The Wolf Of All Streets - Saylor Buys $500M, BTC Flies to $88k! ATH Next? | Crypto Town Hall
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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Good morning, everybody. Happy Monday. Welcome to Crypto Town Hall. Every weekday, 10, 15
a.m. Eastern Standard Time here on X. Thank you so much, all of you, for joining us once
again today. Quite a few things to talk about, but obviously I think the one that's most
compelling for people is going to be why is Bitcoin pumping? It's $88,644. As we speak now,
Ethereum just hit $2,100. Solana pumping $144 up almost 9% in the last 24 hours while Bitcoin
and Ethereum up about 4.2%. Many asking, what is the catalyst? What is happening here? Are we finally breaking out to the upside?
All of the exciting things everybody wants to talk about.
I guess we can start there
and then move on to the other main topic here,
which is, I guess it shouldn't be a surprise,
but Sailor buying $500 million worth of Bitcoin.
But I think the bigger story there
is that they've now surpassed 500,000 Bitcoin, hold a significant
percentage of the supply, leaving many to actually start to wonder if it's too much.
So we can start the conversation, I guess, with price. Sasha, you're looking at this all the time
over at the tie, obviously. I mean, what do you think the catalyst here is right now for prices rising?
Yeah, I think it's clearly also delight action.
I know some people were expecting a Sunday pump
actually to happen, and it didn't happen.
But there's been so much going on between the SEC crypto task
force holding up a lot of meetings,
meeting all the executives in the space,
really trying to push the space forward
with regulatory clarity.
The big conference last week in New York City where Trump made made an appearance, well, like a recorded appearance, but still was featured as a speaker.
And even for recording, the room was packed and everybody was listening to every
single word. And the main outcome of that was that his intention is clear
and it is to make the US the center of the world
when it comes to crypto finance, right?
So I think all those catalysts were just overdue
for repricing and that's what we're seeing right now.
You know, my question is,
like we've seen a lot of publicly announced buying
since we hit 100K plus,
but we weren't sure who was selling.
And it may be that the reason the price is going up
is whoever was selling has run out of coins to sell
or has decided to stop selling at this point.
And so it's not so much new buy side interest, but it's a lack of sell side interest. And I don't know that to be a fact,
but I've just been scratching my head as to why Bitcoin had gotten as low as it had for a while.
So that's my two cents on that.
I actually can't see who's talking because of the permanent glitch here. Dave, I saw your hand go up, but it shows as a listener.
So you know who's on stage or a listener, but can you speak?
Yeah, I can speak.
Yeah.
Well, I now understand.
After last week, I fully understand and feel your pain.
Yeah, I'm going to jump off and come right back on as you speak.
Okay.
Well, look, the answer to your question, which Scott will find very amusing. the We can either have Doge or we can have working Twitter spaces, but we can't have both.
We want nice things.
We want nice things.
Listen, today is a beta day.
Nasdaq's up 2% and this is all coming from traditional financial players.
It's very rare when you see a Bitcoin move like this where the funding rates on the exchanges
are negative.
Now, I'm going to repeat that because that's like to put this in perspective, you know,
typically when you see up moves, you see the funding rate is double average, 50% higher
than average.
It's now negative, meaning this is not speculation from the perp markets.
The perp markets aren't doing anything other than lagging.
It's not speculation looking at the CME futures either.
The CME futures are more or less the same,
you know, premiums they've been for the last,
you know, since February.
So this is just spot buying.
And it's spot buying probably driven by ETFs
and people who are going in their Coinbase
and Kraken accounts and or their Binance accounts
and their OKEX accounts and buy.
And it's beta.
Now, do all the things Sasha happened talked about?
Do they matter? Yeah, they will.
And that's why Bitcoin is likely when the dust clears to accelerate past it.
But I think this is pure beta today.
Good point, Dave. You know, Sasha, some of the things you said,
it's like those are all knowns.
We've known that Trump has been pretty bullish. You know, regulatory environments been, you know, we've never we've never had a moment in history, though, where Bitcoin and crypto has been in a positive regulatory environment. So positive tailwinds and a positive macro environment. Right. We've been, you know, the market's been completely, you know, like,
broken down here by these tariff talks, April 2, the tariff deadline,
some got dovish or at least the reports are that they're getting dovish on tariffs, you've got the
market ripping bitcoins ripping. That's it. Right. There's nothing else like him attending
a conference did not like did nothing for us. Like those are those are all things that have
been happening. He's been talking about the market for a long time.
He's been positive on it. He launched a token. We know all of those things.
What wasn't priced in was the dovish talk on the tariffs. I think maybe what we're possibly seeing
is the actual unwind of that. He said they're going to have reciprocal tariffs now, which means that, hey, we're
just going to meet them where they are.
And so it kind of sounds like he was, you know, not walking lightly or carrying a big
stick.
He was basically just saying, you know, hey, we're going to have these massive tariffs.
And now he's backing off of that.
And that's why the market is basically making that happen.
And so I think what we what has happened is we have priced in higher
tariffs than what we think we're going to get.
And things are going to unwind from there.
But that's just my take.
So I don't know that it's that we priced in higher tariffs.
I think it's that the market was pricing in just
dealing with the instability of having no idea what
was going to happen, which is part of the course with more
panic, more uncertainty, and now that part of the course with more uncertainty.
Right.
And now that there's a little bit more certainty.
Exactly.
And so backing off it, I think, is why you're seeing like some good recovery on and people
feeling like they have a good view, which like, I don't know, the next time they introduce
a policy that feels half baked or people don't know what it's going to do, we'll drop right
back off in the same way and then come back up.
