The Wolf Of All Streets - Bitcoin Will Replace The Dollar | Jack Mallers Explains Why
Episode Date: June 15, 2025►► Discover Bitcoin Yield: https://archpublic.com/ I sat down with Jack Mallers at Bitcoin Las Vegas for The Wolf Of All Streets to talk about how Bitcoin is reshaping the global financial syste...m. From the fall of the 60/40 portfolio to El Salvador’s bold experiment and the rise of Bitcoin treasury companies, this is a front-row seat to the Bitcoin revolution. Jack doesn’t hold back – this conversation will change how you think about money, power, and the future. Jack Mallers: https://x.com/jackmallers ►► JOIN THE FREE WOLF DEN NEWSLETTER, DELIVERED EVERY WEEKDAY! 👉https://thewolfden.substack.com/ ►► Arch Public Unleash algorithmic trading. Discover how algorithms used by hedge-funds are now accessible to traders looking for unparalleled insights and opportunities! 👉https://archpublic.com/ ►►TRADING ALPHA READY TO TRADE LIKE THE PROS? THE BEST TRADERS IN CRYPTO ARE RELYING ON THESE INDICATORS TO MAKE TRADES. Use code '10OFF' for a 10% discount. 👉https://tradingalpha.io/?via=scottmelker Follow Scott Melker: Twitter: https://x.com/scottmelker Web: https://www.thewolfofallstreets.io Spotify: https://spoti.fi/30N5FDe Apple podcast: https://apple.co/3FASB2c #Bitcoin #Crypto #Investments Timecodes 0:00 Bitcoin Doesn’t Need You 3:00 Government Timing And Bitcoin 6:00 El Salvador’s Bitcoin Transformation 9:00 America’s Reserve Currency Crisis 12:00 Bitcoin Treasury Companies Rise 15:00 21.co’s Institutional Vision 18:00 The Death Of 60/40 21:00 Solving The Hodler’s Dilemma 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)
Sit down, bucko. I gotta tell you how money works.
Bitcoin doesn't need you. You need Bitcoin.
If I owned Bitcoin because of what a president said or didn't say,
then, you know, I'd be porous.
What if Satoshi Nakamoto comes out,
takes his million dollars, our million bitcoins, and sells it all?
Wow. This is unbelievably exciting.
The conversations I'm having on Wall Street is these guys are like,
hey, Jack, don't tell my boss I said this,
but the 60-40 portfolio? Dead.
Bitcoin doesn't need governments, institutions, or even you. But you, institutions and governments,
all need Bitcoin. This is according to Jack Moller, the CEO of Strike and of course,
the new Bitcoin Treasury Company 21. Jack knows more about Bitcoin financial services than almost
anyone on the planet. He broke down everything that's coming in the future and why Bitcoin will be a global
reserve asset.
You don't want to miss this time Vegas and 50,000 people.
Is this beyond kind of your wildest dreams of where the space would have arrived this
quickly or is this basically in line with what you anticipated?
No, anyone that said that this that what they anticipated is a liar.
I just told the story, actually.
My first Bitcoin meetup was in my living room.
My stepmom created the first meetup in Chicago.
I came home from school, and Andreas Antonopoulos
was on my couch.
Sit down, bucko.
I got to tell you how money works.
And so to think that I went from that to Las Vegas
and given keynotes, no, this is the coolest thing in the world.
In other respects, nothing about Bitcoin
surprises me at this point.
It feels manifest, unstoppable technology that's
destined to push humanity forward.
So it's probably split emotions, I would say.
But we wouldn't have arrived here, I don't think,
unless the administrative, legislative, regulatory
situation had shifted, right?
So this could have been a very different conference.
I'm not saying any of it would have stopped Bitcoin per se,
but we have this sort of Goldilocks moment right now
where it feels like you can
do all the things you want to do.
Yeah, I mean, listen, I don't think anyone owns Bitcoin because of what someone in the
White House is tweeting, right?
If I own Bitcoin because of what a president said or didn't say, then I'd be poor.
