, rates have been, especially the 10 year, but even T-bills have been kind of higher for longer than people expected.
So in the near term, you know, the earning season is around the corner.
The stock's extremely volatile.
Like if they beat earnings, stocks going up and it's on its rear end right now.
So I don't think the rates are kind of the near term issue.
And then longer term, there's other businesses, you know, brokers like Schwab,
interactive brokers where float is a meaningful part of their earnings.
And it's easy to get bearish when rates are coming down.
But usually when rates are coming down, it means animal spirits are elevated.
and business activity is strong and, you know, maybe Bitcoin's working and on-chain wealth's being
created. Stablecoin AUM is growing. So I don't fully buy into that, like low rates are bad for
Circle. I think there's kind of more going on. It's a reasonably high quality of earnings,
but my comment on the pricing pressure, and I agree with you that, you know, OUSD is at least saying
that they're going to return essentially all the float to the ecosystem. But I,
I still kind of land on who's the business exec who's going to drive that?
Like a lot of these 140 companies have other ways that they can earn float.
Maybe, you know, it's going to be other business lines competing.
Exactly. Exactly.
This is like, you know, when we always have the argument about bricks like replacing the dollar and you're like,
there's a long history of, you know, dictators not working too well together.
Exactly.
Just consortiums tend not to work.
And so that, that be the bare case.
You guys, I mean, Nick, Jan Sun is behind a stable coin himself, right?
Agora, is that correct?
We've talked about that in the past.
Yeah, and that one from the beginning, we were, we are, you know,
planning to basically return all of the float to distributors.
So that thesis from the beginning was there's room to undercut circle on price and to maybe
white label some of this infrastructure.
But I think we've done a reasonable job, but we have a hundred and some odd million and AUM for
Agora, Nick does. And, you know, Circle is close to its all-time highs. So lots of competition has not
eroded that the network effects of USC. Every new stable coin that launches needs to be interoperable
with USC. You know, you could argue every, so, you know, you can argue it's good for everyone.
What about the Coinbase side? It seems like they're involved in both.
We'll see. They are due to either extend or eliminate the partnership with Circle this year.
You know, I think that they make, Coinbase makes a lot of money off that partnership.
It's instrumental to the base development.
You know, there's a lot of things going on with coins in a moment as they try to pivot from being an alt-coin play to having, you know, their fingers in like every point.
part of the financial business and there's a lot more competition in prediction markets and
perps. So, you know, stocks down a lot. That's another one where we've been, you know, we've
been underweight these exchanges and brokers relative to, you know, Bitcoin miners where
valuation, I think, is cleaner and the story's been more straightforward.
That makes a lot of sense.
We've seen this trend now.
I mean, Robin Hood had a big announcement this week that they're launching Robin Hood chain, which is their own layer two, 7% yield by participating in Defi, by lending USDG.
DYDX rebranded to become the decks that's on Robin Hood chain.
So it's a way to pitch the news that just happened, but it's also a clear trend that all of these major, what were once viewed as exchanges.
are now trying to become everything apps for everyone, right?
So a full breadth of both stock side, but also the crypto side, but also the rails, but also
defy and also having a chain.
I mean, they're all trying to do everything here.
Yeah, totally.
And Robin Hood's had a great move for the stock.
It's up, you know, 50% from the lows.
And just this week, they reported some really strong June.
preliminary numbers, which by record volumes for these prediction contracts, for options, for
equities. So, you know, numbers, earnings estimates appear to be going up for Robin Hood.
You know, they look well positioned. Yeah. Okay. So pivoting from all of that, let's talk markets.
Obviously, the big debate endlessly is what's going on with Bitcoin, what's going on with the
crypto market. Why is it down? When will it go? Is the four-year cycle exists? I mean,
just give me your once again broad strokes kind of on where we're at.
Yeah. You know, we respect the four-year cycle and it's been one element in kind of not buying
every dip in Bitcoin this year. And, you know, that's one of the reasons why Node at least is up,
you know, 20% Bitcoin's down 20 or 30%.
We, you know, not to say we didn't buy some of these dips.
The first time that Bitcoin hit hit 60K, we noticed some really one-sided positioning in the
derivatives market.
And then we got the bounce into the low 80s, ran right into the moving averages.
And on this retest, there hasn't quite been the same type of capitulation signals.
in terms of liquidations or the premiums that people are paying for puts versus calls.
And I think that the market noticed that.
And while there was definitely a lot of bearishness, we didn't see that same type of capitulation.