It's just a roller coaster.
Well, I do think one thing's different.
We mentioned this morning the fact that the market was dropping that the liberal media
is going crazy on Musk and all the other stuff, which all is interrelated.
It was unsurprising to see the secretary of the treasury go on the talk show circuit and
tell people,
hey listen, you know, we got this, this is going to be calm, we have an intelligent plan,
etc., etc.
This tells me that this administration realizes that there are certain areas where they don't
want to fight a multi-front war and they're going to focus or they're going to focus.
So this morning's news that there won't be anything crazy, that we're going to be targeted and negotiated is basically the idea that, okay, wait a minute, we don't
need to push that fast on this stuff. And where they really want to stay pushing fast
is on the domestic agenda. And I think that that will give the mayor cover because there's
nothing that motivates protesters more than getting poor. And, you know, and if you take that away from people, I think that that's, that's
the, that's the propaganda war within the war that you're seeing here.
So it's really not all that surprising to me.
I can, hopefully I can speak, Dave.
I do have to say just as a caveat here, you did an incredible job last week and
thank you for covering for me that whole time, because it is always a glitch glitch when I try to get back in this space as it literally said the space
it does not exist. That was the first. But eventually did make my way back in here,
obviously. So I think that everyone to some degree agrees that this is a macro driven rally,
that it's alongside a calming of markets. That said, does that mean that the bottom is in and we continue from here?
Dave, we talked about this maybe on
the spiciest macro Monday of all time this morning.
Just an incredible hour.
But Arthur obviously saying,
hey, there's a better chance.
We're talking about Arthur Hayes saying,
Bitcoin now goes to 110 instead of back to
77. And if it hits 110, it's all systems go. So I guess opinions here on whether the bottom
is likely in, and this is just another bull market correction. I love everyone's, you know, takes on
that and then we'll move on to sailor. Dave, what do you think? Well, you know what I think,
because I publicly said the same thing,
except I said it when you and I were buying
at between 77 and 78.
So yeah, I said it was a tradable bottom two weeks ago.
Nothing has changed for me.
I just, you know, it is what it is.
I mean, I think that there's institutional buying.
It's very clear.
The analogy I used this morning
was there's an iceberg that doesn't chase.
I don't think the institutions are buying at 88.
I think they were buying at 85, 86, 87, and if it stays and stabilizes around this level
in the next few hours, then yeah, maybe they'll come back in and be passively buying.
But the institutional buying tends to be less FOMO driven than what we're used to in the
crypto markets. But what we haven't we're used to in the crypto markets.
But what we haven't seen is people buying in the crypto markets.
And you'll know that when leverage starts coming back in.
By the way, I was curious if anyone's following it because I literally don't.
Did that hyper liquid guy get liquidated or did he close himself out first?
It would be really interesting to know because he closed himself out.
He made nine million dollars and then he went long on ETH.
Yeah, so he's a smart trader and he's gotten it.
That's what I kind of figured was going on.
But look, if you try to trade this market
and you're a professional, it's a great market to trade in.
All the retail people who listen to this
and aren't really trading are dentists, doctors,
lawyers, whatever, don't trade it to stack stats
and stay longer, DCA in when you get cash.
I mean, I can't be stronger than that.
I think it's that simple.
The big problem is in a trading market,
when I mentioned that it was beta today,
is you can get flushed out of your positions very quickly,
but if you know what you're doing, it's different.
And I think that that's really the one piece of advice. It's not investment advice per se, but the one piece of advice I would give,
you know, is for sailor.
I I'd like to let other people comment.
I talked too much last week.
So, well, you know, to talk to you about the bottom here, Dwayne, maybe
since you focus on macro, but also obviously look at Bitcoin, do you think
that the bottom of this small stock correction has to be in for the Bitcoin
bottom to be in and what's your view on whether that's the case?
Yeah, thanks. Good morning. Well, I am I would I would think there's a strong
I don't want to obviously say yay or nay, but I would say that there's a strong possibility that yes
The bottom is in I mean what I was really looking at was
Inflows on ETFs. I'm sure you guys talked about this
I came in here a couple minutes lates. I'm sure you guys talked about this. I came in here a couple of minutes late,
but I'm assuming that you talked about Bitcoin,
ETF inflows, you know, rebounding.
And that's one thing that I was really looking at that
versus gold because gold, you know,
has come up to record highs here.
We've had inflows on gold ETFs to pass Bitcoin.
So that was a concern
for me, at least in my world here, because gold is going to
have consistent demand drivers, you know, with us with central
bank buying and then also some of the geopolitical events. But
with, you know, but with Bitcoin, I think a lot of the
uncertainty around tariffs was one of the problems here now
that we're hearing a bit of a pullback in regards to the
tariff policy coming out of the Trump administration, that
gives a little bit more certainty to markets with
Bitcoin. So if one wanted to say that the bottom is in, then I
could agree with those terms, as long as this sentiment stays
where it's at, just in regards to some of the bigger events
that are happening. So really, how the Trump administration is going to approach geopolitical events, what's
going to happen with tariff policy come April and some of those minor issues are over the
big macro issue of uncertainty here.
Anyone else specific thoughts on whether the market bottom is in or not?
Otherwise, we will move on to Sailor who now owns,
what's it, 2.0. I don't have it in front of me, but over 2% of the supply surpassing
500,000 Bitcoin owned by strategy. Of course, all of this coming from creative
Bitcoin owned by strategy, of course, all of this coming from creative debt instruments and strategies to buy Bitcoin.
