The Wolf Of All Streets - Crypto surges on eve of FOMC decision #CryptoTownHall
Episode Date: December 10, 2025This Crypto Town Hall discussion provides an in-depth analysis of the current state and future trajectory of cryptocurrency markets, focusing on the anticipated Federal Reserve interest rate cut and i...ts limited immediate impact on Bitcoin’s price. The conversation highlights the growing importance of stablecoins as a gateway for blockchain adoption, especially in emerging markets where traditional banking infrastructure is weak. Experts emphasize the critical need for regulatory clarity, with shifts expected between the SEC and CFTC, and landmark changes such as the OCC’s recent approval allowing banks to engage in Bitcoin trading, signaling increased institutional integration. The dialogue also explores the evolving tokenization of assets, the challenges and opportunities in transforming traditional financial systems with blockchain technology, and how crypto-native companies maintain an edge by catering to the unique demands of Bitcoin holders. Additionally, the rise of Bitcoin-backed lending is examined as a vital financial tool enabling users to access liquidity without selling their assets, supported by transparency and risk management that distinguished resilient firms during recent market turmoil. Overall, this discussion captures the dynamic interplay of policy, technology, and market innovation shaping the crypto ecosystem’s future.
Transcript
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Good morning, everybody, and welcome to Cryptotown Hall every single weekday here at 10, 15 a.m. Eastern Standard time. Obviously, all eyes, once again, are on the most important FOMC meeting of all time until, of course, the next FOMC meeting, which will be the most important FOMC meeting of all time. But we all know at this point that we're getting a 25-bit rate cut. I guess we can discuss here whether anybody believes it might be 50. Nobody believes it.
It's effectively fully priced in at this point.
Our title Crypto Surges on Eve of FOMC decision.
Factual, Bitcoin went up to about 94,000 yesterday before settling in at 92,000 today.
But I don't think that the move had anything to do with the Fed.
Happy to argue that or discuss that point.
I think that Bitcoin's just kind of floated here.
Small moves up and down waiting for a bigger direction.
And we do have, I think, much bigger catalysts actually.
right now than just what's happening with the Fed and what's likely priced in.
But I think we need to at least start with the Fed and start with your own pal,
what we are predicting for today, since that does in some way, you know,
affect prices of all markets.
And then we can move on from there.
I see we've got I see, I see lawyer, Austin, Carlo, and David.
If there's anybody else on stage, I do not see you.
I'm here too.
Is that to Tomer?
Is that you?
Yeah, that's me.
See?
I know the voice and don't see the face, but I identified you by your voice.
Pretty impressive at this point.
It shows that we're basically all family here at this point.
All right.
So, I mean, guys, what do you think?
Is the Fed meaningful?
Is that what's impacting prices for Bitcoin and crypto right now?
Do we think we get 25 basis points, but he's kind of hawkish?
Does any of this matter when we know assets going to come in and unleash the fire hose anyways?
No, I think it matters.
matters. I think Jerome Powell on the way out is going to be probably doing far more to encourage
dissent to come from the different governors. And if we look at a parallel between the Fed and
the Bank of England, Bank of England has five to four votes all the time. And it's really
hard to figure out their path of monetary policy, just from reading their transcripts. We
may be descending into an environment with the Fed where we have far less certainty going forward
although we do believe whoever goes in as chairman is going to be trying to drive rates down.
Austin, I know you've got thoughts.
I was going to say, I'll pile it on this one.
One, I think 25 bibs is almost locked in.
Zero is probably more likely than 50, but both of them are like infantessibly small compared to 25 basis.
points. The Federal Reserve, as a general statement, does not like to massively surprise the markets on these
things. And you do see telegraphing in advance of what's going on. And so I would be shocked if we get
anything other than 25 pips. Also because of the current economy, right? Like if you look into things
from the perspective of somebody voting at the Fed, you can find data to support whatever narrative
you already had in your mind. If you're worried about the economy, you're looking at jobs,
you're looking at consumer confidence, and you're saying we need to cut. If you're worried about cutting,
you're looking at things like liquidity conditions, like asset prices continuing to go up,
inflation, still being above target, even if it's not terrible, and saying, hey, hey, hey,
slow down. Why are we doing this? And there's been nothing in the data that will cause either side
to diverge from their current views. And if you looked at the last meeting, it was pretty clear we're going
to get a cut this time or out. I think the thing everybody should be paying attention to is the
future path, though, because I agree whoever Trump puts in is going to be a vote to cut,
but the regional banks at the Fed are very independent. And there's sort of like a thermostatic type
behavior here. It's almost like putting somebody who's super doveish in probably pushes other people
more hawkish at the regional bank level. They do not like being told what to do on a political
standpoint. And so I would be watching the future dots. And if the market is going to continue to
react further, I think that, to be honest, is more predictive than specifically what happens
with the cut at this meeting. Yeah, I think that's a great perspective. I think that
whoever Trump puts in is going to do whatever Trump says. It's a, I think it's just a matter of time.
But I do think that there might be pushed back along the way. But I think we're very clear on the
at least general path here right um i think we can pivot off the fed it's boring nobody cares i hate
your own pal i hate talking about the fed but i think the fed shouldn't exist so let's move on uh
carlo we've got you here uh we've got some uh we've got the world of stable coin adoption here
i'm not sure if we ever talked about that i mf report uh last week uh that was definitely on my
docket but along the lines of stable coins and tokenization in general we have larry fink saying
BlackRock's, CEO, Larry Fink, says that tokenization can have a greater impact than AI.
I would argue that tokenization, the first iteration of that is stablecoins, and you're our stable coin guy.
But we also had Paul Adkins yesterday saying that he thinks that everything could basically be on blockchain rails and tokenize in two years.
I think that's absurd, but I'm here for it.
Carlo, what do you think?
First off, good morning, Scott.
