The Wolf Of All Streets - Silent Market, Violent Move Loading! #CryptoTownHall

Episode Date: February 18, 2026

In this Crypto Town Hall episode, hosts and guests analyze Bitcoin's tight $66K–$68K consolidation, debating bear flags vs. potential breakouts amid institutional rotation from OG whales to ETFs/gov...ernments/funds. They discuss February 5th volatility possibly driven by TradFi hedging blow-ups, ETF open interest limits, structured products growth, and symmetrical volatility in crypto. Sentiment highlights extreme fear, long-term holder strain, whale flows, global uncertainty peaks, AI competing for capital, and industry maturation pains—including scams, politicization, and narrative-follows-price dynamics—while maintaining cautious long-term optimism.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 you know, market's pretty much exactly where it was yesterday, at least as friends of Bitcoin. Everything else is kind of meandering along. And the one thing that I noticed, which is kind of fascinating, is really strange, in a way, posts from people. Max Kaiser and a bunch of others have posted about how, you know, something that we know. I mean, it's not like there's any surprise, right? You know, that we know that there was a rotation from, quote, individuals, which were mostly the Bitcoin whales that sold last year. to governments, funds, and businesses. And, you know, he put out a post lamenting that that meant that Bitcoin has lost its way.
Starting point is 00:00:39 I would make the argument that that's literally exactly what has to happen for Bitcoin to become what he always says it should become. And at the same time, we get Scotty Pippen, who's, you know, probably the best Robin in the history of basketball to Michael Jordan's Batman, for those who don't get the joke, who is a Bitcoiner, who's been following it for years, posting a chart saying it looks like it's a pennant formation, which, of course, to technicians mean it's either going to break down or break up, but it's not going to stay where it currently is. And I think that's probably pretty accurate and various people screaming about that. All of this at the same time as Bitcoin has been trading between
Starting point is 00:01:18 67 and mid-66 to mid-68,000s for the last six days after the fall. And so who knows what's going on. So anyway, with all of that, I noticed my good friend who has got himself into a food fight on our show on Monday. And I'm sure you have opinions on this, Mike. I mean, what do you see happening? I'm sure I won't agree, but that's okay. Well, that's where we provide value, Dave. I look at you as a bigger brother. You helped me learn and, you know, temper some of my enthusiasm. But I think your bottom mind is you just pointing out of consolidating bear market. I enjoyed before when Bitcoin was hovering right around 90. People called it a full flag.
Starting point is 00:02:03 I'm like, no, that's a bare flag. I'm sorry, but it's a flag. There you go, but it's going down. It's a flag because, but it is important to understand this. The one thing I will correct you on is you and I know with absolute certainty and it will agree that in the S&P, for example, increased volatility is highly correlated to down moves. In Bitcoin, it is not. In Bitcoin, increased volatility is correlated to moves.
Starting point is 00:02:31 It's much more symmetrical, which is very different than other assets. And the reason I say, just to be clear, is because I think Bitcoin trades like an option. And eventually, it will be the same as every other asset. But now it isn't. That's where the difference is. Anyway, Scott, you're here. I am here. Hello.
Starting point is 00:02:49 So anyway, Mike and I were just starting. So, Mike, sorry to cut you off. Well, you didn't cut me off. This is healthy banter. And that's what I was doing with Larry the other day. He asked a question about what might stop, but I mentioned ETFs. And I didn't use the F word. My mother would probably spank me, and she still has the ability to do that.
Starting point is 00:03:05 She's the wife of a U.S. Marine. And so that's where this comes from. But let's just point out, that's how it's so important. But we need to point out what's happening in this space. Now I see it on the Ivy chat in Bloomberg all time, and I feel sorry for some of these people because what's happened is the number one lesson you learn on the trading desk. And that is to understand someone's personality, observe them when they're losing. money. Now, we're seeing a lot of that in cryptos, and I'm sorry for that. There's not much I can
Starting point is 00:03:29 do about that except to point out my outright views. I see a beer market. I want to see proof of otherwise. Before we start, I look at it, the year, it looks like there was a sell on opening for the year, around 90,000. It could be a buy on the close for the year. The bottom line for that is we just, you know, from one of my main base cases, I think stock market policy is going to go up. I think Bitcoin's leading the way. Prove me wrong. So so far, You know, 64 is a very good reason to cover shorts, maybe test longs. And I look at 74 now as this reason to kind of be looking to retest shorts. Proof me wrong.