And a lot of people starting to scratch their heads and wonder if it's too much.
Simon, you've been here probably the longest, certainly, in Bitcoin.
Does one entity controlling that much of the supply at this point concern you? We always prefer more distribution but unfortunately
people get the Bitcoin opportunity and it doesn't change what it changes
people's time preference once they get it. It doesn't change who figures that out
and so I don't think it changes that wealth distribution style of thing. And so, you know, Saylor is, I think, yeah, passing the 500,000 mark.
And clearly, this is going to go on for as long as it can.
The last round of products are slightly concerning in that they promise,
if my understanding is correct, a perpetual 10%
dividend paid in dollars.
And it's not just cash.
It's drive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So now in any kind of significant market correction
environment, depending on anyone that can reverse engineer that
balance sheet, which clearly requires a significant amount
of sophistication at this
stage in terms of who goes ahead of who and what product is launched next and then where you would
fit in preference. And I've got to be honest, I do think understanding preference and what would
happen under a Chapter 11 scenario, it is actually an important indicator
when investing in this product,
just because of the sheer complexity of the cap table now.
I also do believe, this is highly speculative,
but I actually believe that strategy has now become a US government proxy.
And so if you wanted to create a load of dollar products that make the product,
the company more and more risky,
and you want to make it strategically more risky to interest rates,
flows and manipulation, then it is there now.
manipulation, then it is there now. And if the US government needed to acquire a Bitcoin strategic reserve, doing it via
a proxy that could be nationalized would be probably the best way of doing it.
And there's no other way of getting so much Bitcoin in an environment where you need it. At the same time, its strategy to, with all the stable
coin regulations that are now happening, there's a massive race to control the future of the dollar.
Elon Musk came out and was talking about owning 50% of the entire financial system,
financial flows and payment flows.
OpenAI just came out and is working with Visa in order to create a stablecoin wallet.
I speculate that Trump also wants a piece of that as well as all the traditional players.
So you can see that there is a clear strategy, and I think it's at the US government level,
to be able to have the possibility, in case it was needed, to get a hold of a significant amount
of Bitcoin through the nationalization of strategy, and also have a stablecoin standard,
where we're kind of moving to what could potentially be a pre-threat or
reserve free banking system where everyone's competing to issue stablecoins but backed
by treasuries and non-fractional reserves.
It's a very, very interesting time.
And I do like to speculate on these future eventualities.
And I think the strategy at this stage is kind of a proxy for a strategic government play.
Alex, you got your hand up.
I think I've probably been one of the most consistently uncomfortable people with microstrategy
and what they're doing for the last six months or a year on the show.
There's two things that I don't like.
Number one is I don't like heavy concentration. I think it is crazy how many people who are
purporting a decentralized, non-governmental currency who want strategy to have a million
bitcoins and the US government to hold a million bitcoins and a bunch of Middle Eastern governments
to hold half a million bitcoins each. I get it'll pump the price, but the more that we concentrate the supply, the less useful
it is.
And just more importantly, the less likely it is that we ever get anywhere near this
actually being adopted widely by people as the cross-stora value.
So I've always been uncomfortable with it for that or disliked it, I'd say, for that
perspective.
And then, in terms of the debt play and the convertibles they were running,
I came around enough to understand why that particular play wasn't a particular problem.
But the problem with it is that you see now, they started building up this massive market cap and getting really, really rich running it. They tapped out the market for that now though, but I think they're addicted
to the leveraged accumulation of Bitcoin. And now, so they have to start looking like,
what's another product we can do? What's another product we can do? And if you rewind,
20, 25 years to the early 2000s, there's nothing wrong with mortgage-backed securities.
The entire concept is totally fine and
reasonable and increases liquidity in the marketplace.
But then people want more and more and so you start doing
more esoteric and more aggressive and you
start rehypothecating over and over again and you start stacking into,
forget, sorry, who it was, and you start stacking into,
I forget, sorry, who it was, who was talking about it,
Simon was saying it, like that cap table
is starting to get really, really complicated
in ways that maybe one or two people
inside MicroStrategy actually understand
what's going on there, but maybe they don't.
You certainly can't see the unknown unknowns in it.
And so I think you do start to get into a really dangerous place as they start combining
a lot of these different products where in a sharp downturn, which it's not crazy for
crypto to drop 10%, 20%, 30% in a few days or a week or something, that could...
Again, we just don't know what the implications are.
And I think for something where we're trying to say, this is meant to bring
stability to the world and to financial systems and things,
it has the risk to do the opposite.
Simon.
Yeah, I also wanted to note as well that there are
more products to try and push more liquidity
into micro strategy as well.
There was the announcement of the launch
of a Bitcoin convertible ETF.
So anybody that is doing the convertible strategy,
which is a marathon, riot and strategy,
they're creating an ETF of that now.
So now there will be flows in,
and then you can imagine all the different products.
So we are getting to look like a mortgage-backed security
type of environment with leverage for protection
and downsides and all of these very sophisticated products.
And you just don't know what people are going to
do with these things. So I do believe that this is pointing towards something that could be
the cause of a massive liquidation cycle at some point in the future, which doesn't affect Bitcoin. It doesn't change my analysis of Bitcoin at all, but it does create an attack vector for severe manipulation
in order to acquire a lot of Bitcoin
by a sophisticated player that has vast access to capital,
even at the Federal Reserve level,
if you wanted to strategically acquire a lot of Bitcoin.
