The Wolf Of All Streets - Crypto Skyrockets: Bitcoin Over $100K, Ethereum Up 33%
Episode Date: May 9, 2025Friday Five is THE show about the main news in crypto. Join me and Nathaniel Whittemore as we delve into the main topics that moved the markets. Nathaniel Whittemore: https://twitter.com/nlw �...��► JOIN THE FREE WOLF DEN NEWSLETTER, DELIVERED EVERY 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 #FridayFive The views and opinions expressed here are solely my own and should in no way be interpreted as financial advice. This video was created for entertainment. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision. I am not a financial advisor. Nothing contained in this video constitutes or shall be construed as an offering of financial instruments or as investment advice or recommendations of an investment strategy or whether or not to "Buy," "Sell," or "Hold" an investment.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's been another crazy week for crypto news and the market.
Once again, we have to focus squarely on what's happening in Washington.
There are a lot of stories for NLW and I to break down.
We're going to get to it right now on the Friday 5.
Let's go. What is up everybody? I'm Scott Melker also known as the Wolf of All Streets. Before we
get started, please subscribe to the channel and hit that like button. Get around NLW right
now. It's the Thursday evening five. Just in case, you
know, the entire world explodes by Friday. But yeah, we're
recording this night before. Yeah, it happens every time we
try this. So it's almost guaranteed. But we've got some
big stories. And once again, man, we've got to look at
Washington. I mean, this was a crazy, crazy week.
We pretty much thought that stable coin legislation was
a slammed up bipartisan support crypto army.
Anti crypto army was completely dead.
It didn't exist anymore.
And then we had complete mayhem and insanity.
You can just break it down.
Boy, there's so much to break down. I think that what I would
say, and I'll start with the good news. It's not clear to me
that this is exclusively the return of the anti crypto army.
There's a piece of that. But then there's also this other
piece, which is a very different story. So let's try to unpack kind of those two sides. So the first is let's talk about the straight up
theatrics, anti crypto army side of this. I think best embodied and Maxine Waters staging a walkout
of want to see a mark appearing. Yeah, let's do it. I see we got like the clip of her not the full
walkout to this joint hearing. Let's try this one more time
adding to the stage. Here we go. To this joint hearing,
because of the corruption of the President of the United States,
and his ownership of crypto, and his oversight of all the
agencies I object.
Okay, and then a bunch of them marched out, right? And like
there is a bunch down for four of them marched out, right? And like, there is a bunch down for four of them
marched out a very small bunch of them. Watch out and then they kind of had their own like,
uh, we're going to have our own party on the side and cry and held their own round table
on the side. By the way, I have it on very good information that Maxine waters in these past few
hearings, we have a lot of people from the industry that were there, is Biden level dementia at this point.
Like cannot put together sentence three aids standing around her trying to get her to read
sentences pretty bad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, so, okay.
So to some extent, this feels like it was pretty inevitable.
And this did not really have to do with market structure legislation or stable coin legislation. This had to do with political
opening because of, you know, Trump's rocky popularity because of tariffs and tariff-related insecurity. And this
group of Democrats, once again, thinking that hanging crypto around his neck is a smart political move. You know, this was really not about any of the
substantive things. That was actually the frustration for people who are in the room who are trying to get this done was
kind of like, let's separate these two things. And what I think is actually pretty ironic is that one of the more popular
bipartisan positions is that elected officials shouldn't really
be able to profit off of their insider knowledge.
This is an opinion that Republicans and Democrats
hold in fairly equal measure.
And maybe that's overstating the case.
But there's a reason that we, Nancy Pelosi's stock tracker
is a joke, right?
This is both sides of the aisle.
People don't like it.
And so this splinter group that went off into
the other room, they spent most of their time kind of ranting and raving about Trump and the Trump family's, you know,
connection to crypto and stuff. And they came up with this bill that would prohibit people, you know, who are elected
officials and their immediate family from being involved in crypto in certain ways. And what I think is ironic about
this is that hold aside the theatrics and the grandstanding.
I think that there's probably a whole bunch of support that you could get for that.
You know, you get bipartisan support for that.
I mean, like there are lots and lots of people in crypto who aren't super fans of meme coins being launched, you know, the weeks before the inauguration.