That said, puts are still really expensive versus calls by historical standards.
We're seeing that like in the 80th percentile.
So it not quite the 99th like we saw, you know, the first time BTC hit 60K, but puts are expensive.
Realized losses are in the 90th percentile historically.
So people are dumping losses.
So, you know, there is maybe some hint of sellers exhaustion that may emerge here.
And then we've also seen the older cohorts, kind of two-year.
plus holders have slowed down their selling. So that's another maybe hint of sellers exhaustion.
And I think that's what's kind of leading to this Bitcoin bounce here in the latter half of
the week. But I'm still kind of waiting and watching to get more, to get more aggressive.
With that in mind, as you look at what previous cycles have done, is it really so easy as we go
back up in October.
You know, I mean, I was not a believer that the four-year cycle was intact, by the way.
And it's looking more like maybe it just is.
I guess we need to see what happens sort of at the tail end of this.
But if we had almost to the day the top in October, right, usually the next fall after about
a year is when things start to rise again.
Yeah.
I mean, it really depends on your kind of individual positioning and risk reward.
What I've been telling clients is that you want to have your full position by.
October. So, you know, putting in some type of like time-based buying where you add a few basis
points every every month or so until we get into Q4. That seems like a reasonable strategy.
You know, I can't say I know exactly what's going to happen. But the fact that we, that the four-year
pattern matched up so well, like you got to respect it a little bit.
What's the bear case right now?
AI continues to, I think, pose challenges for flows
challenges for flows, but also for fundamentals.
I think what happened with Zcash was an interesting example
of Anthropic and these frontier models just directly competing
with software stacks.
And that's the bear case, one of the bare.
case. Obviously, there's other things around the edges like quantum, but I think Bitcoin's actually
made some considerable progress in getting the community aligned on a path forward and, you know,
Brink hiring their first quantum engineer who comes from the block stream DNA. Seems to me like
that problem is more behind us than in front of us in terms of the market, realizing
that something has to be done.
The election is still out there.
And that's why I think a lot of people are centering on this October idea for a bottom is,
you know, you could arguably, the front pages of the newspapers have not really grappled
with what a blue sweep would mean for the pro-growth agenda, not to mention the crypto agenda.
so that that bare case is looming.
And then the clarity odds are still reasonable in polymarket,
but there's more people saying they just don't have the time to do it.
And my conversations with institutions around altcoins especially
is that the disclosure regime inside of clarity is really important.
People don't want to do business with these tokens
when there's all these related party transactions and opaque,
relationships between the labs and the foundations and you don't really know who owns what you know
you see it in the disclosures court like a quarters later like with trump's crypto stuff right if the
disclosure regimes had been in place you would have seen that more or less closer in real time
yeah i've been putting clarity at five percent i know markets have gone 70 60 50 40 but i
even all of that considered in the time i just don't think they can come together in an ethics clause
And this week you have Trump's disclosures, obviously, you know, people putting it anywhere between
1.4 and 2.3 billion in earnings in 2025, or if you extend slightly back, on the crypto industry
alone, I don't understand how they would possibly get seven Democrats in the Senate on board with
voting for something that did not prevent that action.
Yeah, I think that's a reasonable case.
Like some of the crypto lobbying groups in Washington, you know, we're signaling that there might be a compromise on that if the language and the ethics doesn't explicitly target his kids.
But, you know, your take is a fair one.
Yeah.
So that means that we could get a Bitcoin reversal.
But if everybody's waiting for clarity and we don't get it, that the Alcorn market could continue to languish relative to Bitcoin, right?
Yeah, but yeah, it could.
But does that ever happen?
And what we're seeing today with Solana and some of the other alts are up quite a bit more than Bitcoin.
So I still have some little positions in the alts.
And given the volatility, they do move the needle for the portfolio.
But my general like 30,000 foot view for this year, and I haven't made a, a
ton of changes is that publicly listed companies are extracting a lot of the value that the open source
blockchains, you know, might have gathered. And oh, U.S.D, you know, one example, Circle and their
arc blockchain. Another example, Robin Hood chain, Coinbase, like the list goes on where the users
on the enterprise side don't want volatile fees. And just to
to pick on ETH for a minute, like that was the issue.
You know, you can't build a business around transaction fees that are that volatile.
And then I think we've had regulatory clarity that on open source institutions can't do it.
So that that leaves these kind of quasi corporate chains as maybe the best hope to onboard large scale blockchain users.
And so our, you know, we've been underweight alts and kind of overweight the equities in the space.