Good morning, Carla.
So the Kylo-Ren meme comes to mind where I just scream more and more.
I think you're absolutely right.
I think that stablecoins are the gateway because they're the most logical pivot for anyone
who wants to bring in blockchain infrastructure, do it in a regulatory-compliant way,
but doesn't have an appetite for crypto.
The IMF, interestingly enough, wrote a report.
I covered it. I discussed what I think is essentially, obviously we all know the IMF has a reputation
for going into nations that are struggling with their own monetary infrastructure and bailing them
out. And they tend to have very huge influence over those nations and how they run their
economies and how they value their currency. And there's no doubt that stable coins are a threat
to the IMF loan process, because if a nation has an ability to off-ramp to their own native currency
and on-ramp to digital dollars seamlessly, then it kind of presents a nice alternative to having
to take on more international debt. With respect to tokenization of everything, I can't disagree.
I mean, I think the SEC is waiting for clarity, and although we don't know if that's going to come
across the goal line before the new year or after the new year, I think we can all agree.
We're going to get market structure clarity.
The SEC is indicating more and more each day that they want to distance themselves from
non-security aspects of tokenization, which means we're going to see a bigger footprint from the
CFTC, and we're going to see less of a regulatory overreach from the SEC, and I think this
makes everything bullish. So yeah, more. More of it all, Scott. Let's bring on more stable
coin solutions. I like that. Acting was on a tirade right now, just an absolute tear. I mean,
he made that comment on the news about tokenization being at full force in two years, which
although isn't necessarily true, but awesome. He also, I mean, went on to say that ICOs should
not be treated as securities and dustfall outside the SEC jurisdiction. I mean, he's been hunting a lot
of things that Gensler thought were his arena out of the SEC's jurisdiction consistently here.
I mean, he basically said that everything in crypto is not a security, unless it's a token
high security, which is already a security, right?
And including my beloved NFTs.
Yeah, that's right.
And he went on another tirade about future-proofing U.S. crypto rules in a major regulatory
overhaul, basically saying not only do I want to make sure that we get this regulation right,
but I want to make sure that the next people don't come in and fuck it up.
So, I mean, he's a guy's really, really got our back right now.
Lawyer, go ahead.
Well, that's why we got a, I mean, Scott, that's why we have to lock it up with
with actual legislation because anything that comes out of guidance from the SEC
with the change in administration or change in leadership is obviously vulnerable to be
replaced.
But legislation, just like the Genius Act, is really hard to unwind once it's been signed
into law.
So we're getting set up pretty well here for very, very clear regulatory lanes.
And I think that's just going to translate.
the number go up. I know you hate to talk about the Fed, but I think the Fed is largely being
marginalized at this point because we're seeing a transition in monetary policy to the Treasury
via stable coins, which is going to marginalize the impact the Fed has. And look, I just saw
yesterday that Trump is suggesting that the autopen may be at play here, and that much of what's
been appointed to the Fed may have been auto-penned in, and he's looking, and he's tasked Bessett
with revisiting that. So one way or the other, he's going to get his rate cuts, and he's going to get
his liquidity, and we're going to run it as hot as possible going into midterms, because
his economic rating is in the 30s, and he can't have that going into the midterms.
Yeah, I mean, it's a bigger question because I'm not sure how many more levers and button.
I mean, I'm always impressed with how many buttons and levers they can push and pull,
but, I mean, how many will be left if we kind of go into a stagnationary environment here
and inflation ends up running super hot into the midterm.
It's going to be a really, really hard needle to thread, I think, in the middle of 26.
But I guess we'll see.
Lawyer, you had your hand up.
Yeah, I think, well, you know, when you think about the question of AI versus stable coins
in terms of the most influence, I guess you look at the short term.
term, like, AI is going to be massive, and it is massive.
Stable coins, I think one of the biggest things that stable coins will do because of their adoption is
just sort of destroy any de-dollarization talk.
I think it really just, like, the more that stable coin, like, if you imagine that we had moved
into this sort of tokenization without stable coins, other countries would have this gap
to fill and, you know, that maybe it would have an effect.
But the way that we are, the way that stable coins will be adopted.
will have this effect that you may just see, you know, the U.S. dollar is, you know, the reserve currency for the next million years, and that's why. And you may not be able to point to it, but, you know, it may be there. And what's really interesting to me is there's, you know, there's a polymarket on whether AI will be Times person of the year. And yesterday, it's shot up from 40% to 70% as AI. So I don't know if that means someone knows something. I don't know how big of a bet they would have done to move it, but I'm interested to see if that's who they picked.
that's not a person
who is that someone who works there's time magazine
just saying it's so funny that AI
you say AI would be purchased of the year
no they've done that before it's not always they've done
they once made the personal computer man of the year so
personal computer actually did pretty well so I guess
I can't argue gets that meanwhile Sarah O'Connor
in the Terminator world is obviously freaking out
that we're about to make AI person of the year and the machines are coming for us.
So this is a great plot set up for the next dystopian movie.
I mean, AI is not a person yet, right?
Yeah.
Well, as a longtime user of AI and a former resident of the beautiful city of Philadelphia,
I'm going to be super thrilled when the transcript of this spaces can't understand
why we're so upset about Alan Iverson being the person of the year.
practice austin practice
but i hold on i i want to pile in with one more point on the tokenization thing before we go
too far off the beaten path here i think if you're reading what atkins is saying this is very
important for all the market participants looking at this stuff i don't think what he's saying
is that in two years literally everything will be like tokenized on chain and trading that way
I think what Atkins is trying to telegraph to people is that over the next two years,
we want to have rules and frameworks done so that everything can be tokenized, right?
That like the possibility exists and maybe small amounts of it are happening and people can do it.
And I think that's an important like flag to understand because in addition to some of the stuff like ICOs to some extent are on the easy side of things.
