The Wolf Of All Streets - Crypto Bloodbath! $1.3B Liquidated in Market Meltdown | Crypto Town Hall
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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Crypto Bloodbath. Good morning. It's 10, 18 a.m. Eastern Standard Time. This
is Crypto Town Hall. We do the show every weekday, 10, 15 a.m. Eastern Standard Time.
Some days are better than others. Today, obviously, a down day for markets. Bitcoin currently
trading at $86,588 and dropping fast, seemingly. Ethereum down at $2,370, down about 11% in
the last 24 hours. Solana also down about 11% trading at $135.78. I think we all know
that markets aren't looking too happy at the moment. Excited to dig in with the panel on
what the charts look like
and fundamentally why many believe
this correction might be happening.
Luckily, we have Peter Brandt here.
Peter, would love your thoughts on the Bitcoin chart
right now and what's happening with the market.
Yeah, I mean, I'll post charts online.
You know, chart patterns, a chart pattern.
It is what it is. price is what it is. I always humors me when I post a
chart pattern that's clear and people want to argue about it.
Hey, here's the reality. We have a three months double top in
Bitcoin. Now you can take that for what it is you can argue it,
you can say it's wrong. You can agree with it, you can say I'm a liar, you can
respond anyway you want. The reality is we have a 13 week M-type double top in Bitcoin, that's
reality folks. Does it fail? Does it meet its target? Does it begin a bear market? Hey, those
are things we don't know. What we know is we have a 13 week double top in Bitcoin,
period.
Now deal with that for however you wanna deal with it,
but that's the reality as things stands right now.
Yeah, so Peter quickly, sorry about my mic as usual,
not necessarily working.
So we obviously we had the top around 183
back in I think December, and then the more recent top around you know 109
the lowest point between those I believe was you know just around 89 which we're kind of breaking
down below so I assume that that's sort of your confirmation of the double top is this break below
89 is that correct? Yeah I mean until until this double top fails and somehow, which means we got to climb back above that, that midpoint low,
we've got to consolidate there and then start back up until we
have that we have about 75,000 targets. Again, you can argue
with that you can say I'm full of that you can respond any way
you want to respond. But as far as I'm concerned, as a TARDIS,
we have a 13 week double top, it has been completed, it has a target
of 75.5, which by the way, would be a pretty good retest of the
parabolic advance that we started back in 2013, or 2023.
So
yeah, 78 385, depending on which exchange you looked on was the previous all time high.
Right.
So if you're looking at the high from sorry, I'm doing on my phone, basically March of
24, which has never been retested as support.
Right.
So a lot of people have looked at that area all the way on the way up and saying that
was kind of begging for a retest. But usually in these parabolic advances, you don't necessarily get it, but that aligns what you're
saying with sort of that area. Yeah, I mean, yeah, you take that 72 73 area exactly. I mean,
I always looked at the weekly chart of Bitcoin as kind of a continuation inverted
heaven shoulders pattern that started with the two March 2021
high. And you know, and so we're the left shoulder back there
then and then we went down into the bottom of the head November
2022 we rallied up we had, you know, this seven month
consolidation that started back in March 2024, then we broke
out.
You know, if we crack here and we move back in the mid 70s, it's a retest of the neckline
of that weekly trend pattern.
It's a retest of the parabolic curve that we have and, you know, we'll deal with from
that.
Now, do we have to go back down there? No, we don't. But you know, we can
always negate this double top. That's, you know, patterns are
always negatable. And that can occur. And obviously, those who
think this decline is full of crap would say, Yeah, we're not
going to go back down there and retest, we're going to find a
bottom here, and we're going to go straight to 200,000000, whatever. But I have to deal with what I consider to be the
latest input. And the latest input of information for me is a 13 week, double top. And as a chart,
there's no have to deal with that. It makes perfect sense. Do you have any specific thoughts on the rest of the crypto market outside
of Bitcoin or the context of this into markets in general? This move, because it seems like stocks
are pretty flat here. Yeah, I'm a long standing bear on ETH. I mean, I always have been, I think, ETH is full of crap, but I'm no, I mean, I'm a Bitcoin guy, look at Bitcoin.
The rest, it's just a whole big field of pretenders.
Makes sense.
Fullis, you obviously are looking at the charts,
actively trading this on a day-to-day basis.
How do your views align with Peter's?
What are you looking at?
Hey, Scott. Yeah, maybe I have a slightly different take to Peter. I just think that yeah this price action that we're
getting kind of reminds me of the range that we had last year between March and October. And I mean
you'll remember, most of the panel will remember, most of our listeners will remember that sentiment
in that range was basically the worst indicator
of where price was actually going
and what you should have done at that time.
We had moves to the top of the range, let's call it,
the range back then was basically between like 70K
and maybe like high fifties.
And every time we moved to the top of the range,
you got the same moon boys coming out of the woodwork
saying, yeah, this is it, new paradigm, long year longs,
we're all gonna make so much money.
It's top long season, all season coming, et cetera, et cetera.
And every time by the last time by the breakout
we got November, there was a rejection.
There was like six or seven rejections before that happened.
Likewise, at range lows, and this kind of comes into my point.
Every time we went back to like 60 K 58 K, there was a dip in May that went to 57 K.
There was a dip in July that went to 55 K.
There was of course that big dip in August that went all the way down to sub 50K.
But each one of those dips, the same permamayors are coming out and saying that, oh, we're
going to go lower, we're going to go to 30K, like set your stink bids, bull market is over,
et cetera.
But I still, at the time, and now looking at this price action, I still think we're
in a range and range rules apply, right? Now, at the moment, we're deviating quite low below the current range, which is like
arguably between like 100K and call it like 90K or even like 105K and 90K, right? This is a pretty
low deviation, but we've seen low deviations before. We've actually seen this exact type of
range pay last year. We saw it the year before right. BTC consolidates and then either moves up out of the range or down out of the
range. Now maybe this is the breakdown. Maybe we're just going to retrace the entire Trump
pump that we got in October, November last year. Maybe this this is the end of of the
of the bull market quote unquote because it's been a very varied bull market
for a lot of coins.