That's been, that's been okay for now.
Listen, one thing I think that I got very right, very early in 2025 is that I said that we had alt-season.
It was just in the stock market.
It sounds like what you're saying there pretty much aligns with that.
It's like, people were like, when will alts go up?
But I kind of made the point that all the money went into, you know, crypto-adjacent equities during the entire.
year and that was the money that would have been pumping those exact all coins.
It sounds like that's, you're talking about how you've actually to a certain extent
why nodes doing so well.
Yeah, yeah, although you know, you also had to avoid kind of the second half of the IPO season last
year. So the DATs, right, most of those have completely round-tripped. We were able to sidestep
those. And then some of the smaller cap IPOs that came later like Gemini, BitGo,
So these stocks have really, really struggled.
And they're not profitable.
So the market doesn't want to pay for unprofitable companies in a very fragmented landscape.
So, yes, sticking with the larger ones has also helped.
What else is Node focused on?
I mean, you're one of the rare people who's actively managing, obviously, a fund portfolio here, a product.
And so you have to not just have opinions, but make real decisions.
You mentioned, obviously, minors, is that on the back of them pivoting to AI, which is the hotter narrative?
Yeah, absolutely.
So, you know, we launched last May and through, you know, Thursday, July 2nd, we're up 56% and Bitcoin's down 40%.
So that's 100 percentage points of outperformance.
and we did that by underweighting Dats and exchanges and overweighing minors
because the valuation arbitrage between what they earn from selling Bitcoin
versus what they can earn from pivoting that data center capacity to serve the AI market.
It was really extreme.
It's still quite pronounced.
And we haven't brought down that exposure a great deal.
reason is I feel increasingly confident that a number of these companies are going to be able to
convert to REITs over the next couple of years. And that should bring down the volatility even more.
The credit markets continue to fund kind of GPU purchases directly. It's really bringing down
the cost of capital for these names. And then on the supply side, you know, bringing on new
power continues to be challenging in the U.S.
And after two decades of not investing in, or more even of not investing in power infrastructure, because the world was globalizing, now it's de-globalizing.
You know, you can't store your sovereign AI data in another country.
So everyone has to duplicate the capacity after a couple decades of underinvestment.
So I think that's going to take a while to catch up.
And I want to focus on stories where we can value the cash flows.
So those names.
you know, you have to look out of years.
Yeah, I mean, what does that phenomenon mean for Bitcoin mining, right?
Because obviously, a hash rate has effectively crashed.
You know, like difficulty has come down massively.
Some of that, I guess, is obviously the market.
But it seems like miners are more incentivized to become AI data centers than Bitcoin miners.
It's more profitable.
And they're willing to sell instead of hold to fund that.
So you kind of have downward sales pressure and them eventually, maybe
going offline as Bitcoin miners entirely, right?
A number of them will go offline as Bitcoin miners.
They may keep a small piece because for now, look, our fund is pretty small,
but if these names exit Bitcoin mining completely, then I would have a harder time owning
them.
So that would be a negative.
So they may keep some just to have the optionality.
it makes the hash rate of the pure plays even more attractive to the extent that Bitcoin can stage a recovery.
So like in the last down draft, when BTC hit 58, we didn't add to spot Bitcoin, but we did add to Bit Deer and Mara.
And those are two names that are relatively pureplay on the bit mining side.
They're trying to pivot to AI.
But, you know, Bit Deer is completely vertically integrated now from the chips to the chips to the.
the mining machines to the data centers.
And so their margins would see like could see an enormous tailwinds if Bitcoin recover.
So I feel like there's enough exposure to the coin via the pure play miners.
But you know, you raise the kind of the existential question.
If everyone leaves, then what's left?
And one thing we noticed is that this decline in the hash rate, the Bitcoin hash rates
down year to date. It's actually the longest time that it's fallen without making a new high.
And some of that is definitely reflecting the listed miners leaving. And our thesis or my thesis
has been that sovereigns would pick up the slack. And some of that's happening, Ethiopia,
Kenya, you know, Kazakhstan, but not big enough to make up for the overall hash rate decline.
And that's a major question mark, I think, for Bitcoin. And once that is rising,
again, I think people will be happier to buy even if we're up off the bottom when it occurs.
That makes you wonder if maybe a great investment right now would be Bitcoin mining equipment.