Yeah, exactly.
But at the end of the day, they pushed the vote
through today, the Republicans thought they obviously had the
votes, and we're going to just go ahead and make it happen. And
it failed. I mean, it failed 48 to 49. And for those who are
quick to blame the Democrats, which is obviously our knee
jack jerk reaction. Last time I checked the Republicans hold the
Senate, and therefore two Republicans,
being Josh Hawley and Rand Paul,
joined those few Democrats in voting no,
and making sure that this didn't yet get to the floor.
To be clear, this is not a complete failure, correct?
This is just kind of going back to the drawing board.
Yeah, no, this is, so this gets us to sort of this,
the second side of this, which is the more substantive frustrations with with the stable coin bill. You know, the face of this sort of, you know, who wasn't seen as a crypto antagonist. And what's really hard to parse out is how much
truth there is to the sort of Democrat pitch that, that a bunch of things that they had thought were, you know, argued
for were kind of, you know, changed on them. And so they're throwing their bodies in front of it. Like, it doesn't
seem basically that this is pure obstructionist, where they
actually don't want stablecoin legislation to come to a vote.
It does appear to be they are not resolved on these issues. And
the train was leaving the station in a way that they had
to kind of lie in front of the tracks. That's and so whether you
think that that's right or wrong, that's still very different than, again, Maxine Waters staging a dramatic walkout or
something like that. So I, it is very possible that by next week at this time when we're doing this show, things could be
more back on the line. It's very hard to tell from outside.
There's sort of a bit of a fog of war.
And the quotes that I'm seeing in various media
don't have me convinced one way or another about this.
Yeah, and then there's questions obviously
as to how this affects the stable act on the house side.
Right, because you had both houses sort of come together
for this round table that she marched out of.
That clearly got a bit of a snowball effect
for an anti-genius act sentiment,
which did cause it to get at least rejected for now.
And now we have one on the house side as well
that probably has a lot of people with their eyes on that
saying, well, if it didn't happen in the Senate,
maybe we'll flip over here as well.
Yeah, yeah, look, I am going to for the moment, choose to be
optimistic. I think in fact, this is my sort of, you know, hot
take the ridiculousness of the sort of political grandstanding
sort of walkout may actually weirdly get more Democrats on board with trying to treat this seriously because it just looks and then the next time you have a transition, you have a transition, you have a
transition, you have a transition, you have a
transition, you have a transition, you have a
transition, you have a transition, you have a
transition, you have a transition, you have a
transition, you have a transition, you have a
transition, you have a transition, you have a
transition, you have a transition, you have a this is really just the Democrats saying, we still have serious issues with this that are not addressed and you're trying to move it too fast and we had to slow you down, but we want this to happen.
We'll know really fast.
That's not a position you can fake for long.
And that's at least what the rhetoric is.
So I don't know, it could be okay, but it's weird right now.
It's very weird.
I also think it will be okay.
And I think there's things that we don't know,
right? And like you said, maybe there's just some nuance here and a couple sentences get changed.
And all of a sudden, we're celebrating the genius act, you know, moving forward by next week.
Look, I mean, the other piece of this is that there is there is a lot of politics happening
around crypto right now that have nothing to do with crypto. There are assessments being made
around crypto right now that have nothing to do with crypto.
There are assessments being made that have to do with political openings from, you know, from totally unrelated issues in
terms of like, you know, Trump popularity and not the
Republicans do have a little bit of a feel of, God, I want to
get this through now in case it gets worse in terms of, you
know, our power. Democrats, Democrats are sort of throwing
their bodies in front of that, because probably there's a
little bit of an assessment there that maybe they're in a
better position than they were three or four weeks ago. So, you
know, and that's the part that we can't control as an
industry. And we just kind of have to, you know, put it put
our chill hats on and hope it gets fine.
Moving out of Washington into the houses of power in our
wonderful states of
America, New Hampshire becomes first state to approve crypto
reserve law. This is definitively good news. So we
can't be upset about this one at all, especially when this came
on the back of first earlier this week, a rejection in
Arizona, which we'll get to. And of course, Florida, who many
expected would be a layup for
a strategic Bitcoin reserve, basically saying it's not going to happen here. And as that follow up
quickly, Arizona governor did sign into law the second bill that came onto her desk for a state
to keep unclaimed crypto, sort of a strategic Bitcoin reserve law and Texas moving forward
with their bill as well, which is obviously bullish, but New Hampshire gets all the all the flowers, I
think right here for getting this done first.