So watch this one.
John-Marc.
Hey, Simon was cutting in and out for me.
I don't know if it's my connection or everybody else's, but can you hear me?
You're fine.
He was okay to me, but no glitch surprises us here.
Yeah.
I think Michael Saylor, when he spoke, I guess it was earlier this year, quite early this
year, maybe late last year.
And he talked to investors in MicroStrategy about forming a partnership with him.
He said, one thing you know for sure about him is he won't be selling any Bitcoin.
But with the new instruments that he's launched, which require MicroStrategy to have cash to
pay out and service these instruments, the question becomes, well, can he just keep selling more of these
instruments and increasing his debt pile to pay off the pre-existing instruments?
Or at some point, will some sale of Bitcoin be necessary?
And I think that's probably the thing that's most concerning with analyzing what he's doing.
It doesn't look like there's been a tremendous amount of demand, frankly, for strike. And we haven't seen, like, Strife announced that it's $700 million,
I think, in terms of its initial offering. But in today's announcement, he sold like
$600 million worth of shares at the market and $1.1 million worth of strike. So we're not really getting close to a point where that's becoming a big part of the balance
sheet, but it's certainly something to keep an eye on for sure.
Dave.
Yeah, I think it's also worth pointing out a few things.
First, when financial engineering kind of took hold of the real estate markets
in 2004 or so and sort of driving those markets higher, it took four years or three and a
half years for the chickens to come home to roost and after a very, very large rally.
So yeah, I think Simon's right. I think there will be a very interesting event. I think the event may be when Bitcoin corrects from 300,000 down to 200,000, which would be a rather large correction.
I think you'll start seeing all sorts of things happening. Obviously, I'm being a little tongue
in cheek, but not by much. I don't know when that will happen. I do think that financial
engineering is something that does tend to signal the tops of rallies,
but usually after they've driven things higher.
You can't make the argument that its buying has been driving the market higher because
this is the last buy is the first one in a long time that the market didn't open on Monday
and trade below where his buy price was from the weekend.
This is actually the first in a very long time that that hasn't happened.
And the reason has something to do with micro strategy.
It has to do with what I talked about before.
So I think it's worth understanding that.
But I do think it's also worth noting that there is a large demand that is likely to
happen from the institutional community.
A lot of it, it's very, very popular in Europe in particular.
It's popular among high net worth people in the US, which is structures like principal protected
notes with where you give up some of your upside. So, you know, so you buy this product that will
give you 50% of the upside of Bitcoin, but will cap the downside at a very reasonable amount.
And you do that in order to make sure that you don't take career risk.
And a lot of people do that.
It's a very popular type of structure.
And I think you're gonna see more and more of that
as time goes on.
Yes, there will be structures like more highly levered ones,
where you get 2X the amount,
and it's gonna all be done through options
and that sort of thing.
And we could talk about how,
but I don't think anyone really cares.
People are dipping their toe in the water.
This is not that popular yet.
In the crypto community, yeah, we look at the numbers, they look popular, but the amount
of money that is in the traditional financial system, just compared to Bitcoin's total market
cap is still miniscule.
It doesn't take a whole lot to move this stuff.
Right now, I'm concerned about strategy owning so much, and I don't like
the 10%.
I don't know why I haven't read the, you know, I don't know, for example, if it gets suspended
or if it's, if it's senior debt or whatever, which is I think Simon's question, but it
does seem a little bit problematic.
But I do think there's a lot of other people out there that are playing in the same sandbox.
Scott, real quick. Oh, sorry. I didn't see your hand up. Go ahead, Joe.
Okay, real quick. You know, when you look at the market cap, you know, of strategy, you know, hovering now, you know, above 80, you know, if you look at something like a BlackRock, you know, with a market cap of
like 150 billion, you know, I like where Simon's head's at with, you know, some sort of unwind
and what could potentially happen.
But even if he can hold on for five years with the model that he has, I mean, what's
strategy's market cap when Bitcoin's sitting at 500K,
like we're all calling for, right?
And then how do you parlay that into something else?
Like everyone kept saying, you know,
the model is at some point BlackRock's gonna absorb them,
right, they're gonna get the Bitcoin
and like that's the whole goal, right?
But, you know, it could be the other way around, right?
Strategy could be absorbing other companies
with other cash flows that can be diversifying
out of that. You know, how much how much more money can be lent to them when they're holding
this much Bitcoin is pretty incredible. You know, the capital structure, like it's a public
company. And I know BlackRock owns a ton. I know Vanguard owns a ton. You know, I would
be very interested in it probably It probably should be more transparent
how the decision is actually made.
Is it Sailor himself being able to make these decisions?
Does he have a board?
Can he actually get fired?
I don't know what his voting shares looked like for himself.
I think some of those things,
where's that Bitcoin stored?
Is that his house?
Does he have a paper wallet?
Is it with Coinbase?
I think some of those things at this point,
he becomes like enough of a risk for the,
like if you truly believe in the decentralized world
that we're all trying to say and that we all have a say,
at some point, these things should probably be
a little bit more transparent,
not to the point where like people can go and get it,
but it should be more transparent
so that we know it's not an issue.
I mean, part of the reason that, you reason that he spoke about recently that the security is there,
Bitcoin is because Satoshi is gone.
Right. And like there's a lot of risk there from like a creator that could dump
potentially like now he's that guy.
And so how does he de-risk himself there?
So I don't know. There's a lot going on.
I still believe in like,
it's not like based on what I've heard him talk about.