But like how do you think about reg NMS?
How do you think about NBBOs?
How do you think about like centralized clearing agencies in a tokenized world?
Those are big questions.
And Atkins saying, I think these things will be happening in two years, is actually planting a really big flag for the SEC.
Oh, I think it's a huge statement.
And I think he knows exactly what he's doing.
I think we just kind of unpacked it yesterday that's absurd to think that all that could actually happen in two years.
The rules may be there, whether people will be using them or not.
I have a different question.
There you go.
I agree with that. Go ahead, Dave.
Yeah, sorry. I was having technical difficulties this morning.
Not really sure why everything broke, but it did.
Can you hear me now just to be sure?
It sounds spectacular.
Loud and clear.
Okay, great.
Okay, cool.
So, you know, two things.
First, you know, I said it yesterday, but I'll repeat.
It bears repeating that it could, you could actually get to Atkins' goal where it's a change
under the covers that doesn't really mean very much in the beginning.
Now, I don't think that's where he's.
wants it to go, but you could have tokenization inside DTCC with none of the other rules changing.
So that is something that is possible.
But I think the bigger question is going to be, will they come out with rule proposals and be able
to get through the process of changing the things that really block crypto from moving?
I think he's hedging his bets because yesterday when he talked about how most crypto are not
securities, that's his way of basically saying, listen, if I can't.
can't change the securities rules, such as the accredited investor rule, the need for transfer
agents, you know, and I have to use exemptive relief. I'm not going to be able to get the kind
of capital formation that he thinks should be, or the kind of free and open trading that he thinks
should be getting done, you know, in a tokenized world. Because make no mistake, the true
benefit of a tokenized world is that you can trade from one asset to another 24-7 through a variety
of different platforms that will compete for, you know, for investor interests with basic disclosures
and basic protections. And when I say basic, I mean things like best X, so you know exactly what
does it cost you. And things like, you know, anti-manipulation, that if you're running a platform,
you are, you know, you can surveil for that. And if you're a defy platform, that on chain, you can
find, you know, what you need to find to see if there's manipulation going on. Those are the
things that he cares about, but it's going to take a long while to get there and it takes
multiple steps. And I'm curious, you know, between Austin and Carlo, you know, what do you think about
that? Because obviously, these things don't happen overnight. Stable coins is key and the ability
to make on-chain transfers within the financial system is key. And all of this together is, as you
said, I can't remember whether you said it or somebody else did. It's not really your words that I'm
used to hearing from you, Scott, but someone made the point that if you basically looked at all this
news two years ago and said this was going to be true, you'd think that you were, you were dreaming
and just assume that the price would be, you know, three, four, five X where it is today in terms
of Bitcoin. So, you know, I don't know what to make of it other than the fact that, you know,
we're seeing, you know, we're seeing the transformation of the market. And these trends are really
important. And we're going to look back five years from now and say, oh, my God, you know,
why didn't we know X was going to happen? Yeah, I mean, I tweeted yesterday.
like jokingly, you know, with the meme of the big Chad guy doing a one-arm handstand and it says
1%, like up 1%, you know, on his laptop that we were up 1% on the year in Bitcoin.
I mean, it's absurd.
When you look at what's happened in the last year, the fact that Bitcoin's trading at the same
price as it was a year ago is pretty crazy.
But if you go back three years and you're in the Biden administration, you say Bitcoin's at 92,000,
you're pretty excited.
So I guess it's just about time frame.
I'd liken it, Scott and Dave, too, what we're seeing now with RIAs finally getting to the point
where they're comfortable recommending exposure to cryptocurrency assets in investment portfolios,
Bank of America, Charles Schwab, all these institutions are coming out, Vanguard.
We went from the approval of ETFs to it took some lag time for this adoption on the RIA level.
I think this two-year runway with respect to tokenization of all assets is going to be the same
thing. It's going to take time for the plumbing to be implemented because we have to totally revamp
how trades are settled and run markets now 24-7. And then we have to get everybody who's already
ingrained in institutional trading to now pivot to tokenize trading 24-7 on blockchains.
And I think there's going to be a lag time there after the plumbing is implemented.
where these institutions are going to be comfortable full porting.
Yeah, I had a conversation Monday, which will be out on Sunday.
We usually don't do them six days in advance, but with Johan Cabrat from Robin Hood,
who's the head of crypto at Robin Hood.
And to say that they as an institution are all in tokenization would be the
understatement of the century, I can just tell you that they squarely believe that that's
where the puck is moving exactly what you describe Carlo.
And they're not waiting for it to happen either.
they're going to find ways to do it whether the rails are fully in existence or not.
And I think that we're going to see that across the board.
I mean, you know, it starts with news like we had today.
The PNC Bank is offering the full crypto services with a partnership with Coinbase.
It starts with those things and it ends in all these things being tokenized and moving on those rails, right?
So, Austin, go ahead.
So I think part of the important thing to think about as we're tokenizing things, though, is there are, you know, what's the right way to say is there are some very basic primitives needed to make things work that don't really exist in a form on chain and in some ways are antithetical to the ethos of crypto.
So one good example is net settlement, right?
Like, crypto likes to think that real-time gross settlement, aka like everything is pre-funded,
the dollars move around as a feature, not a bug.
And in some cases, that is 100% true.
It's just a significant upgrade.
But in other cases, that thing is actually extremely bad.
And I think it's important here to zoom out from the retail perspective and start thinking
of like institutional perspectives if we're moving everything on chain.
because RTGS settling equity trades makes at least some degree of sense to me from a retail
perspective, but like real-time gross settlement for institutional repo defeats the purpose of
the entire bank funding market existing. And what I mean by that is, I think over the next two
years, as this process happens, and people like Robin Hood are not well situated to see this
because they play mainly in the retail space, we're going to see a more radical transformation
of the kinds of things that are valuable in crypto than many people fully understand.