We all own it because it's apolitical.
It's been successful no matter what a government has done
or not done for it.
But I do think what is bipartisan
is we're living through probably the most fascinating
macroeconomic time of our era.
I think we're living through a monetary regime change.
I'd be shocked if the dollar, the current iteration
of the dollar as a world reserve currency were to remain.
So I do find this administration's support for Bitcoin to be very interestingly timed.
And then now we're in trade wars and what's going on with China.
I think it is as cool a time to be working on Bitcoin as I've ever seen in my 13 years.
So we used to be the crazy people when we talked about that monetary shift and
Bitcoin becoming the global reserve currency.
And a few months ago, Larry Fink, the CEO of the largest asset manager in the world said, if the dollar continues in its path, it will hyperinflate, our debt will explode,
and Bitcoin will become the global reserve currency. Yeah, our new CMO.
I mean, it's wild. Yeah.
But I mean, what do you make of people like that now,
seemingly understanding?
I think a lot of people were skeptical of the Black
Rocks of the world coming in.
When you hear someone like him talk,
it sounds like he's legitimately orange-billed.
Well, for me, it's validating, right?
Bitcoin doesn't need you.
You need Bitcoin.
The first step of adopting Bitcoin is humbling yourself.
And you are not the main character. That was my advice to El Salvador.
That's my advice to anyone that cares to listen is that this thing is bigger than all of us,
which I think is one of the most important parts of having a neutral reserve asset.
Money is our time and our energy in an abstracted form.
It's the market good that we all exchange our effort and our labor and our work for
to then go out and get the good that we all exchange our effort and our labor and our work for to then go
out and get the things that we want in life. And so to have that be a neutral asset that no one is
bigger than is critically important. So I think Larry Fink has realized like I'm not bigger than
this thing. The ego has has reduced and he's just become a part of it and contributed to it. And I
think it's paying dividends.
It's his most successful product ever.
So that's the Bitcoin story is you think you're smarter than it,
you think you're bigger than it, you think you're more successful than it,
and then you realize you're not.
And it's in your best interest to just be a part of it.
And then you live the best version of yourself thereafter.
So congrats to Mr. Fink. Welcome to the show.
You talked about...
We can give him an applause. You talked about El Salvador, right?
Sort of there in passing.
And I don't know if I've ever asked you for an El Salvador
update.
Obviously, for those who don't know or maybe weren't here,
you made the announcement at a much smaller Bitcoin conference
at Manowinwood that they were adopting Bitcoin
as legal tender.
It was still one of the most surreal moments even for me and I think for
anyone in the space that happened. But talk about where they're at now years later and what Bitcoin
has done in your opinion for El Salvador. I'm proud of El Salvador. When I was having the
meetings with the government, this was a la February, January even of 2021. They wanted to not, it wasn't only about Bitcoin, it was let's be
tough on crime, let's be clean. What are innovative policies that would invite, I mean El Salvador is
never the home of Google engineers, MIT professors, the most brilliant financial minds in Wall Street,
it never attracted that level of talent and it was how can we become a beautifully aesthetic place for humanity to prosper
and turn our story around?
And Bitcoin became a core nucleus of that, because guess what?
If you buy Bitcoin and you become a Bitcoiner, it's an open network.
You're all of a sudden on Michael Saylor's team.
You're on Larry Fink's team. You're on Jack Dorsey's team.
Now you're on President Trump's team.
And El Salvador got that early, and they
understood, lean into the network effects
and the economy scale of an open network that
is all empowering to all of us that buy into it.
And it's paid dividends.
I mean, I think their Bitcoin treasury
is almost worth a billion dollars.
They've been able to renegotiate deals with the IMF.
They would have never in a million years.
I mean, their credit rating has just gone up and up.
I mean, they might be, I mean, Moody's just downgraded the US.
They might be more credit worthy than us.
So I couldn't be more proud of them re-engineering their story.
And I think it goes to show just how inclusive and empowering
Bitcoin is.