But I just haven't seen enough evidence to say
that that is the case.
And I think this is really where it's important
for people to focus on their own charts,
focus on their own analysis.
Don't get caught up in the, I guess, in the hysteria
or in the high emotions that always come
when price is dumping like this, right?
Quickly, Folas, are you telling me that you can be a trader without getting opinions from a thousand
people on X? That's possible? Peter, what do you think about it? It's impossible! You need the
opinions of a thousand people on X to be able to make a decision.
X is like the ultimate double-edged sword because if you curate your X feed well, you
can get some, you can get, you can have basically, it's like this freedom of information that
basically we've never had before.
And I'm sure Peter can speak on this more than I can, but I always think back on the
guys who got into, got into finance, got into trading markets in the 70s and 80s.
And yeah, guys like John Bollinger
talking about drawing his Bollinger Bands
on a paper chart.
I used to watch my grandfather.
My grandfather was a stockbroker.
And when I was a kid, I used to watch him
at the breakfast table, drawing his charts by hand.
It's amazing.
But the last point I'll make here
is that just there's so much information
that the issue isn't trying to find the information it's basically trying to block out and I think
that's what's it's very important for traders now especially if this is your your first
time or one of your first times experiencing this kind of downside this kind of market
volatility is just to try and block out the noise, focus on the quality, focus
on what you can say for certain, focus on the empirical facts and just try and think
about the plans that you had before emotions came into play. It's not always easy. But
I do think that we haven't seen enough here. I know there's a lot of guys calling for 70k,
80k. I just haven't seen enough yet. I think that there's a very good chance that range low supports holes and we bounce but the lineup final point
I will say is that to counter that is basically you want to see you do want to see bulls step up
I don't think that this is where you should be knife catching
I think that this is a scenario where you wait for confirmation and enter with conviction
Rather than trying to knife catch every low because we're just sweeping and sweeping and
sweeping again.
Yeah, just quickly.
I mean, for the record, you know, if we count this as sort of the low of this move, let's
call it 109 top, we're still only down about 21.1% from the top.
I think it moved to 75.
Let's just call it round to be a 31% drop from the top. Peter, I mean, both of those are hard for the course, if not shallow for previous Bitcoin
bull market.
So I guess before we kind of move on, I want your thoughts on whether a drop to 75, does
that change your opinion on whether this is a bull or bear market or what's likely to
happen after that?
Because we know we've had 35, 40, 50 percent
drops in every bull market in crypto, Bitcoin specifically. Yeah, I mean, full disclosure,
60 percent ownership position in Bitcoin from an investment point of view. I mean, I've not been
below that percentage for a very long time. I still think we're in a Bitcoin bull market
cycle that will end somewhere between 125 and 150 and August, September of 2025. I mean, but no,
that's as an investor. That's an investor is a separate Bitcoin portfolio that I have as a trader for the company account
we're stored Bitcoin futures. So you know, how do I reconcile that I don't reconcile
it? Why should things always have to be reconciled? So yeah, you know, they're they're separate
positions based on separate timeframes based on separate decision making met matrices.
So yeah, I mean, a correction back in the 70s, you know, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met,
met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met,
met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met,
met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met,
met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, met, my Bitcoin corrections table and stick it on Twitter some point today. But yeah, correction into the mid 70s. That's kind of actually kind of a
yonder from a historical point of view.
Yeah, Dave, you had your hand up.
Yeah. Yeah, actually, I was gonna say pretty much exactly what Peter just
said. I mean, look, you know, you have to look at timeframes. And you have to
look at a couple of things
that are structural in the market that are important.
You know, we've talked about, people talk about, well, you remember we were talking
about yesterday about the carry trade or was it the day before?
It's all a blur.
But if you look, the March futures are trading at the lowest premium to the February futures
one month out that we've seen since the start
of this cycle in basis points terms.
What does that mean?
It means that there's literally no demand right now for buying forward from all the
brokerages that are using the futures.
Now when that happens, that means that all of those carry trades get unwound.
And it doesn't mean that there isn't another side of it.
But when that happens at the same
time as those same buyers who are saying, oh, I want to wait for it to drop below 90
to buy, of course we all know what happens when the markets drop, people walk away, and
so you get these air pockets.
It's classic trading behavior, but I agree.
I mean, from a chart perspective, even from any rational perspective, we broke the 92 bottom of that range with conviction. It's now you
look for the wider range and figure out where the hell it is. And we're in negative price
discovery and you're going to see that for a bit. Now, all of that said, none of the
fundamental drivers have really changed with one exception. And it is worth noting the
one exception. We haven't talked about it a lot. I never really put a whole lot of credence in
you know the Bitcoin strategic reserve being this big announcement that was
going to trumpet it but the likelihood of that is down and
we're watching multiple states where the likelihood where you know it's
failing at the state level where you know we had Dennis Porter on here talking about
how that was going to happen.
I always thought it would be more corporate
and pools of capital and what will happen
in the back half of this year
are all the brokerage firms going in.
So it's not like the bull case has changed, it hasn't,
but in the short run, you have to be very cognizant
of what's going on in the market dynamics.
And I always get really leery just like, In the short run, you have to be very cognizant of what's going on in the market dynamics.
I always get really leery just like I don't like being long when everybody's talking about,
well, okay, we're going super bullish and I always want to see the other side.
With every professional saying 75 or 70 or things like that, I tend to think, you know
what?
That's just too easy and, Pat, markets tend to do the opposite of what people expect But right now when you're seeing Bitcoin leading the world down
I mean, you know, it's rare when you look in coin glass and you see Bitcoin as
by far the dominant
liquidation of the long side
That has not been the case during you know what we've seen since this meme coin, you know inspired altcoin
case during what we've seen since this meme coin inspired altcoin disaster started unfolding, of the liquidations, Bitcoin was a smaller percentage.
Now Bitcoin is literally at its dominance level of liquidation.
And that matters, right?
It's telling you that there was a lot of leverage, a lot of people who had given up in the short
run on alts but were levering on Bitcoin.