There are a lot of forms of functionality that unlock a huge amount of value that simply do not
exist and have not been addressed in this space yet.
I have to push back, Austin, because you and I usually agree, but I think you're missing it.
Look, even in crypto trading less than 20% is, in fact, way less than 20% is atomic settlement.
Yep.
Today, right now.
All of the major players, all the institutions, if you're trading on exchanges, if you're trading with any of the big OTC players, if you're trading in the institutional markets, they all, and they vary, right? You have eight-hour settlement windows. You have 24-hour settlement windows. You can do it differently. The key to crypto and the key to on-chain isn't that it forces anything. It gives you the optionality to have on-demand settlement, which allows you to
create flexible settlement processes based upon what the participants want.
So, for example, there is no reason in the world why Coinbase or Robin Hood,
you know, by a bit stamp, or Cracken, or Gemini would ever force a settlement process
when they can keep it internal in their own system and only allow for on-demand settlement
when people actually ask for it.
it will what will happen and as a virtual certainty when you talk about equities is you will have
you will absolutely have time period based settlement so that market makers can trade in out in out
in out what you will not have in a world is you will not have the absolutely idiotic in fact you know
just horribly bad process of locate a borrow and then actually do the borrow on settlement what you
the fact that you have to prove that you have the coins or the equities or the tokens,
whatever, to sell, you know, if you're selling short first, is completely economically
viable in a tokenized environment. And it is not economically viable in the current batch
settlement environment for a whole host of reasons. The accounting becomes much,
much easier. And so it's a massive change, but it's one that will actually improve the current system.
If you just ask people, are you happy with the way locate and then borrow works, even if they went to T0 in the current batch scenario, people would be no, because you could have something called fails to deliver.
Fails to deliver, and I started my career automating trade entry systems on what's called the PNS system, purchasing sales inside Wall Street.
Fails used to employ thousands of people across Wall Street to try to clean it up.
It's still hundreds, and it's a very big problem.
And so on-chain fixes all of that and will dramatically cut the cost of the back office.
But you're going to take away the monopoly power of the current prime brokers.
And you're going to take away the advantages of some of the hedge funds who can get away with, quote, locates and then not necessarily be able to find the stock to borrow at the time.
All of that will go away.
But what you're not going to lose because it doesn't make sense to, as you so adroitly pointed out, is you're going to have sessional.
settlement. You're going to be able to trade from the morning to the afternoon once, as long as you
could start off by selling and then buy it back and sell and buy it back and sell and buy it back and
sell and buy it back. Market makers will be able to trade in and out for a period of time. And
then there will be a time when the markets will probably say, okay, now is the time that we're
going to net for settlement and then we'll start the next day or the next session. That's how it's
going to evolve. And there is literally nothing in the technology that stops that. Does that make
No, and it does, but I want to go back to the point I was making, which is I actually largely agree with what you've said about equity markets. And the particularities there, I think, are pretty addressable. Like borrow locate is a hideous process, just period, full stop right now. And that would be a giant improvement to current market structure. I am saying where I think people are going to need to have a much sharper view of the market and where we have a lot of work left to do is leave like equity markets and go look at like global FX.
settlement where if we're trying to do RTGS or even certain forms of time-based netting,
you're going to have huge operational drag on people that makes a capital inefficient,
or go look at like certain forms of fixed income trading with the banks,
where the problem that you have with long-dated settlement windows is the counterparty
credit risk charge just means you don't do the trade.
Or like, for instance, here's a good example of a netting problem that is not well captured
by crypto.
I agree with what you said about equities netting.
Somebody explained to me how you want a net interest rate derivatives.
right on a blockchain right now because that functionally has the problem of future dated exposure
not represented in spot prices existing. And so I think the core problem I'm trying to point out
for the crypto space is we spend a lot of time thinking about opportunities of launching tokens
or doing linear things for call it equities style settlement. I guess I'm just saying I don't think
that's where the money is in many ways going forward because the gnarlier stuff is going to get more and more
interesting as we have these rules.
Yeah, I, now that is a great point.
And I think people should understand that when you start talking about where is the total
address of the market for crypto, it is unbelievably large if one could fix the, you know,
what I also was talking about, but we are not there yet.
And in fact, the market has to change too.
You need a much more standardization of ISDA.
So ISDA is, you know, the international swap derivative.
I think that's what it is, or international standard degree of agreement.
Anyway, they are the bilateral agreements that make up what is, I think, a quadrillion dollar market
in terms of global derivatives on all things.
And just to give you an idea of how effed up the process is right now, the Lehman bankruptcy
is still not finished.
It's still not resolved 17 years later.
And that's because they had so many derivative contracts between them that they haven't been able to
unwind everything. So that should give you an idea. And so the notion that you can bring all of that
on chain without making, you know, without standardizing or fixing the process, et cetera, you know,
is, well, I mean, it's premature. The technology underlying, you know, on chain technology is
clearly better than paper and clearly better than each bank having their own spreadsheets and everyone
keeping everything under control that way. But there's a lot of work that needs to be done. The same is true
with the massive multi-trillion dollar interest rate swap markets. The same is true with,
as he said, the FX markets. Although it's funny, it would be interesting to talk to the folks
at Ripple Prime, formerly, formerly hidden road, because that's quite literally what their focus was,
was trying and focusing, and I know of a few others who were doing the same, trying to leverage
on-chain tech to promote more efficient FX Prime brokerage. So this space was downloaded via
spaces down.com. Visit to download your spaces today. Which prime brokerage will allow, you know,
funds to actually disintermediate themselves from a lot of the hairy, gnarly stuff that Austin was
talking about. So look, there's a lot there. There will be opportunity, but it's not at all clear
where or how that's going to benefit, you know, investors in the crypto market. There probably
are startups and other companies working on things that matter. Would you say that's a fair assessment,
Austin? I would and it also leads to the point of the crypto companies that instead of trying to
replace the incumbents sort of like build off of the incumbents might be some of the winners like
you mentioned Hidden Road but I'll just leave this here as a nugget that people don't normally
talk about if you really want to see people doing on-chain to off-chain FX somebody should go
have a look at Zodia markets. Yeah I know those people know those guys too right and yeah and and people should
understand. Zodia is
mostly owned by Standard Chartered. One of the bigger
it's Standard Chartered, right? I think it's them.