Completely appropriate for the don't tread on me state to be
first first to the Bitcoin Party. I mean, Bruce Fenton is
cheering, you know, fist pumping somewhere. But obviously,
obviously, you know, makes complete sense.
It does make complete sense. They were going to be first.
They moved relatively fast compared to others.
But let's dig into those others, because I think everybody knows
the news that New Hampshire got approved.
Great. We can get into the nuance.
I don't think it's necessary, to be quite honest.
It's New Hampshire. That's the nuance.
Yeah, I think Arizona is the stranger story, obviously,
because the governor vetoed the first one. The second one was a very watered down version, I think Arizona is the stranger story, obviously, because the governor vetoed the first one. The second one was a
very watered down version, I think. And that did pass. So we
have a kind of strategic Bitcoin Reserve.
Yeah, I mean, look, I think that once again, if we're talking
about the the larger politics that crypto is subject to.
I think Arizona is another great example of this.
This governor vetoed an extraordinary percentage
of the bills that have come through her.
I think it was something like 85 out of 250,
whereas the previous high was something like 49
in a legislative session.
Both houses in Arizona are controlled by Republicans, but she's a
Democrat. So there's much bigger tension going on there. And it's
very hard to get a sense of, again, how much it's about
crypto versus just sticking it to them. You know, look, the,
if we want to like actually read the text of the language without
overinterpreting it, she basically says state
pension pensions aren't a place to, to be experimenting with this stuff. Never mind the fact that one of their
biggest pensions has a big investment in micro-strategy. But they are, you know, look, I think, I think some people are
sympathetic to that. The people who are working to advance this in Arizona, point out quickly that it didn't say that
they have to buy anything. It just said that they could at some point in the future, should it make sense. So, I don't
know, it was, it was already watered down. They picked a version that was even more watered down. To some extent, I, you
know, I feel like a lot of these stories all come back to us, not necessarily being primarily political watchers
and just actually having a firsthand experience
for the first time of how frustratingly incremental
everything is in politics, even when you get wins.
Yeah, I think we'll take our wins.
And once again, the story is New Hampshire
because they really did it.
Yep, don't tread on them.
Next story here, Apple eases NFT crypto rules
for iOS apps following antitrust ruling. Apple eases NFT crypto rules for iOS apps
following antitrust ruling.
Apple's loosened restrictions on developers' ability
to offer iPhone and iPad apps,
directing users to external purchasing methods,
including to NFTs.
Just the biggest story here is that 30%
that they tax everyone on for anything, right?
Yep.
Yeah, I mean, look, once again,
courts making things safe for crypto. The strangest of bedfellows that have been for the last, you know, three, three or four years.
Look, this is I think is pretty unreservedly good news. No one likes the Apple tax. Apple, you know, has a huge power to constrain activity because of this. You know, unfortunately, for crypto, this is sort of, you know, a few, few years
past the prime of when some of these opportunities would have been most exciting. But who knows what stuff it opens up in
the future that wouldn't have even been, you know, able to be considered in the past. So again, I think this is another
unreservedly good news thing for the industry. It creates lots of space that will not materialize into real exciting things
for some time.
But it opens up a whole new set of entrepreneurial activities that are going to bear fruit at
some point.
Yeah, I think there's this consistent theme in all the news that we report on a weekly
basis that like, it's big because we're removing friction and we're moving past friction that
could prevent things.
But it's too early to tell how much that will actually
open the doors to, how much we've built,
how many people will actually take advantage of this,
but it's nice to know that we can.
Yep, yep, absolutely.
And I think that part of the reason that it is so
frustratingly slow in some ways is that we still have not
recovered the core thing that we lost around FTX, which was normal people
thinking that we're completely and utterly insane. That still remains the case. And until there's new blood and new
energy, we're just cycling capital. Now, of course, the cool thing about this cycle is that a lot of there is a lot of new
capital from those institutions that we swore up and down were just waiting to get in for a
decade, and they finally did start to come. So it's not like there's nothing new that's happened. But boy has, you
know, the, the regular kind of person not come back at all. You know, I think about this all the time. And in the
immediate wake of it, everyone, everyone felt like and said, We set ourselves five years back. Sam said us at least five years back with FTX in particular.