And oops, that's what's happening to that. in the short run on alts but we're levering on Bitcoin and oops you know
that's what's happening to that. I think it's 1.4 billion in the last 24 hours is the aggregate right now
it's a very large number for this market. That's right it's a big number and a
lot of it is Bitcoin you know what I'm trying to tell you is that what I'm
trying to say Scott is it's it's it's a fairly conclusive proof that a lot of
DGENs who were getting crushed in alts started
aping in and overlevering on Bitcoin.
And that is, you know, given that the percentage of this move isn't that big, I mean, we're
talking 10, 20, 30, 30 times or more leverage.
And when that's being done, you know, all bets are off.
Yeah.
And yesterday you, you, myself and Matt Hogan kind of had a conversation obviously about
these outflows. I believe you were here. We were talking about the outflows, the ETFs.
We had, I think about 500 million last week. Well, we had 500 million more yesterday from
and the numbers get bigger today. Right. And the reason I told the carry trade closing
because it's no longer a viable trade, which
means that people who bought spot Bitcoin or spot ETFs, as we were discussing, are using
the ETFs for the carry trade, who are short futures and buying spot ETFs are closing those
positions in profit, which means selling ETFs, which means outflows.
Yep, exactly right.
Yeah. Austin.
Yeah, I was going to say, you know, it's interesting listening to you guys talk from the equities
perspective.
I'm a grand shield fixed income person by trade.
And, you know, the running gag on the floor used to be all markets are funding markets.
I think the reason for call it the short term wrong footing of crypto on this
move is as markets get bigger, and we all agree that Bitcoin has gotten significantly bigger,
especially with the ETFs, you start correlating more and more with global macro, whether you want
to or not. And we're living in a world right now where expectations on interest rates are being revised, expectations on core economic
returns are being revised, people are sort of internalizing the American policy of increased
tariffs and looking at, well, maybe we were wrong about the future path of inflation.
And at the same time, we have this trend in crypto of people rotating from all to the
levered Bitcoin bets, we have global macros showing up and being like, actually, maybe you should revalue all of the risk assets.
And so I think one thing that's happening, as you guys have said, is people were not
really ready for things like the carry trade dynamic this time around with the ETFs in
play. I think the other thing I'm watching here is, are we seeing Bitcoin becoming a leading indicator
for what could be happening in larger global macro markets based on this move? Because if this is
fundamentally driven by funding, if this is fundamentally being driven by the clash of
crypto expectations and real expectations on economic returns, what does that tell you the
next leg is?
Go ahead, Duane.
Yeah, sure. Thanks. Good morning. Yeah, so there is, you know, just to, I guess, jump on those comments as well.
There is something to be said about, you know, the concerns about inflation here.
So if we look at the last, you know, the last CPI, we have an uptick in inflation
and it, you know and it outsized forecasts.
I think that has something to do here with the three-month low that crypto has experienced
here.
I mean, Bitcoin has experienced here.
I think it also just in general does coincide with more of a tumultuous time in regards
to crypto in the sense of the meme coin fiascoes
that we've seen with celebrities here
and the meme coin frenzy.
So also as well, when you put that together
with like a lack of near-term catalysts,
it does put the bull market overall into question.
So I think when you put a lot of these issues together
with tears and with some
uncertainty in regards to the administration as well, you get this pot of gumbo, so to speak, where investors have to navigate through that. So I think that's really what's happening here. So
we're seeing a real overall risk-off maneuver here with Bitcoin. And I think that's going to
does relate to what's happening in markets as well.
Even with the commodity complex, if you look at gold, silver, copper, etc. They are down today as well.
So I think that's a good indicator of where we're going.
Yeah, my one of my best friends lifelong. I'm not allowed to say where he works, but I'll say it runs in Chittadel.
He texted me this morning at 5am, hey, what the hell's up with your Bitcoin?
As usual, because you troll your friends at 5 o'clock in the morning on a Monday at all
times.
And I said, hey, what do you think is going on with Bitcoin?
He said, okay, from top down, obviously, tell you where he works.
He said, listen, there's a like Wall Street woke up yesterday.
We don't get the crypto news.
He's like, we found out there was a one point five billion dollar hack
this weekend or on Friday is like, we didn't know that till yesterday.
He's like, we view that as definitely part of the reason this is selling off.
He said,
they don't really look so deeply. So they just get the headlines and Libra and the Trump token, they view as a ceiling for the industry for quite a long time. And they also to Duane's point,
think tariffs are a poor tool. And the amount of uncertainty in markets is leading to a sell off.
I'm not telling you those are the reasons, but I'm telling you this is coming from somebody applying at one of the biggest
institutions. Those are the things they're pointing at for the reason that we're seeing this sell-off
is that they're very concerned, I think, short-term about Trump policies and not so much long-term
with the deregulation and all the things that are likely to happen. But meme coin market
hack, not favorable for Bitcoin when they all woke up on Monday. I don't know if anybody has
thoughts on that, but that's what I'm hearing sort of directly. Ryan, go ahead.
Yeah. So I'm not much of a trader. Historically, when I've tried trading and just looking at the
markets, I've done very, very badly. I'm an engineer. I've been an engineer for 20 years and I look at the patterns with
the way people trade these technology tokens, essentially. And it's a lot of greed. They throw
their money around with being very, very reckless. And by the way, the quote unquote hack that
happens with Gnosis, I think there's
a lot more negligence than they're leading on, a lot less hack and more negligence.
I'm on a lot of teams that use Gnosis safes and the different multisig tools. And we review
the bytecode before we send things, assign things. And we make sure that we know who initiated the
transaction. And it's a lot of security procedures, even when
we're transferring a million or 10 million or whatever, let
alone like 1.4 billion. So I think I think this industry is
still, you know, maybe one of them, a bunch of kids kind of
getting our stripes and, and learning
that we're in the real world with real money. And all the
more professional institutions are looking at us like, like,
why would I put my money there? The one other comment I'd say
is, I thought historically, and maybe some of the other
panelists here couldn't answer this. I thought historically,
when you move out of like crypto would be a hedge for the dollar.
And if you're selling back into the dollar, it's you think that the dollar is going to be strong.