Yeah, it's Stanchard. Right.
One of the bigger FX players out.
Ooh, Stan Char. I didn't know we were on a
nickname basis.
Yeah.
All of them have their
street nicknames. Like nobody says the whole
bank of the era. There's a couple of things
that a couple nuggets I've caught here. Stan Char was
one. And then in passing, I was zoned
out and Dave said something about PNS and
I thought he said penis.
No, he said penis.
Besides that, yeah.
Get your mind out of the gutter, dude.
It's just what I heard, man.
I don't know, the penis department.
So anyways, yeah, go ahead.
Yeah, no, but I think that the important point here really is,
and you talked about it this morning, Scott, the real news,
the bigger piece of news, the one that I think is, it's close to inconceivable.
The OCC is allowing banks to offer Bitcoin trading,
before the SEC and FINRA are allowing brokers.
And so expect to see movement there.
But that is not a small thing.
I'm curious.
Lawyer and Carlo.
And then the PNC news, right?
It's just a lot.
Yeah.
I was at PNC yesterday to open an account,
and I told them the reason I chose that bank
is because they are going where the puck is going.
Integration of cryptocurrency purchase within bank infrastructure
is huge. I mean, there's no way to downplay that.
Did you tell them to rebrand as PNS? Anyways, but Carlo, so maybe somebody can explain or unpack
Dave, one of you, why that actually matters. Like, what's the nuance there? Because,
A, the OCC news, I can say people saw it, and I think a lot of people's default was I thought
this was already the case. And then the PNC news, I think a lot of people looked at it and thought,
We already have banks doing this, and then at the end of the story, it says, you know,
there's the first bank to be able to do this.
So there's obviously some nuance about these stories.
So first of all, even when Robin Hood would build their crypto, they had to put it off
into a separate affiliate.
What the OCC guidance is, it allows what's called riskless principle trading.
Now, riskless principle trading is essentially agency trading.
But what it means is you can buy Bitcoin in your own account and at the same.
price trade it to a customer with a commission or not so you can make two
transactions go out in the market by sell to customers what does this mean
I'm gonna make an unabashed plug here because it's just so freaking obvious
so if you're a bank and you want to have get a a absolute professional
ability to offer low-cost documentably low cost with transaction cost analysis
trading, it used to be that you would have to find somebody who would give you an account
that you can then aggregate for and use their technology. Now, every bank in the United States
can become a customer of coin routes or a customer of Talos and say, okay, give me your system.
I will open up. So PNC can open up an account on Coinbase, an account on Cracken, an account
on Robin Hood, and trade Bitcoin there using state-of-the-art, out.
algorithms or state of, you know, for customers that are sophisticated or just pure smart
order routing for customers that aren't. And be able to then transfer that back to a customer
legally. And it was totally illegal up until two days ago. Totally illegal. They couldn't do it.
Now they can set up their own accounts with these entities trade and flip it to a customer
and charge them a fee. That, okay, that's crazy.
So it's a massive thing.
I mean, I will be amazed if the banking industry, if the large banks aren't picking up the phone and figuring out that, oh, my God, we can buy the technology and get into the business as fast as PNC within weeks.
I mean, literally weeks.
Does the technology exist to do this?
The only thing they would need to do this is that.
And obviously, you need a clearance or settlement provider.
You could do it yourself with something like fireblocks.
There's lots of ways that you could do it, but all of it is available off the shelf.
That is a massive difference.
I'll tell you, I was surprised by the news because it effectively means that every single bank can offer it.
And frankly, I can't believe that FINRA isn't going to allow brokers because brokers have been blocked for years.
I mean, you know, we're going back to Trump won.
Brokers have been blocked.
Finra has a designation of non-securities trading that brokers used to trade FX for customers or trade gold or silver for customers.
They've never been allowed to use that for Bitcoin.
Once that goes away and they can, the exact same thing, riskless principle trading could become possible.
And none of that was even contemplated a year and a half ago, not even thought about it.
They just said, okay, we're never going to be allowed to you do this.
And I know because I talked to a lot of these, a lot of people running broker dealers and banks,
They didn't think this was possible.
So underestimating the importance of this news, I'm telling you, it's seismic.
And yet the market doesn't seem to care, which is always funny.
You know, it's like, you know, but the four-year cycle matters more.
I don't even know how to phrase it.
Yeah, I mean, Kathy Webb was on TV like answering for the four-year cycle.
So, Dave, what would you do with Coinbase on this?
What do you mean?
I mean, if you've got all these banks coming in, arguably, it says spreads are going to narrow.
You've got a lot more competition for the flow.
Well, what will happen is, is the banks, the easy thing for the banks to do is open up accounts on all four of the large U.S. regulated spot exchanges.
And then let the best exchange win at each individual point.
Let's see where the market share really goes.
And obviously, it's good for Coinbase.
It's okay for Coinbase, but what will have, and because Coinbase doesn't care,
Coinbase will, is very competitive on, on profit margins, on rates, on commissions, on exchanges, on exchanges.
fees for large players where Coinbase is stupidly expensive is for retail. And so it's not good
for Coinbase when all the banks can compete with them. But the truth is, is the banks are
going to only offer Bitcoin. They're going to be very, very, very focused. They're going to offer
Bitcoin and Ethereum probably and not much more. And Coinbase is going to all be offering a suite
of product to try to out-compete the bank. So it's going to be a very interesting dynamic. I think
net net it's good for Coinbase. But there's positives.