I mean, no one seems any more passionate about the mission
than him.
And that goes a long way.
But we'll see what actually happens here
with the capital structure of the company.
I think there should be more transparency, though.
Alex?
Yeah, I think that brings up an interesting point
around corporate control stuff, too.
I don't know what the voting control structure of micro strategy is or some of that core
ownership. But again, if you run into enough liquidity troubles, capital structures can
get changed. And again, just over concentration like that just creates systemic risks, which I think is a message we're hearing
across the board from folks here. And it just, you know, again, I think it just goes against
the core ethos of what we're all trying to do and looking for. Simon? Yeah, I mean, look, you've got
a public company with public level disclosure, it's just none of us has bothered to go through the disclosure.
Governance doesn't matter so much.
I don't think it's microsailer dependent other than the pitch.
We've got an incredible amount of technology now to custody Bitcoin in a corporate environment
where a director can switch and there's processes for multi-factor authentications.
All of that innovation has happened,
so I'm not so concerned about that.
It's what comes next.
So now you've got some products that tie you to cash,
which creates an attack vector.
Then you have a strategy where you might become a crypto bank, a collateralized lending company.
Then you might tie some of that Bitcoin to margin loans. Then you create the opportunity
for somebody to significantly manipulate the price of Bitcoin in order to create some kind
of cascading liquidations. And then if you look at the mortgage-backed security issues, one of the biggest issues was Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. So it was actually governments
that were subsidizing mortgages and encouraging all of these fraudulent loans. So then if you've
got the US government that comes in with a Bitcoin strategic reserve and it starts acquiring Bitcoin,
then you just open up an attack vector.
Now imagine if it gets a bit funky where there's some change in the dollar through this kind
of stablecoin standard model and the Federal Reserve and the Treasury are on the opposite
sense of an argument.
You just create these opportunities.
What I think is most interesting in that whole thing is that while we had our Celsius FTX Block
5 Voyager scenario, that was based upon fraud. What I think would be most interesting in this is we
could create another leverage story that teaches everyone not to borrow against their Bitcoin
if this is the direction it all ends up going.
But I think the most important thing is,
while the 2008 financial crisis scenario,
at the end of the day, the emperor has no clothes
and fear currency that just doesn't actually exist.
So therefore you need a government bailout.
But if we enter into this cascading liquidation,
over leverage, collateralized Bitcoin scenario.
At the end of the day, people will realize the people that were protected were the ones
that held it in self-custody, didn't leverage it, and didn't borrow against it.
The ones that do will be contributing to it, and those will be the people that have the
liquidity to acquire it.
I think the lessons could be the same and I imagine when
Wall Street gets involved that's somewhat inevitable but the lessons of
the underlying backing of 21 million Bitcoin backed by currently 800x a hash
that no one can change is what will be the end story and maybe we just need to
learn that story again as we do every cycle
in every financial market and through history when leverage is involved.
Dave, I think you had your hand up before.
Well, I didn't, but I do actually have a comment.
That is why it's so important to understand that apart from MicroStrategy, which given the amount, I mean, before the newest product, the 10% perpetual,
I don't really see a disproportionate amount of leverage.
The actual leverage in the crypto market right now,
particularly in Bitcoin, is really low compared to normally.
And so, we've gone through, just understand,
when you get to the point where we start hitting
the resistance levels that people talk about, 92, 95, whatever, and leverage is this low,
and yet it's grinding higher, if we start seeing that grinding higher period without
leverage, that is much more sustainable.
But yes, if you start seeing leverage getting to significant amounts and people paying for
perpetual swap exposures, et cetera, et cetera. Yeah, that generally is more significant of the
top, but we're not seeing that right now. And yes, you could project that in the future
if in fact, let's just say the sake of argument, strategy doubles their size of Bitcoin
buy half of, doubles their size of Bitcoin. At these levels, using significant leverage, yeah, that has all the hallmarks of the trader
who was right and bought Bitcoin every step of the way around the rally, but kept levering
up and levering up and got liquidated in this last drawdown.
And that does happen, right?
You know, there are people who did that.
As long as they don't do it that way, it's okay.
We're all worried that that's what they might do
because all the people on this stage understand
that just because you've made a lot of money
doesn't mean that you should be, you know,
still running 10X leverage at all points
because it means a 10% drawdown and you're gone.
And so you don't want to be worried about that,
but yes, it is right to keep your eye on it.
I just don't think we're at a tremendously concerning level
yet, but it looks like the seeds might be being sown,
if I'm listening to Simon correctly.
Yeah, it's more a long-term thing,
but it would take five to six years
for probably that whole cycle to manifest,
but just keep an eye on it.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
What about the rest of the market?
I think we've kind of talked through Bitcoin, obviously, and I know we have another conversation
in a bit with Orderly, but Ethereum finally back over $2,000, with a bit of strength, obviously, was dancing
around that number for a little while, was pushing 2100 today.
If you look at the Ethereum Bitcoin chart at probably the longest term possible support
that you could have back from 2020, is it finally time that if Bitcoin shows some strength
here and continues to move that we
could see some real movement in the altcoin sector?
Joe, what do you guys see on Lunar Crush?
I mean, that gives you any sort of indication as to which way alts may go if we see some
strength here or weakness for that matter.
I mean, everything's bouncing.
Everything that matters is bouncing right now with the market. But a lot of stuff is still down
30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70% meme coins down more. So it's not anything I would say to get super excited
about. But what I've been seeing is a lot of people have been deploying cash in the last two weeks,
a lot of whales, a lot of people that know the market and have been around for a long time
were kind of calling Bitcoin 81 as like a great place
that we might not see again.