Starting point is 00:04:04 Close above that level. I'm not just using it at Bitcoin. It just, it's the thing to remember is what Larry did the other is very similar to what Michael Saylor did. When he put the peak in last year, he tent the market gods with extreme humery. When he said, you know, he tempted, he made fun of Warren Buffett for not investing in Bitcoin after he made 10x and Michael Strait. He's down 7, 70%. That's what I'm for it. I felt what Larry did the other day.
Starting point is 00:04:29 Those kind of moments mark extremes and peaks in personality. Obviously, people are losing money. So, bottom line is respect the bear, make it prove you wrong. And I'm not in the scrimment. The big point, I see the same thing, and was willing to say short copper above six, willing to say buy key bonds around 5%, willing to say short silver above 100,
Starting point is 00:04:49 and even potentially short on crude above 65. I'm in the scrimment for all those markets to go up. That S&P 500 has to stay above 7,000. The help of as it reverts to 6,000, stuff that used to happen. Okay, nobody cares? Okay, I'm going to then, you know, as the teacher in the class, I'm going to start picking on people. So, Jeff, I see you up here. You haven't been here for a bit.
Starting point is 00:05:15 I mean, obviously you wrote, you know, what has probably been the most cited article about what happened on February 5th, and we've done pretty much nothing since the market stabilized within a few days of that. You know, what are you looking at now in this market that's kind of like sitting in a $2,000 range for the last six days? Well, right now I'm certainly looking at the 13Fs because it's giving us some clues as to who the biggest holders and deltas would have emerged towards the end of 4Q. And on that point, on the article that I had wrote up on what happened on February 5th, one of the hypothesis that I made was that this was.
Starting point is 00:05:57 was largely driven by a non-crypto-native asset manager that's likely involved in a multi-strategy format where there is a whole boast of correlations that you're navigating for not just Bitcoin risk, but Bitcoin's risks to other multi-assets. And maybe I was not surprised to see that the biggest holder of Ibit today as of December 31st having added a whopping 14 million shares is Millennium. Millennium now owns 2.5% of iBit, and it is the largest holder. And I mention it because I think some of the trading patterns we're seeing with Bitcoin is not driven by right now, like directional risk taking. I do think it's a trader's market. I think it's being used for funding. I think it's being used for basis
Starting point is 00:06:51 trading. I think it's being used for volatility arbitrage and a lot of other non-direction. RV-centric arbitrage strategies. And the core of my thesis was that something broke on that correlation around RV trading because, as we all can see, software had sold off massively. And the correlation to that particular ETF, IGV, anyone here would have seen is abnormally high. So I still think my best hypothesis is related to something in the trad, world of risk mitigation rather than there being like a specific Bitcoin-centric blow-up or insolvency or liquidation. Of course, I think these things can compound into causation, but I don't know if
Starting point is 00:07:41 it's like the catalyst per se. So that was interesting to see. You know, what else my monitoring? I really am monitoring the features basis because I just... think it is a popular trade where the Bitcoin ETFs are driven at large by that kind of fast money capital movers. And so what I would love to see is some iBit or BITB or other Bitcoin ETF creation units come into play without seeing like an expansion of that basis where one can then hope that it's more directional risk taking rather than being a paired trade. So that's something that I'm trying to watch a little more closely and recognize if there's any patterns to be had in some AM 930 moves and 4 p.m. Because that's generally where you see kind of these bases kind of narrow or implode as the trades are being put on pretty quickly.