Is that fair, David?
Does that make sense?
No, no, no.
Appreciate that.
I mean, it's nuance, right?
You can't, you know, I'll tell you who it's absolutely good for.
It's absolutely good for the infrastructure players in the crypto market.
And it's good for the crypto market because unlike ETFs, when someone buys riskless
principle through the bank, the bank's going to probably offer a custody product too.
They don't have to.
They could offer the ability for customers to self-custody.
and just use the bank to be able to offload and offer them.
They probably won't at first, but they could.
It'd be better for the crypto market if the banks could have inventory.
Well, inventory, you have to understand.
Step one is this.
The reason they're not going to have inventory, David, has nothing to do with the OCC.
It has everything to do with Basel.
That's the next big domino to fall.
And the reason for that is this.
Right now, if the banks have inventory, they have to reserve a,
even if they are, let's say for the sake of argument,
just pick a simple example.
example, the bank is long, you know, 10,000, a thousand Bitcoin's.
They have a huge monster position, but they hedge it in swap markets or futures markets
so that they're not really taking the Bitcoin exposure, but they want the inventory to be
able to price products or, you know, lend or whatever.
Right now they have to reserve 100% of the capital on both sides, the long and the short
against their, against their reserves.
That's untenable.
It needs to be haircut based upon volatility and volume.
And that is not legal right now.
When that happens, when the bank rules and capital rules change, then you get what you want, literally within almost instantaneously.
But that's the issue.
Anyway, how about the PNC news?
PNC is basically, they're getting pole position.
So that's good.
I think it's a good thing, right?
I don't know.
You know, they got Carlo's account, so, you know, good for them.
And Carla likes them because they give a puck.
bingo brilliant yeah actually marisa you're here and i know we're going to chat anyways
in the context of all the things dave just described so what's happening with the banks
obviously opening the doors to all these services which of course will eventually be i think
universal usage of bitcoin and eth and crypto as collateral like you guys at leaden being
crypto-native and being kind of first and being here in general, like, how do you handicap that?
How do you prepare for that?
Like, where does the edge for the crypto-native companies like you?
Because we continue to talk about banks all the day, all day, and I think it's generally good
for the market, but, like, also short the banks along Bitcoin, right?
Thanks, Scott.
Thanks, Dave.
Yeah, I mean, the first thing I'll say is when we were thinking about this product in the early
days, we believed, because we believed that this product would work and that people would not
want to sell their Bitcoin and keep it, you know, as a collateral asset as they do with every
other hard asset like Holmes, gold, stock, et cetera. So if you play that out, even in the early
days, in the future state, we always believed that the banks, once they understood this product
would want to participate. And it's been a funny journey, you know, in the early days,
they would shut down our bank accounts
and we have framed letters
from pretty much every major bank
in Canada shutting down our bank accounts
and today, you know,
as of I would say
two years or so,
they are, you know,
banks are our partners.
We borrow from banks
and we work with them, you know,
fairly closely.
They've started dipping their toes.
And now they, you know,
they're starting to signal
that they want to come in more
with more of a direct strategy to, you know, B2B or to companies or clients.
Where I think the – so first of all, this is part for the course for us.
Like, we've always believed the banks would come in.
Where I believe the edge lies for the crypto-natives is in a few places.
So, number one, banks are used to operating in a zero-reserves world or a full re-hypothication world.
countries even like Canada have no reserve requirements for banks.
So they're used to re-hypothicating pretty much everything under the sun, everything they own, everything they have.
So they only know how to operate in a sort of re-hypothicated world.
And that is, to me, a big disconnect with what Bitcoiners want, right?
Bitcoiners want transparency.
They want to know their assets are in custody.
They want to know that you have proof of reserves.
And in a sort of re-hypothecated world, that cannot happen.
And if you're doing so, you're taking a massive amount of risk.
Now, banks can try to tell you it's different, we're bigger, we've been doing this for longer,
et cetera, et cetera.
But the reality is that they're re-hypothicating or they would be, in essence,
re-hypothicating an asset that cannot be printed, right?
And this is very different than the model that they're currently used to working under.
And then the second one is, banks are building.
to service one jurisdiction during market working hours.
Banks are not built to operate 24-7.
They're not built to operate in clients in different jurisdictions.
If you have an account with, say, HSBC in Hong Kong,
and you try to set up an account with HSBC in Canada,
they'll tell you there's no overlap.
They're not the same accounts.
They're not the same banks.
There's no history that can transfer from one bank to the other.
And so conversely, at Lennon, we have clients that, you know,
take out loans in countries like Canada
and decide to move to place.
like El Salvador, and we're built to operate 24-7.
We're built to operate for a global client base over the weekends.
Like, there is no working hours for Bitcoin, if that makes sense.
And then the last thing I'll say is that Bitcoiners and crypto-natives in general,
typically if given the option of two sort of equally qualified or similar credit quality options,
one being a crypto-native, another one being a bank.
My view is that the natives will prefer working with the people that have the proof of work,
that understand their preferences, and that can build products for them.
The reason we exist and the reason stable coins exist is because banks haven't done a great job to date.
They've let people down.
Yeah, I don't think your average Bitcoiner who's already your customer is leaving for State Street or Goldman or Bank.
of New York Mellon, right?
And so you're basically just expanding a massive pool of potential customers of which I
would imagine the natives will get a bigger slice of the pie without losing the existing
one.
I mean, that kind of a fair way to...
Yeah, and listen, like, will they take some of their legacy clients that want to get into
the space and want to have some exposure and don't really care too much about the values
and the principles behind Bitcoin?
They just want to basically be a loan for the ride.