And I think that that has kind of flushed.
Everyone's kind of said, okay, I also have a couple
of my different alts that I love,
that I'm also gonna take a portion of that and deploy into
is kind of what we've been seeing.
Sentiment hit a bottom around the 16th of March. And so we've actually seen like a, you know,
a turnaround there. You know, our kind of funny our internal numbers are showing the same thing
at Lunar Crush with users and, you know, page views and sessions and everything. And so I think
people are starting to kind of turn their head around a little bit.
Scott, we were on here a couple of weeks back,
and I think we potentially thought
we were calling a bottom there.
And I think we might have just been a week or two early.
But I do think that, I would say, eight to 10 days ago
was the bottom of at least this quarter.
And I think it's going to be a nice rally into May. I would say eight to 10 days ago was kind of the bottom of at least this quarter.
And I think it's going to be a nice rally into May.
And then maybe you think about slashing something there, but we'll see.
That's interesting that anecdotally your metrics align with what the market does.
Because I think you can look at even this show or at a YouTuber or spot on on Twitter
and it follows the market exactly.
You're just like, you're not going to get views when people are
bearish, not paying attention unless it's a major crash day and
they start to ramp up as price rises.
It's really an incredible study in human psychology.
I want to ask Robbie, since we've got you here and I always leave you out in
the Bitcoin conversation. But you generally
give me the update on what you're seeing. I can say that during this sustained period here,
on my side, my telegram was dead, not many things being pitched around, not seeing a lot of projects
trying to launch. I mean, on your end, have you guys seeing, have you seen any, you know, sustained pitches?
Are there new things coming to market that you're excited about right now?
Or do you think people are still waiting for sort of market conditions to improve?
I think it's kind of, you know, there's a lot of both, honestly.
I was in Warsaw last week during the Polish blockchain Week. And the community there is really like,
as you, I don't know if people know,
but Poland has been a center of software development
and particularly great for the gaming industry as well
for a very long time.
And so there's a big Web3 community
and a lot of builders there.
And I have to say the atmosphere was just,
you know, people are very, very bullish. And I think that's also because
it's more a community of builders than it is a community
of investors per se. So everybody's really focused on
on building product because they believe web three is, you know,
doing transformational things for them. So I think that as a
sort of market signal of how the ecosystem is going,
I thought was great. I think in terms of the macro stuff, obviously, I actually view the
price movements in crypto generally recently to be a lot more reflection of what's going on
in the macro economic environment and political uncertainty and these kinds of things, more so than something that's crypto specific.
But I do think, speaking of floors earlier, that I think we are pretty much seeing the
floor of things because our house view, I think, is aligned with most people that the
second half of the year will be quite strong.
And so I think we're just sort of starting to get into spring and a little bit of sunshine now.
I mean, it's just good to have a conversation that there are people who are not accessing over the price and are actually just building things.
So I assume that you're still viewing very positively what's actually being built in this.
Absolutely. And plus there's always, you know, the little bright spots because there were rumors circulating on Twitter about the CFTC and policymakers
looking at declaring NFTs and non-fungible tokens as another defined class or category
of digital asset.
I think that would be fantastic.
I didn't actually see that.
How do you think that would be positioned? Collectibles like meme coins?
Yes, correct. So I think as long as we're talking about NFTs as being collectibles or strictly
commodities and ruling them out of that god-awful catch-all bucket of is it a security, then that
really unlocks the NFT and the content community to just go back to
launching more token collections and launching more content without the fear of regulatory reprisal.
Is there anything specifically on your radar that you think might launch or happen short term that
could be a catalyst for more excitement around all coins and what's
being built in the shorter term, three to six months. I think there's going to be,
obviously there's new collections of new products coming out. So there's a handful of big game
titles that are prepared to launch, but I think it will also frankly just inject a lot of life
into existing collections. I mean, we've seen the relative bulletproof nature
of some of the blue chip collections.
I mean, most notably CryptoPunks,
but lots of things in the traditional NFT,
2021, 22 vintage are down significantly,
but in the grand scheme of things,
they're still a solid asset class
and more and more community features and functionality
and activity gets built around them.
I mean, look at the Apecoin ecosystem now for Christ's sake.
Yeah, absolutely.
So Robbie, thanks so much as always for your perspective.
Since it's 11 o'clock here,
we're gonna move on to a conversation here
with Ran from Orderly.
Looking at the document here, but probably better for you
to give me the TLDR, Rand, assuming
that you can hear me, everything good on your end.
We always like to make sure there's no glitch.
Rand, you able to speak?
Yeah.
Perfect.
I'll get on my side.
Yeah, so maybe you can give us the TLDR, obviously,
on what Orderly does as we dig in.
So maybe you can give us the TLDR obviously on what Orderly does as we dig in.
All right. Thank you. Great to be here.
So for Orderly, we set out on the mission to allow anyone to trade anything from
anywhere. That's our overall mission.
We think that, like other DeFi builders,
the future of finance should be on chain
in terms of the infra.
And I think it should be omni-chain
so that users can deposit and withdraw native assets
from any chain.
And they can swap.
They can trade, use the assets to trade perps
where the chains are abstracted away and it will be really good liquidity and you can trade
anything from crypto assets to trafi assets eventually. And that's kind of what we set out to
do. So what we built is an order book that unifies liquidity across different blockchains.