Is this like a bullish indicator for the American economy
because people are moving back into the dollar and they think all the cuts are going to make it stronger?
Or is it just like people are just looking at the markets, reading the tea leaves and think
I just I think there's like 12 very loud Bitcoin maxis on Twitter
who scream about the death of the dollar and that's not on the radar of anybody on Wall
Street. I just don't think they have a concern for getting out of the dollar. Maybe I'm wrong.
But I've never heard any of them, you know, who aren't hardcore old, you know, Bitcoiners
ever. Still that real concern because where are you going to go? Ryan? And that I'm in my, if you're on Wall Street.
No, exactly.
That's why I'm so confused by it.
Because when you actually look at the fundamentals
of what Bitcoin is and how it works,
it's still one of the most sound things
we can use at this point.
You know, there's no other financial system
on face of the earth that can do what Bitcoin can do
in the volume that it can do it.
So the technology has not changed.
We're still working with the same code base, even more engineers that we've worked with
before.
We have more building on top of it.
We have more innovation and people coming into the ecosystem.
So we're looking at a price as an indicator of the technology. I think the technology is going to prove true over time and people are going to,
you know, they'll jump in, they'll jump out, but over the long time, long term, it's going to be
the tsunami. So we're watching the tides pull back thinking, oh no, it's going to crash.
I think we're just gearing up for the flood.
that that
that
that
that
that
that
that
that
that
that that that Yeah, whatever. Yeah, you know, always want to be polite. Look, I had this theory this morning and I posted it
You know as a reply to Jeff Dorman who was kind of annoyed with OTC desks
You know talking about bullshit and I thought by that funny because we all know that you know when the press calls
It says why is this happening? You're generally gonna regurgitate bullshit
I think that your friend at at Citadel probably nailed it much better in terms of approximate
causes for whatever, but that's not pools of money.
I do think in the-
He doesn't work at Citadel, Dave.
I didn't say that.
Thank you.
Okay.
He works at some place.
Binnadel.
It's a new Bitcoin company.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, cool.
So in any event, I think that there's a lot of muscle memory in the crypto world and people,
and maybe it's completely coincidental
with some ridiculous notion of Sam Bankman Fried
posting on X yesterday, I mean,
but people remember Luna blowing up
and they remember that after Luna blew up,
and by the way, it had very little to do with Luna,
if anything, they remember Voyager and by the way, it had very little to do with Luna, if anything,
they remember Voyager and all the various force selling events that killed the last bull market.
And I do think that there's fear out there that, oh my God, Bybit had a, you know, $1.4 billion. The meme coin blow up has been horrible. Oh my God, this is going to accelerate and the whole
thing is going to come crashing down. Now, the between these proximate causes and what happened is massive.
Most importantly, there isn't the collapse of a lending market where Bitcoin collateral
has to be liquidated except for idiots who over leverage themselves.
And so if you expect that that's what's happening, then selling Bitcoin in that scenario
is more a question of, okay,
there are some people who are selling
because they have to sell, and there is that truth.
Remember, Bitcoin rallied over 100% last year.
A lot of people made a lot of money.
A lot of traders made a lot of money.
And those traders are gonna owe taxes.
And when they see Bitcoin starting to fall below the range,
it's like, oh crap, I need to pay my taxes.
I gotta have to sell my Bitcoin to do it.
I may as well do it now so that way I don't have to sell more
if it goes down even further.
And so you do get that sort of acceleration loop.
And by the way, that is exactly,
someone on the spaces yesterday mentioned
it feels like March of 2000.
And that's what happened in March of 2000.
The NASDAQ dropped 14% in one day,
which for an index is a very big deal.
I mean, for Bitcoin, 14% people panic
when it's equities, it's a really big deal.
You start hitting circuit breakers and shit like that.
So understand, we saw that.
By the way, it recrased all of those losses
even in the NASDAQ
and the collapse didn't happen until six months later.
Now, I'm not saying that we're gonna have a collapse six months from now, but what I'm
telling you is that these sorts of scenarios are a big deal.
I mean, just right now, I mean, it's only a couple of days, but the February future,
a couple of days from now, people are selling at a discount, you know, $100 to $200 discount,
right?
You know, that's actually happening
and it's been happening since we've been on this call.
So there are a lot of flows that are going on
and that's despite, by the way, it rallying,
what are we up?
You know, a thousand, you know,
about a thousand bucks off the bottom
and you're seeing that.
So you have to understand that there's a lot of crap goes on
but when people get into panic mode, all bets are off.
I didn't even see that it had dropped below 86, but looking now, and you said we're a thousand off, pretty, pretty wild price action.
Austin, you were next.
Yeah, I was going to say to a previous comment, one of the obnoxious market dynamics that people should be aware of is
often when we revisit expectations in the general economy in the US lower, the dollar is going to
get stronger, not weaker. It's a little bit like the Winston Churchill problem of it's
the worst asset except for all the others. As people revise their expectations down on things
like Bitcoin and people are panicking, and as you can see from futures action, there's a lot of fear in the market. What does everybody pile into? The dollar.
I would not take that as an endorsement of the long-term path of the dollar. I would take it as
criticism of everything else. But just be aware, even if you're a Bitcoin maxi, even if you're a
dollar hater, in short-term periods of fear, people are going to pile into the dollar, it will get
stronger. Other it will get
stronger, other things will get weaker.
It does drive technical price action and it's a very flows-based thing, as Dave was saying.
Yeah, I absolutely agree with all of that.
Matthew, what are your thoughts on what's happening at the moment, obviously, sowing
some weakness across the board in the crypto market
while other things are generally flat.
I keep, well, good morning, everybody.
I hope you're doing well, Scott.
I kind of wake up today and just have this nagging feeling
that something isn't necessarily right.