Of course.
like they're great and they're also going to legitimize the activity right like it's it's uh it gives
people comfort when uh you know one of the challenging things about 2023 in 2024 after every single
lender went down well other than lenin was this idea that we had to you know explain to people
that it wasn't that bitcoin back lending was broken or wrong it was just the people that were doing them
we're bad actors, or with very shady operations and very poor risk management, it's really
beneficial to have, you know, the top companies in the world or the top financial entities
in the world, trying to follow on a product that you've innovated on, if that makes sense.
Like, it's a very powerful idea, the fact that, you know, J.P. Morgan is talking about launching
something years down the line that we've been doing for seven years.
So I think it's super, plus we have a seven-year tape of managing through volatility.
And again, I don't think banks that have deaths that lend against equities and lend against
commodities and such, but I don't think they've ever had to deal with a beast quite like
Bitcoin.
And that'll take some time and some adjustment.
You mentioned the 2020-2020-3 crypto-credit collapse, which I know is everybody's favorite topic.
But looking back, like, what differentiated Lennon or you guys in that scenario where you continued to hum along without any issues?
Yeah, I think there's so many things, but I think what I would bucket or compartmentalize the differences are.
Number one is focus in simplicity.
Lennon was always a Bitcoin-only company.
We lend against one asset.
We keep the collateral in custody.
We don't accept things like ripple or smoking chicken fish as collateral for good reason.
And that kept our business very simple.
It also allows us to roll out things like having a simple business makes it simpler to execute on things like proof of reserves.
So we were the first lender to ever do proof of reserves.
We have the longest running proof of reserves program.
I also saw that now you also disclosed full loan book size and collateral ratios in your last one,
because I happen to check at these things.
So, like, transparency is obviously important.
We do 100%.
And in a few days, you're going to see that our proof of reserve is going to become even more transparent,
and we're going to set the bar even higher than where it is today.
So number one, simplicity, number two, discipline and carrying up performance.
reserves. Not a single firm that went down during the collapse had proof of reserves, which
I think is a very interesting data point. Lenin's never had a token. We don't plan to have our
token. It allows you to play with basically financial engineering and taint your incentives. It allows
you to raise dilution-free and board of directors free money, and that just doesn't lead to a good
culture. And so I think focused, discipline, simplicity, and very strict.
risk management and underwriting.
We never lent to groups like three arrows, even though they came by our desk three times
because they do not do something as basic as share financials, whereas you had firms like Voyager
where I think $63 billion lent out to three arrows without any collateral, without any
diligence by the time they went under.
And just to mention...
Yeah, that was actually my money.
Oh, yeah, that's cool.
I'm sorry, man.
Well, what if it was literally my money?
And then one of the other points I was going to make, you know, behind, just going back to the banks for a second, you know, everybody talks about the banks as these giant, you know, forces.
But what I think is very interesting is if you run the math on, if you look at Tether's recent rumored round, I have no.
confirmation, but I've seen the news, and I'm sure others have two, the headlines that they're
rumored to be raising at a $500 billion valuation. If you take that valuation and you look at the
banks, there's only one bank in the world bigger than that, and it's JP Morgan. And so today,
Lennon is back by a company that I would argue Tether is a leader in the space. They know this
better than any bank, and not only that, they're bigger than almost every single bank out
there.
And so we have aligned ourselves with what I believe are very, very strong and key partners
to ensure that we're going to maintain our lead in this Bitcoin back future.
I mean, Tether just increased their investment, correct?
Or like, you announced, yeah, sorry.
We announced the strategic investment.
That was announced, I believe, a few weeks back.
Right, but you've already had a relationship with Tether to some degree, correct?
We did, yeah.
So we did borrow from them institutionally, but this was basically taking the next step
and then having them come in as strategic investors.
So we keep talking about how your average, I guess, investor is going to use their Bitcoin
or other assets as collateral now that the banking system is coming in.
Like, can you give us some, since we've got you, give us some color on how your users do it?
I mean, I'm assuming from, you know, being a customer and doing all these things.
And usually it that your users like basically saving Bitcoin, but they're borrowing USD and doing that through stable coins to live their life, right?
I don't want to sell my Bitcoin.
I'm going to lend it to live my life, kind of like a lifestyle loan to myself.
Bitcoin tends to appreciate it.
I mean, is that how people are using it and how you think it will be used in the future?
Yeah, so the way people are using the products, I mean, the user products for a very wide range of things.
Like, I've seen people use our products to purchase properties, and I've seen families use our products to do fertility treatments and grow their families.
Like, that's how broad the use cases are.
And it's one of the most, one of the funest things about doing this is, like, I don't think.
consider that Lenin doesn't sell loans, quote unquote.
Len sells the things you can do without selling your Bitcoin, right?
So nobody gets excited about a loan.
They get excited about buying a home.
You're not excited about starting your business without selling your Bitcoin, right?
And so the way most people use our products today is, so Bitcoiners don't typically
fit in the nice, neat little boxes that banks like to underwrite you on.
when you want to take a loan.
Most people think that loans, even a mortgage,
is a loan based on the value of the property.
It's not.
A mortgage is a loan based on your debt servicing capacity.
It's based on your income.
It's based on your credit score.
And they also take your house as collateral.
So many bitcoiners that work with us are people that have hundreds of thousands
of millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin.
They are self-employed or they run their own business.
And they want to move to a bigger house.
and they go to the bank and try to apply for a mortgage,
and the bank says, no.
And the person will say,
why, I have millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin,
and they'll say, you have no income,
and we don't consider that Bitcoin to be an asset.
So, therefore, you have no access to credit.
And so at Lenin, your Bitcoin is your credit worthiness.
We lend you solely on the value of your Bitcoin
and ensuring you can pass KYC.
But other than that, all we look at is your Bitcoin.