We're live on 12 different blockchains, including a lot of the major EVM L1, L2s and on Solana.
So user can actually deposit from Arbitrum and withdraw from Solana.
We have our own chain built using OPStack,
but that just settles everything between the chains.
And we rely on our partners,
which are what we call builders or brokers
on top of orderly that handles the user acquisition.
They're essentially like front ends,
whereas on our side, we're responsible for liquidity and assets listings.
Some numbers currently, we have over 110 perpetuals markets listed on orderly,
a cumulative trading volumes since end of 2023, so about 15 months, is about $101 billion up to date and generated about
10 millionish of fees, which we give significant portion to our token holders. And the builders
on top of us, they've generated about 13 million in revenues on top of orderly.
That's what it is in a nutshell.
Some of our partners, the builders on top,
include Radium, which is the largest AMM on Solana.
Their purpose is powered by us as
in they act as a defacto front end,
and all the trades go through orderly.
We have Wufai, which is an omnichain
DEX. We also have QuickSwap, which is the largest AMM on Polygon. And we have 30 plus other builders
built on top of orderly. Yeah. In my mind, as I listened to you, one of the biggest problems
I think crypto has had in general is UX UI and bridging and being way too confusing for the average person.
So if someone's using orderly to trade, as you said, they can deposit on Arbitrum, withdraw
on Solana.
Is that, does that require any particular crypto knowledge for them to do that beyond
obviously how to do a deposit and withdrawal generally, or it basically. All completely built in do they
have to bridge themselves
anything like that.
No so the user doesn't have to
bridge themselves we actually
act as a bridge so so people
can use us as a bridge kind of
like how you can use a
centralized exchange as a bridge
you just deposit.
That's the only time you're
going to see you're going to
need to see the address,
and then trade as you would.
If you want to withdraw,
there's a small withdrawal fee depending on which chain,
and it just withdraws.
That's the other time that you would need to have a,
well, you don't need your address in that case because it's
tied into the same EVM address.
But it's all abstracted away for the user.
Right.
So that's incredible.
You mentioned Omni-chain liquidity layer.
Can you tell us what that actually means?
It's probably one of the first times I've heard that term.
Right.
So we think liquidity is too scattered across different L1s, L2s, EVM, non-EVM. We aim
to unify all this liquidity starting off with perps. So what that means is we have a vault
of just a smart contract on every single chain we're deployed on. And this is where users
deposit and withdraw assets. So it's a simple smart smart contract and then the vault sends crossing messages via
layer zero, we're utilizing their infra to our chain that access like the ledger for all the
trading for the account balances and our chain is built using op stack. And so the cross stream
messages for deposit withdrawals go through once deposited, the users can just trade.
I mean, the sequencing is done currently
in a centralized way, but it settles on our chain
post-trade per block.
So you can scan our chain at any point in time
via the Explorer to see kind of see which trades are made
by which addresses.
And so all of that is open and transparent.
So that's how we do it.
So the market makers are quoting on one order book.
And the traders are flowing in from any
of 34 different builders that build on top order,
like Radium, Wufai, QuickSwap.
All of these guys have users sending in trades and they're
crossing together alongside the market makers. So it's shared liquidity between all these brokers
and all these chains. Okay, so that said, how do you assess what chains to include next when you
have so many things launching in this market, how do you determine
what's worth incorporating and making a part of a quarterly demo?
Right, so I think we like we're a bit, so it's a number of things, right?
It's kind of we care about users and volumes, right?
Like recently we launched on Sonic that's had pretty good results.
We're going to be launch partners on Monad and a few others. and volumes, right? Like recently we launched on Sonic that's had pretty good results.
We're going to be launched partners on Monad
and a few others.
So it's one, it's kind of what everyone's looking at
and we've launched on Barrow recently and the Unibase.
And two, it's so some of the chains they'll give us
some incentives that then we pass on to users.
We have like trading competitions or campaigns that can help us with user acquisition in
general, and we help help the builders on top.
And it's now we don't it doesn't take us a long time to deploy on a chain because for
us, it's not a whole build on the chain.
It's a smart contract vault, right, like the deposit and withdrawal contract.
For us, it's not a whole build on the chain. It's a smart contract vault, like the deposit and withdrawal
contract.
And it only takes a few days for us to enable a chain.
So then the cost of being wrong is small.
So then we try to deploy on quite a number of chains.
And they're always pitching us as well.
And eventually we want to make this a bit more decentralized.
We're already voting on things like listings
and one, two for the community vote on new chains.
And those chains can incentivize the community for us to do that.
What would you view as your metrics for whether this is successful?
At what point is it a certain amount of AUM, a certain amount of liquidity, a certain amount of change?
How do you know that you've reached a state where you view yourself as a fixed?
Well, all our numbers on our public dune.
So we're looking at trading volumes, obviously,
users across all the brokers.
So daily active users now is roughly like a thousand-ish,
depending on the day.
We're looking at TVL, obviously.
I mean, now kind of,
there's a limited number of things you can do. I
mean, you're just trading perks on orderly, we're coming out
with more interesting like vaults very soon, next month and
multi collateral. So that that'll unlock different
strategies, like kind of Delta neutral or, or, you know,
funding rate ARB type of strategies
when people can deposit native East, native Seoul,
which really makes the OmniChain experience stand out
when you can deposit native assets from all these different chains.
But mainly it's just volumes and users for us.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Obviously there's a token association
which is associated, which is order.
So can you explain the tokenomics,
how it benefits the stakeholders and the development,
how people use it, what's the utility?