I mean, name me another technology
that could empower in 180 an emerging market that was devastated
after a civil war like that.
I mean, they all had access to iPhones,
they've had access to television, the radio,
nothing could have done that except Bitcoin, in my opinion.
So I'm proud of them and I'm thankful
for their contribution to the story.
But it begs the natural question,
if the entire world has seen this, which they have,
why haven't we seen a second El Salvador yet?
Well, I think El Salvador was, I think
we're about to see a second El Salvador in the United States.
But.
In the United States.
I was like, are we getting another announcement?
Yeah, we're going to go behind.
No, I think what made El Salvador unique
is at the time they didn't have their own currency.
So what people don't understand about El Salvador,
at least widely, is they went through a devastating civil war, lost their own currency.
And so again, if money is not only just a piece of paper that you use to get pizza,
but it is your life's contribution stored in a market good for you to either save or exchange later.
It is a representation of your work, your effort, your labor, who you are, your life's work.
And so for people that have the luxury to print that, you know, forgiving that luxury
is something that no central banker government is interested in doing.
So El Salvador was unique in that they could not print their own money.
They were using the US dollar.
They were looking for new life, a way to build a better future.
And Bitcoin was a bit more natural because they didn't have to forgive the superpower of printing time and energy energy.
Argentina, you know, going through austerity, all sorts of terrible times.
But they get to print money.
They get to print money and they get to use the military and force
and jail time and the courts and judicial system to force you to use it.
And that is a superpower.
And so I've actually thought, I kid you not,
after El Salvador, to me, what made most sense
was eventually America.
Because America is prided on being technologically forward.
I mean, what we did with the internet
was astounding and pioneered open communication globally.
All of the internet powerhouses were
founded in the United States.
Leader of democracy, leader of property rights, leader of the free world, Bitcoin
felt right for us.
Now, also, we're the world's currency issuer, which means we have the most debt,
which means we run the most fiscal deficits, which means naturally
we're going to start to have an interest in not being the world
reserve currency and to owning and stockpiling and eventually transitioning
into some world Reserve asset status.
And so it made a lot of sense to me. I felt Bitcoin was very American,
and that it is inevitably going to solve our problem of like this Triffin's Dilemma that is compounding right in our face.
Yeah, I think there's a more cynical or sinister side to why El Salvador was so successful,
which is that the United States couldn't attack their currency. So you saw Argentina start to talk about, actually,
some level of Bitcoin adoption.
The IMF came in and World Bank had said, no, no, no.
And they could attack their currency,
which we've seen countless times.
I mean, Bukele, as far as innovating younger,
his appeal to his population, I mean,
he's the most popular politician in the world.
So it was in many ways a perfect storm
to be an innovative first mover.
It was like a Michael Saylor-esque moment
for those that weren't around back then
of perfect leader, perfect moment,
perfect time, perfect country.
And how replicable that was, I think people got ahead
of their skis a little bit.
But I do think the next iteration of that
is the world reserve currency issuer
is destined to have really catastrophic problems.
It doesn't matter who you are or where you are.
It's a function of policy and how the system is designed.
And so very naturally, reserve assets
are going to become appealing at a rapid rate.
And so I think it makes all the sense in the world
that the United States has stumbled
into the position they're in now, which is, hey,
this World Reserve currency status thing, this sucks.
And this Bitcoin thing's pretty cool.
Yeah, it doesn't surprise me.
Bitcoin thing's pretty cool, obviously.
And we're seeing major institutional adoption
as a result of that.
And you're leading in that arena.
Staying humble and stacking stats.
So obviously, everybody's seen what Sailor's done.
You guys were second to say, we're
going to be a Bitcoin treasury company, obviously, with 21.
I think what was so impactful about that announcement,
obviously, was the partners that were a part of it.
Yeah.
Tantra, Fitzgerald, Tether, SoftBank.
So by the way, to me, I was like,
SoftBank has hundreds of millions of dollars in Bitcoin.
Where'd that come from?
So I don't know if they had to buy it or they already had it,
but that was a huge signal to me.