The narrative isn't quite right
and that there's a little bit of, yeah, there's a lot of just conflicting messages and things like that. And I heard, you know, Duane mentioned a lack of catalysts and I would just, you know, consider all the things that have been going on in the crypto space that are bullish for the space, especially, and I want to point out the shackles coming off from the SEC with regards to OpenSea
and Coinbase and now Robinhood. When Trump talks about short-term pain, is this what he was talking
about? Is this the rigmarole that we're going through? I just sit back and say, okay, well,
this is the point in time where people have been begging at 108,000 Bitcoin, like, gosh, I wish I could
have bought it at 90 or at 95 or, you know, how low does it go? And I think that there's
a really obvious case here to be dollar cost averaging, you know, in into this and in stages
to be able to buy back lower at the prices that you're looking at. And the fact that
we're looking at this at an $85,000, $87,000 Bitcoin right now is just
pretty remarkable considering six months ago, it was in the 60s and 70s. So I think a lot of people
buy in when there's euphoria and they freak out when things don't quite go their way. And a lot
of this stuff collapses kind of like a flaunt in a closet because a lot of people start taking out
leverage. And a lot of people start saying, well, if I could just mortgage my house again and buy some Bitcoin,
everything's going to be great.
I agree with a lot of the things that people have spoken on here about,
but I just encourage people to remember that this is a longer-term play,
the technology is still sound.
No blockchain got hacked,
a company got hacked,
and this is always the same narrative
every time this happens.
Oh no, the technology's bad.
Absolutely incorrect.
The technology is working perfectly.
It's the institutions that have messed up in this sense.
And we've got clients right now just continuing to say,
hey, let's go buy on the dip.
Let's keep adding and stacking Sats
or stacking XRP or ether, whatever it is. So again, come back to this nagging feeling that something's not right
with this narrative. Like nothing drastically has gone wrong. So if anything to me, it just feels a
bit manipulated and a bit like a good entry point. Matthew, you're on the ground, obviously, for those who don't know, an RIA, a fund manager.
Do you have clients even mentioning things like the HATS and Libra and Trump meme coins
or any of this, or are they basically still don't even notice those headlines and focused
on Bitcoin?
I think the most important thing that I've seen over the course of the last few days
has been actually looking at a client email right now, I'm terrified of leaving my assets on an
exchange or in my closet. And this idea that self custody is the is the like
paragon of this ecosystem is wrong. Like, like being your own bank is cool until
it's not cool. And that's why we work with an institutional grade custodian
that provides insurance on accounts.
And we work with people to put their wealth into places
that we feel like are secure spots to keep it.
For the moment, there's a lot of different ways
that people can participate in this ecosystem.
But keeping your wealth is just one aspect
of being able to make sure that you get to benefit from it.
Getting your wealth is one challenge, keeping it is the other. And I think a lot of people feel
scared about providing their assets either to an exchange or in some sort of soft custody capacity
or keeping their assets on a ledger. That's like the number one thing that I'm hearing right now.
keeping their assets on a ledger. That's like the number one thing that I'm hearing right now.
Which should start to change at least that perception for better or for worse
with the overturn of Sab 121 and Bank of New York, Mellon and State Street
and all of them coming in as custodians, you would think, right, Matthew?
I mean, that's a absolutely absolutely the custodianship of digital assets
is going to be a new wave of how people start
to become okay with it and how you get people from traditional finance more interested in
it. And this all comes back to how do they create new financial instruments or like peripasu
instruments that help people get access to it either through an ETF or an index ETF or
all these kinds of things. So totally agree that keeping your assets secure is one of the number one things that
will drive adoption in this space.
Zillian.
Hi, just a good evening, everyone.
Just a quick note on what's happening with the liquidations etc. Look, for me this is basically the culminating
factor of many years of kind of disinformation. Let me explain myself. For retail and the exchanges have been marketing to retail mostly,
that being in futures, leveraged products is equal to being in crypto.
Right now, if you go to spaces where there is newcomers or even like one one cycle ago, commerce, etc. When they talk, their exposure to crypto is their
exposure to leveraged products. And exchanges have been marketing heavily towards that simply
because that is one way exchanges make a P&L and market makers make a P&L. So it's really sad to see that when
you have liquidations like this and big dumps like this, they really happen during a time period
where there is extremely low liquidity in the market. So they usually happen when everyone is asleep and they go chase liquidation levels in a very shallow market.
These types of behaviors, I think, and I'm really thankful that it's going to finish very soon
when we're going to start to have more regulatory framework, supervision framework for these places.
I'm not accusing anyone.
These are now standard market practices, right?
But at the end of the day, it hurts a lot of retail.
At the end of the day, we know that the people
that have been liquidated to these levels,
this is basically $1.3 billion of people's savings, okay?
Of people that, this is not gambling money and this these these for for a lot of people these are investments and investments into the
future. So I find it really sad once again that obviously the game is still played as it's been played for the
past six, seven years.
Okay, a little bit more organized, a little bit a lot of buzzwords, a little bit more
structured, but it's still a very dirty game simply because you don't see this level of
liquidations when the market, during the US US market is open when you have depth in the market you see it and very
in very entrenched hours where there is very little. Why? Because the aim is to manipulate by big holders and this is really unfortunate when we have right now a push for legitimation of crypto. Dave.
Well, I mean, ordinarily I would agree, but that's not actually what happened today.
You know, just the math is the math.
The liquidation curve over the last 24 hours is rather smooth.
And it actually, if anything, accelerated a little bit again, uh, at the U S open
when we dropped down during this call to below 86,000.
But yes, the fact is that I often talk about the manipulation effect of this market and
the way it can be done and how people do this structurally and how in every other regulated
market if you do things specifically to trigger liquidations, if you try to do momentum
ignition strategies, what's called volatility ARB, for those of you who don't know this,
the entire Japanese stock market was very, very similar to the Bitcoin market in the 90s.
Okay. I'm actually writing a book that the working title is Million Dollar Frat Boys,
talking about a lot of the crap that went on
on trading desks from the 80s through the 90s.
But in Japan, you had this situation
where the Japanese firms were only able
to trade in futures a lot of the funds,
because of Koretsu,
they couldn't really trade baskets of indexes.
So you had this kind of weird liquidity situation where the futures are more liquid, but settled,
i.e. were driven by the spot price on expiration dates.
Well, in any event, so you had significant market manipulation.
We used to call it liquidity arbitrage.