Yes, so the biggest thing that you can do with order is on our staking page, if you stake it,
you're getting 60% of the protocol's net revenues per day. So when I talked about that 10 million,
that the protocol received 60% goes to token holders. Now there's almost 90 million order token staked.
And the current APR is about 11%.
And this is paid out in stables because the stables are
what we get as trading fees.
Right now, you can only deposit native USDC as collateral.
And that's going to change once we enable multi-collateral.
But that's the fees, and people can get that.
And it occurs on a daily basis.
And you can withdraw whenever you want.
So we want direct value capture to token holders.
Currently, this is the main way.
And if you're staking order, you actually get boosters
in terms of trading volume boosters.
Because the other thing is, if you're trading on orderly,
via any of the brokers, you're getting some token incentives
in the form of vested order or ES order.
That unlocks over 90 days, But it's like a linear, linear unlock. So you're getting, you know,
rewards automatically for trading for both takers and also market makers.
You know, we have some of the,
the best market makers in the world that are quoting for, for orderly.
And that's kind of where we are as a couty comes from, like the winter mutes,
the Salinis of the world. These are, like the Winter Mutes, the Selenies of the world.
These are two that are public, but we have 30 plus market makers. So then the maker and
taker side are both incentivized by order tokens in the form of vested order tokens.
And the more order they have staked, there's boosters on top of this. So
order they have staked, there's boosters on top of this. So, I mean, that's the mechanics. And we aim to even increase that 60% to higher. I mean, eventually, I think all value capture should be
going to contributors and token holders. That's quite a statement. So I guess as we sort of
come to the end here, what's next for you guys? Do you have any exciting features, partnerships,
anything, products that you can share with us specifically?
And then I just want your kind of final general thoughts
on the future of DeFi.
Obviously you're very deep in this,
you're a technologist, you're building things.
What will DeFi look like in the coming years
and where will we sort of fall into that?
So first, you know, anything you have specifically coming
and then, you know, anything you have specifically coming and then,
you know, how you see DeFi shaping.
Yup.
We have plenty of partnerships coming up.
I mean, I won't get into the details.
We have some every week, but in terms of major products, we have two
pretty exciting things.
One are vaults where that allows, you know, any of our top traders to
spin up vault and to have a strategy that can trade, but
everything's on chain, right? And it'll be transparent and visible. And users can deposit
their capital on chain to get a yield from some of these traders, kind of democratizing
access to really good trading strategies, right? And there will be like a rev share
and that'll be vault dependent, what that looks like.
And people can deposit again
and withdraw from any number of chains,
not just one chain for the vault.
We expect that to increase our TVL and our liquidity
and thus volumes with a vault.
I mean, that's pretty exciting.
I think that's coming up very soon.
And we'll have an additional twist that hasn't been done, but I can't, you know,
I won't reveal that now to the Vault. And then there's also multi-collateral,
which I talked about earlier. I think that's really exciting because you can deposit
ETH Native Soul and Native Monad, other assets, just like you would on a central exchange,
not the wrapped version, but the native version version because we're live on all these different chains and it's all
connected together. I think that'll be exciting. It's to again like abstract the way the
chains make it feel more like a centralized exchange where the piping but is all on chain. And that's where I think DeFi is going.
I think all of finance should be on chain,
settlements, ledger, assets.
It's the most natural way to house these functions,
obviously trading for finance, starting with crypto.
You already see a lot of
that with spot assets like meme coins, and now more with perps and with yields. And what that
would entail and eventually with, I mean, there's a lot of RWA being tokenized on-chain. And so
that's coming in. And I think all of these assets will be on-chain. But there's issues around the UX,
around the onboarding, some of the issues that you just described.
Is it easy enough to use?
Which I think will be solved by just better UX,
easier onboarding, and that's already happening.
Centralized players would likely to be more or less frontends,
they handle the onboarding KYCC Fiat on-rails to DeFi
and all the typing is on-chain. But users won't know and they don't care. So I think
that's what's going to happen and it's quite ideal for all the users because they're going
to get access to the best liquidity, the newest assets as soon as it lists,
all types of yields and the chains are abstracted
and they're just, they feel like they're using
like a web two app.
And they can get value capture.
I think it really is the most important thing.
Yeah, go ahead.
Oh yeah, and best of all,
they should be able to get value capture
from via the token, which is something that
centralized entities cannot fully do due to their high cost, high headcount, and just not using a
lot of the on-chain info. Yeah, to me, this is the single most important thing that we need to
solve. And we've been saying it for years, so it's great to see that you're solving it because I think abstracting away all of that complexity
is the only way that this becomes mainstream.
And playing with it,
it seems like you guys have actually accomplished that.
So congratulations and I would love to have you back
in the future as you kind of move forward
and update to everybody else in the audience.
You should give Ran a follow here.
And obviously we have Orderly Network on stage. You can see that purple background with the white O there. Give them a follow as well and
check out everything they're building. Rand, thank you very much. Anything I might have missed,
just a really final thought before we jump. No, thank you for having me. Please feel free to
try out any other, like, no, Radi radium purses, bullfire purses,
try one of the brokers on top and give us some feedback.
We'd love to hear it.
Thank you.
Awesome.
We'll definitely do that, everybody.
Check that out.
Give all of our amazing panelists from earlier a follow.
We still got Dave, Dewayne, and Sasha here.
Otherwise, we'll be back tomorrow, 10, 15 a.m. Eastern Standard Time for Crypto Town Hall.
Thanks, everyone.