We're only on year 2 and 1 half.
And the rest of things recovered so much faster
in some ways that it felt like everyone would come with it.
But individuals have not.
Yeah, well, I can't speak for NFTs and all of that.
But I think Bitcoin has fully recovered from that
and is on its way.
We have a number of companies adding to the Treasury. This is not a story we were going to
discuss today, but that train has left the station. I think he is still largely, to your point,
set back the crypto industry in the United States, even as all of this friction is removed.
I got to do an honorable mention right in the middle of this because you brought up Sam and
FTX, which is that today, former Celsius CEO, Alex Machinsky sentenced to 12 years for fraud.
12 years.
And these guys are, I mean, look,
here's a question for you.
How much do you think that this is crypto specific
or is this sort of the new paradigm
that white collar criminals should expect?
Because one thing that was always interesting to me
is how much, again, like they were being made an example of for the crypto industry versus
there being a shift and trying to have sort of less tolerance for fraud in general.
Yeah, I think it's actually more of the latter. I think that people who thought they would do it
as an industry specific thing probably think Sam would have gotten life and that machines key would have gotten 25 years. Yeah. So I
yeah, I think that when I look at the sentiment, it's like, why so little? I can't speak to
whether it's why so little, but that that is definitely the sentiment across the board.
But of course, you have very emotionally and financially hurt people by these actors. So
you're never going to get I think an accurate perception from from the public of what those sentences should be. But that was an
honorable mention. So moving on, we have, I guess, back to Washington, Treasury Secretary Scott
Bessent says us should be the premier destination for digital assets. Listen, they've been saying
these things over and over again, we're getting it from every person in government from every
things over and over again, we're getting it from every person in government from every
department and every regulator. But still nice to see that they're beating the drum on United States becoming the center of crypto in the world. Even more than that, Besant is the one who
is either tasked with or has tasked himself with starting to lay out the vision for what this global economic reordering looks like on the other
side, right? There were clearly in the midst of a big global change. No number of these trade deals, US, UK, you know,
China being negotiated in Switzerland this weekend, is going to have us return to the old paradigm. There is going to be
something new that's going to look and feel different.
And I think that it is positive that the people who are sort of taking the wrecking ball to
the existing system, clearly see a place for crypto and digital assets and stable coins
in the sort of the future that they are trying to enable if not design.
Yeah, I think that in the midst of this conversation, we have to obviously mention what happened
with the Fed this week, takeaways from the Fed rate
decision and Powell's briefing, of course.
Also in the context of that, we got
the announcement of an announcement that ended up
being Trump hails UK trade framework as first
of many tariff deals.
So we've got some tariff clarity.
We've got Powell standing firm, but market's still going up regardless of all of clarity. We've got Powell standing firm, but market
still going up regardless of all of it.
Yeah, so, Powell, Powell, this was maybe the least eventful
FOMC that we've had. And since Powell took office, I don't even
know is very, very. It was a whole bundle of nothing. I think
he said, wait and see about 38 times was his sort of catch
phrase for this, which is completely predictable. You
know, and look, his position is that he has just no idea. Yeah,
he has in this case, yeah, he has no idea what is likely to
happen next and which things are gonna get wonky. And so they're
in wait and see mode. Meanwhile, I think what's interesting about
markets right now is they are, this is the less optimistic
thing. Markets are trying to price in the resolution of the
trade wars and tariffs. And at some point, even if we got deals
across all of these things, they're gonna wake up and realize
that the whole system has been still fundamentally changed.
We're not going back to something similar to what we,
we're not going back to 2024 when it comes to China.
Even if we go from 145% tariffs to, you know,
10% across the board and no de minimis exemption,
that would be enough to transform everything.
So markets are desperate.
Markets are so looking for good news right now.
And God bless.
I don't want my price to get hurt.
But boy.
I was going to say the same thing.
It's like any excuse for people to buy they're looking for.
I mean, what a V-shaped recovery.