Well, the same thing happens, and I've talked about this on these spaces, often when the
perpetuals are more liquid and you can then dump spot to trigger liquidations and perpetuals,
which of course causes spot dumping, et cetera.
It is a game, and it's a game that some people are making money at, and most of the world
would prefer for those sorts of things not to really be legal or for those sorts of things to be at least under control or for you to be able to
understand it. And when you talk about that in crypto spaces, people get mad. They go,
oh my God, but regulators don't do any good and we shouldn't have this sort of thing. It should
be caveat emptor and things should be able to move however you want to move. Well, you can't have it
both ways. If you want to have a completely unregulated market,
you're going to have liquidity arms, you're going to have these sorts of liquidations.
If you do want a regulated market, then you understand that people who are
buying and selling for the purpose of manipulating the price as opposed to for
investing or buying when you want to buy and selling when you want to sell,
well, those are differences and you have to choose your pick your poison.
And so isn't it fair to say that you would if it was a regulated market,
you wouldn't even have perpetual swaps.
That wouldn't be a product bullshit.
It's a great product.
I know I agree.
I'm not saying it's a bad product.
I'm saying in the most highly regulated markets.
It doesn't exist.
Well, it doesn't exist because of monopolies.
So we don't want to go down that rabbit hole. I will debate that one. That's the hill I will die
on. The perpetual swap in real-time liquidation is so far superior to the dated futures and
you know 24-hour you know the margin calls it's not even funny. I mean it is dramatically lower
risk. If you had this sort of situation in markets
with those sorts of futures, with all the uncertainty of, oh my God, when the liquidation
is going to happen, are the margin calls being made? What's actually happening? I was on
a trading desk during the crash of 87. And trust me, nobody knew who was going to what
bodies they just knew a depth charge went off in the, you know, in the ocean or in the pond.
They had no idea what was going to float to the top of the of the ocean.
Nobody knew.
And it took a week of Hong Kong's market, for example, was closed for a week before
it was able to reopen.
So no, I disagree with that one violently.
I do think that people are afraid to be clear.
I wasn't saying that they shouldn't exist.
I agree with you.
I'm saying they wouldn't.
It was highly regulated in our most highly regulated markets. To be clear, I wasn't saying that they shouldn't exist. I agree with you. I'm saying they wouldn't
in our most highly regulated markets. You don't have perpetual slots on Tesla and the New York Stock Exchange. No, but you could, but they would never allow 100x leverage because it's insane.
You've heard me say that. The most important part of all this is this is what happens when you allow ridiculous
leverage.
Anyone who thinks this is new, it's not.
I mean, they used to have what's called bucket shops.
If you read, you know, funny book, but it's a great book, Reminiscences of a Stock Operator
from the early, you know, basically charting the end of the 1800s.
And yes, I said 1800s they used to
be able to buy or sell stocks on 98% you know 98% whatever so it was about 25 to
as much as as 50 times leverage right and one of the reasons they outlawed
that when they did the laws after the crash of 29 was because what they found
was retail was just getting absolutely
annihilated by using that leverage. So yeah, I mean, over leverage is not good for uninitiated
people. It's that simple. And we see it all the time in crypto.
Dave, just a quick one, please. So just so I understand something. So when you have
like crypto structure structure like crypto markets
where usually the market is heavily on one side
and you have an industry that is running
on these perpetuals, right?
Who is on the other side of the trade?
Well, it's not all one sided.
I mean, the thing that I always point out
and in normal saner times,
people say, you know, they say, well, you could trade OTC with less market impact. And the only
reason that that's somewhat true, it's not really true, but it's somewhat true, is that if you go
to, even if you have the technology like, you know, the company that I co-founded called Coin
Routes does, to look at all the spot markets and say, okay, I'm going to buy on Binance and USDT and Coinbase in US dollars and Kraken and dollars
in Bybit or OKEX and USDT and I'm going to be buying spot. Even if you could do that,
you still are missing all the liquidity that's in the perpetual markets because what the OTC
guys is they pull all of this stuff together and
then they make their prices based upon the entirety of the market.
So basically, all these things move together.
Austin was talking about funding before.
What you have to understand is it's the entirety of the market when you're trying to find liquidity.
Now when you get to periods of intense fear and volatility, you get air pockets and you get people
trying to push one way or the other,
at which point, who knows?
But it's not a one-way market.
If it was a one-way market,
it would go from $1 to $100,000.
That's not what happens.
What happens is there are always people with bids and offers
and I could actually go use their software
and tell you how much, but there's a lot on both sides.
And it's a much more complicated and interdependent.
We do have a sponsor today.
We're gonna be joined by Legend,
which is AI agents for sports.
And I think Antonio is up here to speak on behalf
of the project as well.
And just a disclaimer before we get started that projects on this space are working directly
with IBC who does marketing, incubation, and investing.
They're not necessarily working directly with Crypto Town Hall, Scott or myself in particular.
Antonio, as we're transitioning here to the AMA, do you just want to kick it off with
a bit of an elevator pitch about what you're building with Legend?
Okay, sure. Hello to all of you and thanks for the opportunity to be with you in this
session. We are at Legends. What we have created is probably the biggest football at the base
in the world associated with AI. Where you can query almost anything
that you want about that.
So we have more than 140,000 athletes and more than 1,000
leagues, also with live thoughts from the main bookmakers
in the world.
And you can query almost anything about odds,
betting, journalist reports, and stat insights.
And it can be checked in ai.blegends.com.
So that's like the main vertical that we have.
And then we have another, other two verticals.
One is more around the staking.
It's like prediction markets combined with DeFi.
Imagine that you have body market on top of Lido.
Let's say it's like where you play,
instead of betting, it's where you play
with the deal that the stake in is going to give to you. And then a third one is where we have
digital awards, digital trophies and medals. We've been probably the first web 3 company featured
by the International Olympic Committee and we have created the first ever World Cup in digital format
with the World Baseball and Soto Confederation.
I believe that is like a big summary.
I told you, it started with the biggest football database,
but we are soon adding baseball,
American football, basketball, and more sports.
How long have you guys been building this?
Because those are some pretty significant partnerships
or relationships.
Yes, as I told you, the AI agents,
we just launched the platform today.