Starting point is 00:08:46 And the third thing is I think everyone here is watching as well is the contour of the options market because it really is true that. It is the most kind of capital efficient part of adding reflexivity to Bitcoin's like tactical price changes, at least day to day. So watching expiry, especially onto kind of the monthlies, where there are more rebalancing efforts from the Trotify world is something that I'm keenly watching. I think there just is a lot of sophisticated players. There are people that are doing calendar spreads. They're taking advantage of term duration. They're finding ways to, you know, own gamma, but also maybe structure it where they're not paying theta. And you can do that through calendar spreads.
Starting point is 00:09:33 And you're seeing more of these complex activities come into shape. So, you know, for now, I don't see like a clear, like breakout from organic, like, long-term buying type behavior. But as we all know, that could change really quickly based on sentiment too. So right now I still think it's a bit of a trader. market. That's my quick TLDR take on it. Dave, I don't see any hands. Do you? I don't. And, you know, I always want to resist jumping in because I don't want to talk too much. But, you know, I got, Mark's got his hand up now. He knows how to bail us out. And now that Mark and I are in-person buddies after last week, I know that he won't let me down. We are. And glad, Scott, I'm glad you
Starting point is 00:10:19 are still talking to me after I came in a little too heavy and became a space invader. Gave you that hugged right off the band. I'm a hugger. I'm a hugger. No, no, no. No. I'm glad you. No stress there. Yeah, I think two things. I want to talk about, I guess touch on what Mike was talking about on the technicals and Bitcoin and all that. And just how wildly varying over psychotic the markets are now. And then I want to touch on what Jeff was just talking about. The fact that when Warsh came out, everyone went hog bearish because of the,
Starting point is 00:10:58 three videos where he seemed to be a monitorist and was just going to pull in, you know, all of the capital that the Fed has, you know, or has fled on the market. And then we realized, oh, no, he's not. He's going to be buying two bills just like Janet Yellen and, and everyone else before them. So I think we, you have to keep on the fundamentals. Nothing's changed. changed. We're going to be printing, and there's no one that can change the gravity of the debt and deficit spending we have in front of us, especially when you look at the amount of competition for capital with Germany now a deficit spender for really the first time since, you know, a previous war. So that will continue to really draw a profligate G10 Treasury
Starting point is 00:11:54 dynamic and central banks. So that hasn't changed. That's how it. psychotic our market our market is now back to jeff what you were talking about um instead of looking at the players which obviously hugely important because it informed what happened on february fifth and the days ahead how were the exchanges um supported did you think that the nasdaq request to up to the million i think it was a million um option limit was to protect them in case there were client blowups kind of like Robin Hood, how they had an issue with the one-day options back in 21, and their platform was under assault or at risk of equity and solvency,
Starting point is 00:12:45 or was it not? Was that just part and parcel NASDAQ trying to get more flow from a competitive advantage by making that request to the SEC? So was it systemic, or was it just part-and-parts? to try and expand their share. Yeah, I love this question. Thanks for asking. And I think I shared some notes on this as well that's available on my X-Feed.
Starting point is 00:13:09 And I've been following the open interest change requests since the very beginning. And I think there's been some maybe confusion as well from other folks as to what was happening. Just to make sure you all understand the same story, from a timeline perspective, there's always been an issue with Gensler having approved the ETF with an OI limit that was clearly way too small for the volume and market cap that these ETS would become. So that was issue number one. And I made it very public even a year and a half ago that this number is clearly politicized just based on trading activities. It should at least be five times that.
Starting point is 00:13:51 And they fixed it. So over time, it became 250. thousand instead of 40 or whatever the starting point was. But I would argue, and the other problem is that the ETFs that got that permissioning was Ibit, BITB, BitWise's Bitcoin ETF and Gray Scales, I believe. But the other ones didn't get that. So Vanek and Kathy Woods and all the other ones, they still had like a problem with their OI limits. So there was one kind of action taken to at least streamline all of these based
Starting point is 00:14:25 on the liquidity so that the whole playing field is even. So that's one. And then separately, Ibit alone made the request last year. I want to say it was around like November or December to bring that OI limit to a million. And when you get into a million, like that is basically a little bit more of like a custom grant rather than like the existing guidelines with a rubric that tells you like where the OI should be based on its trading pattern. So that is special. And I think that is one worth watching. And it hasn't been granted.