Obviously, you as CEO.
So Bitcoin treasury companies, really excited about what
Sailor did, really excited about what you did,
really excited when Nakamoto came in.
I've been pitched 30 of them since I got here
in the last three hours.
Yeah.
How many do we need?
Well, again, I-
We'll talk about what you're doing first.
But is this infinite scale?
No, again, I think you need Bitcoin.
Bitcoin doesn't need you.
And you look in the mirror and you realize,
I'm better off as an individual, as a family, as a business,
as a country with a harder money.
I think society has a direct correlation
to the hardness of its money.
Hardness is, by the way, it's a direct reference
in how hard is it to produce more.
When you have a hard money that's bound
to the physical constraints of mother nature,
it allows you to prioritize the future,
lower your time reference, to coordinate effectively
and efficiently in a free marketplace.
And so everyone is better off with Bitcoin in their life
because Bitcoin is the hardest money
we've ever conceived of.
So again, I know people love to get all wound up
and, oh, I'm treasury.
It's very logical that every company naturally
has capital to store and they're gonna store it.
And the, you know, most,
Saylor loves thermo dynamic but
it's you know it's bound to the physical realities of the universe you physically cannot make any
more of it which makes it the safest place for me to store my work so it doesn't surprise me
whatsoever i think at 21 you know one of the reasons i i co-founded it with tether i've known
these guys forever we've been in bitcoin for both of us a long time way over ten years. We this isn't a pivot
From some other operating business, you know, we didn't get into Bitcoin recently
This isn't anything to do with the White House or the administration
These are Bitcoiners that thought there was not a hole in the market
But there was we thought Bitcoin could be represented
in a way that we were interested in,
and we saw demand from folks like SoftBank.
And so we think we're very different,
which I can explain, but it doesn't surprise me
that the capital markets has a big appetite for Bitcoin.
Go ahead and explain.
I would love to hear the nuance.
Well, I think, you know, Tether and I,
I would say four or five years ago when Sailor was getting
started with his pivot, as Bitcoiners, we were like, wow, this is unbelievably exciting.
Also, by the way, Bitcoin inspires the most clever creative thinking I've ever seen because
I do think it's the most free market of all time.
There is no central rulemaker or intermediary or governor or regulator that gets in your way of ideas
And so this idea was so clever and so brilliant. We're just cheering them on. I would say maybe one to two years ago
The amount of institutional demand has far exceeded. I think any Bitcoin
I mean these ETFs and this administration and the amount of demand in the capital markets and especially now we're seeing whether it's tariffs or
Capital controls is this American first investment policy, which is hey China take your money and go home And the amount of demand in the capital markets, and especially now we're seeing, whether it's tariffs or capital controls,
is this American first investment policy,
which is hey China, take your money and go home.
You know, the $150 trillion market of global equities,
like all these companies trading at 50 times earnings,
people are trying to look for like real value,
real returns, companies with a real balance sheet.
And that level of demand, we were like okay,
a lot of these other treasury companies, there's
nothing wrong with them, they're just a bit small.
These are companies, small cat, mid-sized businesses that don't have the skeleton to
actually absorb institutional demand and growth.
And then for the micro strategies of the world, which there's only one, we thought there was
an opportunity to actually build technology with access to the capital markets and access
to such a big balance sheet filled with Bitcoin.
Paolo and I, before we were CEOs, we were technologists.
We both were engineers.
Over the last few years, we were like, man, for the smaller companies that are doing maybe
innovative product building things, a soft bank can't write them a billion dollar check.
This market cap's $100 million.
And for MicroStrategy, we're very interested
in building financial services and extending
the treasury story beyond just buying Bitcoin.
And so that's where our tagline, when I was on Wall Street
pitching the product, it's we want
to bring blue chip credibility with startup upside
to the capital market.
Soft bank wasn't a founding partner.