We have another agent before it was a Twitter account,
but with the digital trophies,
it was the first vertical that we were on.
It was almost three years ago,
starting with the World Baseball and
Southern Confederation as I told you,
but we've been with FISU, with European Aquatics.
Also probably the biggest event we ever made
was with the Pan American Games of Santiago de Chile 2023,
where you have from Canada, you needed the states
to Argentina and Chile.
It was more than 10,000 athletes where
we deliver for them their digital diplomas
in the form of NFTs, as you can imagine.
It was actually the first time ever
that they didn't deliver the physical diploma. It's like the Olympics. Actually, the Pan American Games belongs or is
hung under the umbrella of the International Olympic Committee. And there we, the first time
ever that they didn't deliver digital, sorry, physical diplomas and just deliver NFTs to more
than 10,000 athletes. That's very cool. I'm interested. What was the reception of these athletes to getting an NFT digital trophy versus a traditional
allocate?
It's a very good question. And you can imagine it depends of the athlete, if it's an early adopter or not. And we've seen with the past of the time is that sometimes you are delivering both the physical and the digital diploma.
Sometimes on medals or trophies, sometimes you
are just giving the digital.
What we've seen after these years
is as well as happened with photos,
that before everything was physical,
now you have still physical photos,
maybe for your wedding or very important moments.
But most of the photos are digital.
I believe with medals and trophies,
still the World Cup, the NBA rings,
the Olympic is going to be physical.
But I believe that all of them will have
the digital counterpart as official as the physical one.
So you can, let's say, distribute them in the digital ring.
At the beginning, I mean, also for the athletes,
it's like a new asset that unlock new possibilities because before the trophy At the beginning, I mean, also for the athletes, it's like a new asset that
unlocks new possibilities because before the trophy or the medal, you just have it in your
room. Now you can wear it with you and it also unlocks the possibility for us. We allow
both the organizations, like the world governing bodies or the athletes, to embed media content
into the trophy. So for instance, it's like, it can be photos or videos or audios
of the official photos from the organization,
or even you as an athlete that you can embed a memory there.
With a very interesting thing, like what
we did in the Pan-American Games,
it was not only the Pan-American Games,
but also the Para-Pan-American.
So for the visually impaired and for the blind athletes,
we created an audio version of the diploma.
So we recorded the voice of the president of the Paralympic
Committee, just a 50-60 second recording.
And then with artificial intelligence,
we generated more than 600 diplomas
for these blind athletes that were competing at the Pan American Games.
So being digital, and look, let's say new possibilities
that you didn't have before in the physical world.
That's pretty cool.
Like did the athletes really enjoy this?
Like it seems like a really great way
to prove authenticity of these awards as well. Yeah. It's actually what you say.
When we get into the blockchain world,
let's say, even myself,
I have more than 12 years of experience
creating technology for the sports sector.
We really thought about how to use blockchain in a useful way.
For the trophies, it makes sense.
Because at the end of the day,
being physical is just, let's say,, because at the end of the day, being physical is just,
let's say, a state of the art.
Because the trophy, the purpose of a trophy
is certifying an achievement.
It has been done physically, let's say, for centuries.
But now you can do it digitally.
And being an NFT, it actually allows,
like let's say the Pan-American Games or the Olympic Games
to, OK, I have the trophy.
I have the medal in, let's say in my wallet,
and now you have it in your wallet. Actually, I'm transferring it to you. So it makes sense to be
with blockchain. What was the origin story like for the company? Like when you started it,
what was the reason why you guys wanted to build this? I mean, as I told you, this was like the
root, let's say, of the seed was a previous company
that was also in the sports sector.
We were working something that was not so sexy, let's say it was like more competition
management system, referee assignments, online payments.
Now it was like more on the membership side, like the club management or competition management
side.
And from there being also, let's say, engineers, it was okay,
we were into the blockchain world, into Bitcoin since a lot of years ago. So it was okay, how can
we use blockchain for real use cases where it makes sense, let's say, to use blockchain. And that
was like the origin of the creation, let's say, of the project. And beyond just athletes and their digital trophies,
there's also a fan engagement aspect.
Can you touch on that?
I believe it's called legend stakes.
So how do fans interact in this environment as well?
Yes, I mean, for us, it's like the fans
is always at the core of everything.
I mean, what we believe is like sports you know, sports has a big communities.
We started with the trophies.
Actually there, we made also some things for the fans.
It's like where we allow the athletes,
also talking about blockchain,
it was like to fragment their trophies, no?
You as a fan, you would love to have a,
let's say, you know, a piece of the original ring of the NBA,
no?
Of the, a piece of the original World Cup of football
that Argentina won in the last World
Cup. So we blocked saying what we allow the athletes and the organization is to actually
front in the regional trophy. So as a fan, you can collect a piece of the regional one and not
a replica like every other NFT collection. So that's what we started with the trophies,
just to let you know, I mean, like always the fun is in the middle
of what we are building about.
And what you say about the staking is like in
stake.bilegends.com, we've created, as I told you,
a new way of using gamification dynamics,
or gamified dynamics that you may find in polymarket,
or like in other, let's say, betting platform.
But we are not betting.
It's like you don't bet $100 or $100 USDC against me.
What we both do is, OK, we stake our tokens.
You stake your tokens.
I stake my tokens.
Imagine you're going to stake Ethereum,
like you were talking before, that you have just
like a 3% or 3.5% EPR.
So imagine that we stake those tokens into our platform.
And what we do is to play with the deal.
So if you win, you get your stake back,
your deal and my deal.
If I lose, I just take my stake back.
So it was like trying to use this,
let's say prediction market dynamics, but without risking your
principle. Okay, that was what we've done with also like another thing we've done with
fans in our ecosystem. Very cool. You set some metrics off the top, I believe it was,
was it 140,000 athletes that you guys have worked with?
140,000 athletes that you guys have worked with?
Let me explain to you. Okay, what they say at the beginning,
it was for the AI.billagents.com.
It's the platform of AI agents
where you can today create your own agent
to have like customized and very deep analysis
about betty notes, about stat insights.