Starting point is 00:14:59 So that's the other thing we have to be clear about it. It hasn't been granted yet. Now, why would NASDAQ request it? I think there's a couple reasons. One, I think based on the trading volume that we're seeing on IBIT, one million is actually probably the right number relative to kind of the other peers that have gotten that permissioning. So it's probably the right and like equitable amount from a bottoms up fundamental like analysis of markets. And the second thing is I don't think there's been any like
Starting point is 00:15:38 OI that reached levels right now where we would be breaking those things. But it's maybe more in preparation for a market that could come. And I think one market that could come really is is within the growth of the structure product space. So if you think that wealth management channels are going to start distributing principally protected note strategies or some path-dependent strategies like auto-callables where you're taking Bitcoin risk but for yield in a slightly different payoff,
Starting point is 00:16:14 that's a really, really, really big business. And the market makers do need to hedge those custom OTC contracts using what is most liquidly available and fungible to the underlying, which is Ibit. So I think there is maybe some, you know, preparation for how big that structure of products market can be, that they want to get ahead of it so that they can price it and have market makers confident in their ability to be able to provision for that risk. Because these structured products notes, you know, this is where I started my current Morgan Stanley.
Starting point is 00:16:46 We would like print hundreds of millions of dollars of single-taxed. ticker notes on like a weekly schedule. And the way this generally works is it's always more lucrative when there is a lot of volatility. Because it's essentially a way to sell volatility into a construct of a yield through some structure of payoff. And if you just think about what Bitcoin ETFs represent, it is the unlikely combination of being very volatile and like also doing that with a lot of liquidity. Because right now, usually the problem with like very volatile stocks that exist in single stocks is generally it's because something's bad. It's generally because like there was fraud or something where the stock would gap. And it's not as like evergreen the way
Starting point is 00:17:36 the Bitcoin business is, which is why I think it's actually a little special. And if I were betting, man, I think a lot of banks would be positioning for a structure of products, business growth in that sector. For that, there's interest to increase the iBit limits. But it would be unfair to say it was due to anything that was broken going into February 5th. Because I just don't see that level of risk that is on the books, even with the current OIs, to insinuate that. The other thing, too, I've seen some folks talk about the chance of there being a leveraged blowup type of situation. But to do that in a Bitcoin vehicle, right, it's not going to come from like call selling because call selling one, first of all, it's generally collateralized with your own Bitcoin.
Starting point is 00:18:29 And then if it's not, too, the market went down. So you wouldn't actually have lost money. You would have made money on it. The only way you would actually have like a blowup problem is if you were like selling puts and the puts were becoming more in the money and you did not have the funding. capacity to meet your obligations. So I think you kind of have to look at that leg of the trade and think about like what kind of, you know, trader or a fund would go out there and short a bunch of puts and, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:03 cause that negative gamma action to come into play. And if you think about that, that's kind of where the structure of products business is for better or for worse. you're usually selling downside risk with some gap risk. So maybe you don't think Apple's going to go down 30%. So you're having to be selling out the money put with a barrier of it going down 30%. But when it happens, it's pretty cataclesmic. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:29 Yeah, I mean, look, there's two parts of the structured product business, right? You know, it doesn't matter whether it's selling puts or whether you're selling a principal protected note where you effectively, you do a zero coupon and use it to buy options to get the upside. but you're still protect on the downside because you have the zero coupon, right? I mean, it doesn't matter how it happens. All of these things, as you know, and probably most of the people in the audience don't necessarily, is that they're all related. And so different people will use puts or use calls or use structures or hedge,