They're actually our first outside investor. And that was what was attractive to them is blue chip
credibility. I mean Tether's the most profitable per-employee company in the
history of mankind, the most successful business running today. We're very
credible. Our background, what we've been able to achieve, I mean strike as well
when it comes to gross or net profit per employee. I mean we got to be up there in
the Bitcoin space with the startup upside, with the fact that we only have or expected to have upon closing 42,000
coins. We think we're gonna be able to add that dramatically. We think we're
gonna be able to build high margin, high growth, cash producing products that
actually add to our ability to buy Bitcoin and influence the world with the
tech. So it's that we're big enough to win, we're small enough to grow. We have
blue chip credibility, we have startup upside. That's what we thought. Someone
that was built by Bitcoiners, for Bitcoiners,
people that understand the tech and understand
how to build successful businesses in this space,
that's what we thought was missing.
This is a Bitcoin native.
We're not pivoting.
We're not taking an ancillary business that
didn't know how to spell Bitcoin,
and now all of a sudden is buying it.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.
We just think we're different in that concrete way.
Where does the demand for the actual convertible notes
or the debt or whatever strategy you take,
where does that generally come from?
And does a lot of it come from still places
where perhaps this is the only way they can gain exposure
to Bitcoin, like insurance company or such,
as you still can't go buy?
Yeah.
Well, I think to understand the demand we're seeing at 21
is to understand this macro environment
we're living through.
Again, you've got the Treasury or the Secretary
coming out on CNN and saying,
real negative rates for the 10-year.
Yeah, that's great.
He's saying, I'm gonna focus on the GDP growth
faster than the debt.
It's like, wait, what?
You out of your mind?
Then yields the
next day go skyrocket. And it's so, okay, fixed income, 10 year, dead, right? You're
talking about privatizing Frannie Mae, FedDMAC to buy MBS and provide liquidity that way.
Then you've got capital controls. So all the trillions of dollars of trade surplus from
foreign trading partners, they're saying no more bidding up the Nasdaq no more bidding up
the mag-7 goodbye your 50 times all your favorite tech companies that are trading
at 50 times earnings irrationally well those got to come down because you're
not getting a persistent bid from China anymore all of these amazing
beautiful penthouses that are selling for hundreds of millions of dollars well
you don't have the foreign Russian and Chinese capital anymore. All the
beautiful farmland that isn't actually producing any food, well those aren't
getting bit up anymore. So you're having assets, you know the dollar is
artificially strong, dollar assets are artificially strong because the world
reserve currency status and so if we're going to start to balance that then
fixed income, then the equities market, they need real returns, they need a real
balance sheet, they need real growth. Well Bitcoin is compounding at 60% a year. And if you add a little bit
of leverage to it, you add cashflow generating products and you add a little bit of tether
and a little bit of strike, that's a very powerful equity in a world that's re-orchestrating
capital flows. And so when we go to fixed income market and say, hey, the conversations
I'm having on Wall Street is these guys are like, hey, Jack, don't tell my boss I said
this, but the 60 6040 portfolio dead dead
So here check this out. I just modeled out the 55 540 or the 60 35 5
help me understand where the alpha is and
I say cool and I order up over 500 million dollars of cash in a week on Wall Street boom and that's where the demand is
Coming from is because we,
you know, American exceptionalism was largely funded
by foreign trading partners, Trade Surplus.
And so all of these, you know, tech stocks can't go down,
real estates gets a perpetual bid.
I mean, that's gonna be questions.
We're gonna see capital rotation.
I think Bitcoin's a great place for that capital.
And we think 21 is gonna be, in our opinion,
one of the best ways to do Bitcoin in the capital markets.
I 100% agree.
My concern is when Bitcoin's cycle top,
if we believe there is one, irrelevant.
Bitcoin hits a certain level.
We get the normal FOMO that we do.
And 100 companies who have no idea what they're doing
come in and try to do what you're doing.
They raise debt.
They say, oh, you're 7% yield
I'm gonna do 8, 9, 10, 27%
Bitcoin goes down 20% they're forced to sell and here we are in yet another
leverage cascade of
sell-off
Nothing to do with what you're doing, but there's people who are gonna see it successfully. Great. And
Try to you know imitate it at the wrong time with zero structure.