There is where we have a database of more than 140,000 football players,
okay, more than 1,000 leagues. We will be soon adding basketball, baseball, and other sports.
And if we go into real athletes that are in our platform, there, let's say that position or the
main onboarding of these athletes has been, let's say,
done through the digital medals.
There is where we have already 60,000 athletes,
including Olympic winners, World Cup winners,
and also more lower, let's say, category
of these teams that are not so well known,
not as athletics or basketball.
But there is where we have 60,000 athletes that receive one or four
trophies, medals, or certificates of participation. My question off of that was going to be what is
the user growth been like from fans as well? So like the athlete involvement is really impressive,
but I wanted to hear more about how many fans are on board as well.
Yeah, if you take, I mean, we made the calculation, but this number, if you take all the fans,
because we have all most of, almost all of the, the, the social accounts of all these
60,000 athletes. Okay. So it's like a second level of, of reach that we can have there.
If you put all of them together,
we are assuming more than 800 million fans
that they have in the social accounts, okay?
So for us, it's like the first step on boarding the athletes
and then getting access to all their fans
by, let's say, engaging the athletes into the ecosystem.
That's amazing.
So what's next?
What's next on the roadmap for you guys?
And I know today was a pretty big day with the launch of the agents, but what
else do you guys have going on in this sector? Yeah, I mean, for us, the
evolution is always working in this intersection of sports and chain, let's
say, with free blockchain, always trying to figure out new ways of using blockchain in a useful
technology.
I mean, I told you even the partners that we have on the, let's say, sports sector,
but even also in Web3, we are a partner of, you may know, Socios.com from Chile.
We just made a joint program with them through delivering trophies, like 30,000 trophies
to 30,000 of their users. The evolution is to keep, let's say,
growing on the three verticals that I told you
that are already allowed, but trying
to become like the way the standard we do for the trophies.
Also trying to become the biggest database,
the biggest platform for your own sport data with artificial intelligence.
And then also trying to create a new way of mixing the prediction markets and DeFi.
Amazing. Yeah, I don't think prediction markets have really been solved yet for sports.
Like that's a really interesting vertical. When you go on the polymarket,
most of the volume is for anything political. But when it comes to sports, it seems like
such an untapped market in Web3 right now.
Yeah, I mean, in sports there are a lot. Even in polymarket, they even have the polymarket
or polysports Twitter account or X account. And they are working on that.
And there are so many, so many, so many betting platforms
in the world that we are trying to create a new way of having,
let's say, all the fun without the losses.
So I believe that you understood it.
But it's like, OK, the dynamics are the same.
You choose a football match and you play there.
But it's like you are not risking your principal.
So we believe that there is so many believe that there are many fans that bet, but I believe there are even more fans that love sports but that
don't like to bet. So we are trying to target all that sector, all that segment of users that
love sports, that would love to predict but don't want to risk their principal.
So we are even encouraging them to save, to increase their savings of their assets and play with the deal.
Yeah, I think it was Karate Combat, obviously very enclosed within their own ecosystem,
but they also introduced a sort of zero loss betting model where you
stake tokens on each outcome.
Yeah, I know that.
I've been talking to them.
Yes, and they do that for their combat, let's say, just for Karate combat.
But I believe it's one good thing to do, but I believe it's much bigger, that you can actually
do it with any other, let's say, sport match in the world.
Oh, 100%. It just opens the market size much more rather than being in an enclosed environment.
Even in detail, I told you, I mean, in the stake.billegend.com, you can use
our own token in order to stake, But we've opened the platform for other tokens
that were to use as infrastructure.
I saw that, or I see that in my pancake swap,
maybe that you know that, that you go there
and you have a lot of tokens and you can choose where you,
I mean, which token to use, depending on the APR
that they are offering to you.
So we just actually launched one week ago with PaidNetwork.
It's one quite well known launch pad.
So you can stake like legend tokens
and also pay tokens in different matches.
And the idea is to onboard new tokens
and become an infrastructure and provide to any token
that wants to offer like extra utility
or to like engage the users in an engaging way
on a regular basis, week after week with all these football matches or basketball matches to allow to.
We provide all the technology about predictions, about the staking.
So you just have to put your tokens as a project,
you just have to put your tokens in our platform and bring
your users to engage with these prediction markets without losses, let's say.
Very cool. Well, we have the legend account up here.
It's Blegends underscore OK.
The green logo for anybody who's tuning in.
I encourage people to click on their profile.
Link is in the bio to make sure that everyone's following official links.
Antonio, as we're wrapping up here, we have more than 4,300
listeners right now in the space. What would your call to action be? How can the listeners
get involved? How can they help? Anything that you want them to do?
Yeah, I mean, I would invite all of you to access the main website that I told you. It's
like, billagents.com is like the main webpage, but you can go to ai.belegends.com and experiment with the AI agents. You can go to stake.belegends.com
and check out the staking part that I told you and you can even go to museum.belegends.com and see
all the trophies and medals and certificates that we deliver to in the work apps and in everything
that I told you before and of course following us in us in socials, as you say, BeLegendSandersCode.
Okay, both is the same, let's say, profile both in Twitter and in Telegram.
So just invite you to go there, to throw a line, ask the community about anything that you wish.
Hopefully, okay, buy your token and enjoy and get involved with our community.
Wonderful.
Well, congrats on the launch today and I appreciate you guys joining us.
If you're tuning in, make sure to give Legend account a follow and also Antonio a follow
as well.
Want to thank all the other speakers for joining too and everybody stay safe on this red day.
I know it's a pretty depressing day in the market right now,
but it's awesome to have conversations about sports
and maybe think a little bit less about Bitcoin price,
Solana price, ETH price and things like that.
So Antonio, I appreciate you joining.
Yeah, thank you.
Let's put some light.
The good thing about the sport is like,
it's not correlated to the crypto sentiment.
No, it never stopped.
So thank you.
Thank you for your time and for the opportunity to join you.
Yep.
Well said.
No matter how low Bitcoin or Solana goes, sports are going to be around it to entertain us.
So I appreciate you, you joining and sharing and congrats again on the launch today.
Thank you.