Starting point is 00:20:04 do dynamic hedging or not to make it all very interconnected. The only thing you said in that entire diatribe I disagree with is I think you're completely wrong on the point of selling calls. I think that there are a lot of people who have had yield strategies, which are covered call strategies or protect, or even the new, the new one that, that, that BlackRock is going to announce or has announced, I don't know if it started trading yet. And I think that a lot of the people who buy those ultimately expect that they're going to have the upside. And if they get penetrated, it get called away, that capital is to get redeployed. So I do think there's a fair amount of gamma that can happen in both directions, but it requires actually
Starting point is 00:20:47 a move. I mean, you're not going to get a gamma squeeze on the long side after a big move down because there's no reason for it, right? All the calls are struck way. Yeah, exactly. That's exactly what I'm saying. Yeah, I agree that you can have a gamma squeeze to the upside for the exact same patterns that could emerge. But the fact of the matter is that it's not call selling that would have resulted in a move like February 5th because ultimately... No, no, no, no. Yes, that that's That's more of what I meant. And that's why I do think, like, you can, if you squint hard enough, imagine that the dealers in offering these structured products notes,
Starting point is 00:21:24 which have barriers that knock to the downside. Right, because a lot of times, like, the way this thing works, by the way for banks, is like, they'll say it's like a three-year note, but there's like an auto-callable feature where, like, if the Bitcoin goes up, the note gets called. And you make like a small premium, but it's like, like a it's not a multiple of money. You just made like a little bit of money for holding the note for like three months. And investors are like happy, but not that happy because, you know,
Starting point is 00:21:49 they don't want to like redeploy capital. So what the banks will do is like, hey, let's roll it. Like let's do another auto callable. And the banks love it because they collect like 6% on commission every time you do it. So like the math gets a little funky from like a net return perspective when notes retire so soon. But the problem is if the market goes down, that auto callable feature doesn't kick in. And now you're stuck. And now you're stuck. And now you're stuck. And now you're stuck with this potential like downside risk as an investor. And so to hedge that, what the dealers would generally try to do is sell puts against it, because that's kind of the closest vanilla option to replicate the payoff to match the risk.
Starting point is 00:22:29 And so if you thought there was enough, like, risk there in an illiquid market, which we know January was relatively illiquid for Bitcoin, I think that's the other part. Like, there just wasn't enough liquidity historically in the ways we would have expected after December that it's been a downward slope ever since where it's plausible to think that kind of structured products hedging could have been like the catalyst to exacerbate the move to the downside. Right. Okay. So what we kind of know. Yeah, right. So that's part of it.
Starting point is 00:23:05 Obviously, Steve, you have your hand up. Maybe you want to go in a different direction. How are you seeing things? Yeah, look, I mean, first of all, there's just, there's some things I've seen on Twitter actually want to call it and a lot of people talking about how Bitcoin ETFs work. And I just, I was actually just listening and I was like, all right, I'm going to, I'm going to jump in and talk to you guys because I know a little bit about Bitcoin ETFs and crypto ETFs. But, you know, the way that a Bitcoin ETF works is, you know, you're holding, you're holding Bitcoin in custody. and you're not allowed to, I mean, it's client assets, right? I'm not allowed to re-hypocket that Bitcoin in any way, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:52 every share equals one Bitcoin, you know, minus management fees over time. So there's nothing nefarious going on with Bitcoin ETFs from that perspective. I just want to clear that up. And if there were, it'd be a FTX situation. And, you know, these are client assets. They're not yours. And you're not allowed to really touch them outside of the custody that they're sitting in. And if there's redemptions, you can redeem either in Bitcoin or in dollars now,
Starting point is 00:24:24 which is great that the SEC finally allowed in-kind distributions and creations. And then second of all, I mean, I love listening to Jeff because, I mean, I'm fully in agreement. with everything I heard that, you know, buying and selling derivatives on an asset is going to happen whether people like it or not, whether an ETF exists or not. And it has. I mean, most of the people on this call remember Bitmex and where you could get, you know, 50x, 100x leverage on Bitcoin, which is pretty dangerous. I mean, 3x leverage is dangerous, which is why the SEC is not allowing, you know, 3x, 5x ETFs anymore, which is great, by the way.
Starting point is 00:25:13 I mean, I used to be in a business where we had a bunch of 3x ETFs and talk about not sleeping at night, you know, especially an asset like Bitcoin that's a little bit more volatile. I think it's great. Well, I mean, but... Go ahead.