No, I love it.
I mean, listen, I love when a childhood friend says,
what if Satoshi Nakamoto comes out,
takes his million dollars, or million bitcoins,
and sells it all?
I'd be like, oh, I'll buy it.
Yeah, I was just saying.
Everyone in this room will buy it.
Everyone in this room will buy it.
I'm a buyer.
I'm a buyer.
So if you've levered yourself up to your neck Everyone in this room will buy it. Everyone in this room will buy it. I'm a buyer. I'm a buyer.
So if you've levered yourself up to your neck
in your puking Bitcoin at discounts, I'm buying.
So Bitcoin is the best money to transfer wealth
from the impatient to the patient,
from the irresponsible to the responsible.
So again, we are very confident between the founding group
and the executive team.
We've been at Bitcoin a very long time.
We've built lots of successful businesses.
And we know exactly what we're doing.
I've lived through many cycles.
I missed one halving.
I was not there for the 2020 cycle.
So you were like three.
No, not quite.
But I missed the first halving.
Any other, every halving, I was there.
So I've lived through these cycles.
And so we feel prepared. And yeah, listen, every having I was there. So I've lived through these cycles and so we feel prepared
and yeah, listen, it's a free market.
And if there's a lot of impatient, irresponsible capital
that needs a better home, I got plenty of space.
I believe it.
So what's exciting you the most?
I mean, kind of like running out of time, obviously,
but outside of the things that we've discussed,
as you see this sort of Goldilocks moment,
as we talked about, which I think will be continuing. What's the most exciting
thing you're seeing in the Bitcoin space? I think for both 21 and Strike, separate
businesses, shout out my lawyers, shout out the SEC, separate companies, you know
what I think is interesting to us is focusing on utility within the asset
class. We've seen a lot
of the innovation be offering more cryptos or more speculative ways, you
know, options, leverage or list 300 tokens. We're really interested, we've
mentioned in the 21 business plan and public filing and at Strike we've
launched and continue to scale out lending, credit markets, making Bitcoin like,
you can get a home equity loan.
If you have a scarce desirable asset,
why would you ever sell it?
And by the way, the Hodler's dilemma that we all face is,
I've been able to build wealth in Bitcoin,
but I don't wanna sell it.
And money is a means like, you know,
do you know the miser and his gold story?
Is that the miser would stack a bunch of gold
and he buried it in his backyard.
And every day he'd go out and look at the gold
and look at the gold and just admire
that he had all this gold.
And one day his neighbor realized what was underground.
His neighbor went in and stole the gold.
He went and looked out, the gold was gone.
And he's crying.
And his friend comes and says, what's wrong?
He says, my gold, it's stolen.
He said, well, all you did was look at it.
You might as well just put a rock there,
and it'll serve the same purpose.
And so same thing with Bitcoiners, right,
is that we all have amassed this wealth
and this hard, scarce asset.
But you need a house to live in.
You need food to buy.
You want to get married.
You want to have kids.
You want to travel.
And the fact that we haven't had credible utility built
on top of the asset class to allow you to get liquidity out of the asset,
responsibly borrow against it, credit markets, different financial services and
innovation that's a necessity to solve the Hodler's Dilemma, to solve this
problem for this new wealth class that's worth over two trillion dollars. And so
I think both my businesses independently are focused not on other cryptos, not on
further speculation,
but on making the asset more useful
and allowing you to actually allow
to change your life more.
And that's what I think is coming
and what excites me outside of both companies
buy a lot of Bitcoin.
We're excited about the price too.
So what company are you going to be the third CEO of?
Uh, none.
My girlfriend killed me.
You're done? You're capped out at two.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I know that feeling, man.
Thank you so much for everything you do.
Thank you, man.
I really appreciate it.
This incredible conversation was recorded live in the ArchPublic Lounge at Bitcoin Las Vegas.
To dollar cost average into Bitcoin efficiently and to check out all the other algorithms,
go to ArchPublic.com.