I think it was nine almost 10 days in a row
to the upside, just crazy.
And Bitcoin led it all, which is amazing, right?
You gotta remember that stocks only made it back
to basically liberation day and then slightly above,
you know, as of today,
which when people list this will be yesterday,
but Bitcoin went from like 82 to over 101.
Yep.
Big, big difference in the way that Bitcoin has behaved through all of this.
And I think it's just funny as an honorable mention as a part of this.
I mean, Trump literally said buy stocks.
He goes on TV, he's like, now's a really good time to buy.
We're going to pump the markets, golden age, buy stocks now before China stocks this weekend.
So he is actively giving them what they want if that's what markets are looking for.
Yeah. No, I mean, you know, look, I I I am never one to say to sort of doom and gloom, you know,
like I think in general, we're better when we're optimistic.
So I hope it continues. But I think that it's going to be it's going to get weirder before it gets clear.
As in my humble opinion, I think it's going to be it's going to get weirder before it gets clearer is in my humble opinion
I think it's going to be a very very strange summer. Yeah, very very strange summer
It might be a little less boring than our normal summers. That's right. It might so we have the final story here, which huge
2.9 billion dollar deal. I think this is the biggest deal in it is ever
Yeah, coinbase buys Darabit to expand in US crypto options market includes 700 million in cash,
11 million shares of Coinbase, Class A common stock.
So when this was first reported a few weeks ago that it was likely, I think it was more
like 4 billion, if I recall correctly.
So it's a little bit down from that.
But I mean, this is just monster news because Deribit is far and away and it ain't even close the
largest exchange for futures trading and options trading in crypto.
I mean, it's huge, huge for Coinbase, huge for Deribit, huge for, you know, I mean, they're
building a juggernaut.
They're building a juggernaut that, you know, I mean, look, it's been very clear for a very long time for anyone watching that coin bases ambitions do not extend at the water's edge of, you know, the stop at the water's edge of crypto.
I think that, you know, this is the secret that that look, some bankers, I think, actually get I think it's why you see so much antagonism and sort of, you know, so much political fight right now around stablecoins,
is bankers have gotten the memo that crypto is coming for them. You know, I mean, again,
this is a whole different era, and it's been besmirched in time. But do you remember the
headline when Sam Altman or when Sam Bangman Fried said that he was going to buy Goldman Sachs one
day? Yeah, but yes, I do remember that.
Yeah.
Yeah, I know.
Too many billionaire Sams.
Yeah, it was huge.
And the thing was, no one thought he was on serious.
And a lot of crypto people realized
that they thought that that's actually the trajectory that
we're on, crypto system eating the regular system.
And they're building a drug not taking compete. The question on this deal is that we're on, crypto system eating the regular system. And they're building a juggernaut that can compete.
I guess the question on this deal is that,
we have the headline which is,
buys Deribit to expand in US crypto options market,
but to be clear, Deribit does not operate in the US.
So I was sort of pondering this,
is this a move to control this futures market
to have the biggest exchange,
but to expand internationally?
Or is there actually something here that would allow them
to offer these products that just aren't allowed
in the United States?
I, my read, so I think that headline was confused in my opinion.
I think that this is Coinbase competing out
rather than just competing in. Yeah.
Now, there may be fringe bet.
There is infrastructure that can be ported over
as licensure gets ready and all that sort of stuff.
So I don't think that that's nothing.
But this is Coinbase saying, we've
been fine to chill over here in the US as this big market,
but we're coming for you.
Yeah, we're taking over the world,
and we're going to own the leverage derivative side
of it as well, which it's it really is just massive news.
But yeah, I think that's a bad headline because, you know, I don't think that this implies
that all of a sudden that volumes come into the US.
Nope.
All right.
Well, we did it.
We nailed it.
The late Thursday five, aka the Friday five.
I wonder what the price of Bitcoin will be tomorrow. Because you know, as
we're talking today, it's over 101. And I think last time we
did this, it moved like $5,000 in 12 hours or something.
Probably Yeah,
even more. All right. Well, I still think these are going to
be the biggest stores stories of the week. And I'm sticking to
it, guys. Give it LW a follow. Check out the breakdown, of
course. And that is all we've got for you today. Thanks them Cheers
Still