And so people come to Lenin,
take the loan they need by property, that's a big use case, you know, expanding families,
buying homes. Another big one is funding businesses. So whether these are, you know, Bitcoin
businesses that are funding expansion projects, et cetera, or traditional, increasingly more,
traditional business like construction companies that have Bitcoin under balance sheet and they
don't want to sell their Bitcoin, but they have to pay, you know, their contractors. So they'll
come to us and put their Bitcoin as collateral, borrow the dollars they need to make the payments,
and then once the project sells, they can come back and repay the loan.
And now, that's in the U.S. and North America.
What's happening more in emerging markets is more and more of our loans, the disbursements
of the loans, are going out in stable coins.
And the reason for that is that, number one, emerging, you know, people in emerging countries
speaking as of Venezuelan, you know, Venezuelan banks have always failed us, right, every single
time. There is zero trust in the Venezuelan banking system. And so when you ask for a loan,
you don't want to get that dispersion to a local bank. You want to get it in stable coins. And
in Venezuela, for example, my aunt, who's like not a crypto native, she's like a 67-year-old
lady that lives in a condo, she called my mom the other day because she was confused about where
she needed to get her tether to pay for her HOA bill.
So barbershops take tether now in Venezuela.
Some boutique, not every grocery store, but a lot of grocery stores take tether.
And so more and more of people's lives outside of the U.S. dollar economy are happening
in stable coins.
And more and more of our loans are being dispersed in stable coins.
So it just made a lot of sense for us to be getting closer.
in our partnership with a group like Tether.
And who produces assets that all of our clients very much to use and love?
Okay, so did you see the news, by the way, as a total aside,
the news from Argentina today that they're going to allow banks domestically
to transact in crypto and stable coins?
I mean, from bank to bank.
Absolutely something we've never seen anywhere on the planet.
So I think that just illustrates your point.
I mean, you know, if a bank can send money to another bank or customers between banks without SWIFT and ACH and these systems, literally directly through stable quotes.
Yeah, and this is happening.
So one very interesting thing that happened not too long ago, I don't know if you guys were following the elections that happened in Bolivia.
But Bolivia had an election about three, four months ago.
And in the run-up to the election, there was this massive wave of inflation.
And the reason that a lot of these waves of inflation get so acute is because when government instills capital controls, immediately it creates a parallel market for cash transactions, right?
The challenge is that cash is very limited in these economies.
So when you have a plethora of pesos chasing a very small amount of cash dollars, the rate for those cash dollars in the parallel market shoots up.
And it creates this anxiety in the market.
What the Bolivia government did was very interesting because, but basically what they did
and the run-up to the election to ease inflation is they allowed people to start trading
in stable coins.
And what that did, funny enough, is that it brought inflation down because what accepting
stable coins and embracing stable coins in these markets does is that it allows for supply
of dollars to come in without you having to find.
fly in planes of cash? Does that make sense? Like, how do you increase the dollar supply in an
international market without access to cash, right? And with no trust in the banking system.
You have to do it through stable coins. And ironically, a lot of these governments are finding
that by making dollars more available by way of stable coins, they're actually helping
tame the rate of inflation, if that makes sense.
Yeah, it makes perfect sense.
I'm realizing we're getting close to time here.
But you guys, obviously, we talked about before you had like the crazy year, right?
I mean, Bitcoin we joked earlier is like only up 1% on 2025, but your business has absolutely exploded.
So, I mean, what do you think accounts for that?
And I guess what are you looking forward to in 2026?
Yeah, thanks, Scott.
Yeah, this year has been a blockbuster year for us.
We've done over a billion dollars and loans originated year to date.
Q3, we did $392 million in loans originated, which was almost all of our originations for
2024.
So the speed of growth in our business has been really taken off.
It's gone exponential this year.
And I think it's really, what accounts for that is people realize you shouldn't sell your
Bitcoin.
And when you're looking for places to take a loan with your Bitcoin, you're looking for places
that have been tested and proven
and have been around for
seven plus years,
you want a place that has proof of reserves,
you want a place that's safe
and that has a history of being safe.
And, you know, Leden is a regulated,
you know, transparent, audited, firm
with a perfect track record.
So, yes, there's a new lenders coming into the space,
but they're all untested.
They're all coming in because of an opportunity
they see in the market.
They're pivoting into this.
Lennon has never pivoted.
It's in our name.
Our name hasn't changed.
All we do is lend dollars backed by Bitcoin.
And I think it's that focus, that consistency, that discipline,
is why we're reaping the rewards of staying focused and delivering
and standing by our clients for the last seven years.
So I'm really excited about the future.
I think rates for these products are going to continue to drop.
I think as these rates drop,
these rates drop, more and more people will use these loans for more and more things.
And I do believe in the world where the Bitcoin back loans will be the cheapest, fastest,
and most efficient way for anyone globally to access credit.
And that's why we're here.
Amazing.
So where can people participate?
Check it out.
Yeah, leaden.io is our website.
You can add hoddle with leaden is our ex or Twitter.
you have mine here, you can, my DMs are open.
So if anybody has any questions, feel free to reach out.
Yeah, leaven.io, support at leon.org, if you want to send in any questions, but both
the leaven account, my account, are open for DMs.
We're always obviously welcome anybody with questions.
And, yeah, we'd love to, we'd love to help out anybody that's interested.
Absolutely love it.
Thank you so much, Maricio.
Thank you to the rest of the panel.
Thank you to everybody who's listening.
Great conversation, man.
I'd be glad this you jumped up.
I can't even imagine what we'll be talking about tomorrow.
I'm sure it'll be how Jerome Powell did exactly what everyone thought Jerome Powell would do.
Very excited, very exciting.
But thank you, everybody.
We'll be back.
See you tomorrow.
Thanks.
Bye.
Bye, everybody.
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