Yeah, it's been a graveyard. But like one of our best stocks this year, one of our best stocks this
year, there's this Taiwanese company Global Unichip, 3443 is the ticker in Taiwan. They're the largest
design partner for the ASICs manufacturers. So back in like 2017, 2021, Bitcoin ASICs were double-digit
percentage of their business. It's now very, very small because the ASICs market's been so weak,
but Global Unichip is now designing AI chips for Tesla or Google, and the stocks, you know, tripled here
over the last year. So it's a great example of how Bitcoin and A.I.
AI, they don't just share the electricity.
You know, there's a common supply chain.
And for those suppliers that are able to serve both markets,
a lot of optionality.
So global unit chip is an example, Raspberry Pi.
That's been another one of our winners this year.
You know, they make the cheap computers that people use to my Ethereum.
And started out as a toy, just like Nvidia chips started out as a toy.
Now, 80% of their sales are to enterprise, and those enterprises are using Raspberry Pies to perform inference, basic inference at the edge.
That's an interesting story.
So I like to look at these areas where the supply chains overlap, you know, pay attention to valuation and try to compound at a lower valve and somewhat of these all coins do.
When I asked you the bare case for Bitcoin, I noticed that you conspicuously left.
out the inevitable collapse or sarcasm of Michael Saylor and strategy.
Yeah, it's been a lot of years.
That's what I've heard.
Yeah, it's funny how leverage works, feels really good on the way up.
And then, you know, you become a for seller on the way down.
And, you know, we'll see.
You know, last week, internally, we were like, OK, well, now the ball is in
Saylor's coach.
going to have to make some decisions. And they did that over the weekend. I think those decisions
were sound to sell some Bitcoin, basically. But does that mean the stock should trade at a premium
to NAV? I mean, you're now, you know, you're buying a hedge fund that can trade five things,
its own capital stack and Bitcoin. What PE do you pay for such a head fund? I pay very low.
Yeah, I agree. I think that he said what he needed to say on Monday to kick the can far enough down the road that he ceases to be the main character for a while.
But I think that that's what the market was. I just feel like we got over the past few weeks to a peak in nonsensical takes about how bad it was, given that he wasn't in a comfortable position. I'll concede that.
But saying, listen, we've raised massive runway and we can sit here and basically do nothing and weighed out the market seemed like a very astute way to approach.
Also, I kind of noticed that the messaging from strategy, not him specifically, although that
bounce, but from some of the others, the hubris disappeared over the past few days that had been
there, you know, for the past few weeks.
I think they were really doing way too hard.
Agree.
I think I said it up to you a year ago was one idea that I had for these stats when all
these stats were IPOing and merging is like they should have a living will in their
prospectus that if the stock trades below the, you know, a certain MNAV for a certain amount of time,
that they will just unwind the company, sell the coins, management loses their job,
and you just return the cash to shareholders. And if that existed, you know, you might see these
stocks trade a lot closer to the MNAV because the minorities would feel that they have a path
to realize the value. And as someone who covered emerging markets for a long time,
conglomerates in Asia, like they can trade at 0.3, point four times NAV for a long time if
minorities are observing entrenched management control, related party transactions, tax
considerations to unwinding. So those are, it's through that lens that, you know, we've been,
we've been underway to those types of names. Yeah. So I know we're approaching time here. I mean,
just broadly, what excites you right now about the space and where the market?
is likely headed. I mean, you talked about where you're obviously positioned, but, you know,
I guess in a unicorn scenario, where would you like to be positioned a year from now?
I still think Bitcoin's going to be materially higher in one year. And if that's the case,
you know, we may lag some of our leveraged peers on the way up, but we'll do just fine.
But I think a lot of the market is going to wait for some fundamental catalyst to get more excited.
And people are okay missing the first 10 or 20 percent.
If there's a piece of news that's really fundamentally positive, whether that's clarity.
The White House has been teasing some progress on Bitcoin Strategic Reserve now since Vegas.
And that hasn't occurred.
that could be something.
And then the sovereign adoption, I think, is a continual story.
We're now up to 22 countries that are either mining Bitcoin or holding it at the sovereign level.
It basically goes up by like one or two countries a year.
If that trend would stop or reverse, you know, that would force a reevaluation.
If Bitcoin's not, you know, above its all-time high by like,
probably Q1,
2028, you know, that forces maybe a thesis rethink.
But otherwise, just stay the course.
Don't get too, don't get too excited either, which way.
Yeah, I tend to agree with all of that.
Matthew, thank you so much for your time.
I know that this was a little briefer,
but I think we covered a lot of ground,
so I really appreciate it.
Yeah, great to catch up, Scott.
Speak soon.
Thanks, ma'am.