Starting point is 00:25:29 You go ahead. Yeah, I was just going to say one more thing. I mean, I also launched a 2X, 2X Bitcoin ETF several years ago, which, you know, I mean, it's a, you know, it was fun, it was, it was, it was fun to do. But, you know, there is no Bitcoin in that. It's just, it's just, you know, purely a leverage futures play. It's designed to be a trading product.
Starting point is 00:25:52 And I, and I'm, here's my warning also out there that if you're a sitting in a 2x anything, you, these are products that are designed to get in and out of in a single day. And they aren't meant to be held for a long period of time, even even more than a week. So it's it's I just want people to be warned of that because if you're sitting in a 2x 3x lever product for more than a day, I mean, you're going to get slaughtered over time. So, you know, I could get more into that if you want, but, but I'm just, I'm just going to pause there because I kind of interjected with it. No, the those products are all and in fact pretty much all of the futures backed ETFs and those are almost always futures backed are not buy and hold products because you have role. risk and all sorts of other things that eat away. People don't generally understand that,
Starting point is 00:26:41 but it works out. But yeah, they're all like that. But I think the most important point that I was trying to drive at and why I wanted Jeff to talk about it is, you know, we had 10-10, and there had been rumors of all sorts of things that might have happened under the surface at 10-10. But I think that the only thing that we know that happened is a lot of people got wrecked. And it drove a lot of people out of the market and they left. And then we saw lots of, lots of selling and it lasted for a while. It crescendoed on February 5th. And now the question is, is there an FTX looming that we don't know about or not? If the answer is not, then we're done. If the answer is yes, then we're not done. And the funny part is, it seems to be overwhelming majority. And just look at the today's news on
Starting point is 00:27:31 on X. Ran Nuneer, who used to be a co-host of this show, questions Bitcoin's core promise after 12 years. I'm just reading from X. And then you have Bitcoin analyst Willie Wu published his chart indicating strengthening bear market trend. And in the middle of that is institutions boost black rock Bitcoin ETF stakes in the filings that Jeff was talking about. So you literally have implosions from the entire crypto-native community at the same time as institutions. institutions basically saying, okay, we'll, don't worry, we'll take it from here, which I think is funny. Mark, what do you think? Well, I was just going to say also, like, I mean, a lot of that isn't happening in the spot ETFs. It's really happening, you know, via exchanges that offer, you know, a large amount of leverage.
Starting point is 00:28:20 And, you know, I mean, I'm not going to say an intelligent investor because anything has risk once you start utilizing derivatives. But, you know, your basic basis trade is is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, is, and and very little, um, you know, call selling or future selling, whatever, whatever you're, you're, you're, you're doing there. But, uh, when you're over leveraging yourself for that trade, that's when things blow up like 10, 10 and, and, and a lot of other situations. I mean, you know, we just launched a, for instance, you know, a sui ETF this morning. And, you know, and it's like, you know, just kind of going through the process of, okay, we, you know, we're taking in, we're taking a sweet token. We're putting it in custody. It's sitting there. We're not, you know, we're not doing anything, you know, nefarious with that.
Starting point is 00:29:12 And that's exactly the role of a fun admin is to make sure that you're not doing that, you know, and reporting that out. So, but yeah, no, I think, I think on a lot of the leverage exchanges is where you're getting some of the risks. Yeah, Mark, Mark, you have your hand up? Yeah. The part that I want to jump in on was what you were talking about. You know, Willie Wu, not talking Jesus and calming us down, but going bare on Bitcoin. You know, it's like the table was set, and then all of a sudden someone pulled the tablecloth and everything's in the air. And we're trying to find a grounding or a smoking gun and a foundation. I think that the part that Jeff did, talking about the derivatives in your piece, Jeff,
Starting point is 00:30:06 and then I tried to also separately. This space was downloaded via spacesdown.com. Visit to download your spaces today. Understand it and drive it is important, but it's not the only thing. I think defining the growth, and that's why I want to know about that million option requests, so thanks for that. That's a part and parcel, and yes, there will be Wall Street loves and will continue to do derivatives that will include all these things.
Starting point is 00:30:33 But nothing has changed on the Bitcoin. You know, it is a zoom out, which I don't want to say, but nothing's changed on the drivers that will take us through expiries. Yes, it might be some, you know, 58 might be the price that we have to look at and all that stuff. And Wall Street is building. But they've had these options out there before. I've had clients who own Bitcoin, but they also are getting yielding.
Starting point is 00:30:59 instruments from structured products at Morgan Stanley now, and they've been getting it for at least six months, if not longer. They've been available at least five months. So all these things are happening. The growth of Ibit's crazy, but the dynamics at the sovereign level is absolutely like what I call wartime finance. And I'm not talking about kinetic war, but if you look at any other time, and I'm, I I know that a lot of people have already understand this, but the refocus is it will continue.
Starting point is 00:31:35 And I think we're all looking to make sense of it, but we don't know the price path. We have a very uncertain price path going forward for at least several months. And it's important to have these calls so that, you know, Steve can give his expertise. Jeff does his. And collectively, it's all wonderful, but no one person knows it. because we have tectonic plates shifting, not to sound like, you know, another Dumer from the Munich Security Conference,
Starting point is 00:32:08 but this has happened well before. This has been going on, you know, since Liberation Day with Germany, with a debt break, with France. So anyway, that's what I want to say. I like how you encapsulated it on a lot going on, and so therefore it just means people don't know what's going on in the next week or two.
Starting point is 00:32:29 I mean, don't we have global uncertainty in general at all-time highs? The chart's been going around, obviously. And if you look at 2025, it's even now, it's like I joked, it's kind of like you used to look at the Doge chart, and it looked like these big cycles, and then Doge went parabolic in the Elon Must days. And all of a sudden, all the previous price action from Doge doesn't even show up on the chart, right? It's so heavily dwarfed.
Starting point is 00:32:54 That's what global uncertainty looks like. 9-11 and COVID, these used to be huge spikes, but 2020, is so crazy, especially now after Epstein and everything else going on, that you can't even see the other times when things were uncertain. And it's in these moments, obviously, that the same narrative as it had no impact before become very loud, like to Dave's point. Now, Willie Woo's thread was actually really interesting. It dove very deeply into a very specific, you know,
Starting point is 00:33:20 a new brand of FUD, which was quantum. And, you know, to his credit, whether you believe it or not, at least he did some math, right? and he dove into what it would mean if certain coins were released and all of that. The sentiment, though, generally that Bitcoin, because prices down, has ceased to be what you thought it could become, that is bare market emotional nonsense. Absolutely. I think a lot of these things existed. It's wallet specific. It's not chain. And I will posit that a lot of this is what aboutism, meaning it was there. But now today,
Starting point is 00:33:56 at this moment? Is it time to uniquely bring this point up? Yeah, it's a circular conversation, but it goes back to narrative following price, right? People, humans just cannot deal with situations of uncertainty. They need an explanation for everything that's happening, specifically in markets, and they start to assign those narratives almost, you know, after the fact. Dave, I mean, you've talked about that so endlessly. I don't know if it's worth digging in, but we see it. every single cycle. And so quantum happens to be the new brand. But, you know, like a guy like Bruce,
Starting point is 00:34:32 who's been here from the very beginning, has seen how many times prices dropped, quote, unquote, because of China, or because of the environmental impact of Bitcoin, or because it's only for criminals and drug dealers and Silk Road, right? This is just a more evolved higher tech version of the same repeated, you know, prices beat down narrative. in my opinion. I mean, it's certainly what I think. And all I can say is that the every single possible signal of peak fear, and I don't mean fear, but just disgust.
Starting point is 00:35:11 I mean, Rand dumping his portfolio. I mean, if you read what he says. I mean, I think he's more disgusted about all coins than Bitcoin particularly. Did he actually say he dumped his portfolio, by the way? Because I thought it was just like a tweet that was like around kind of a hyperbolic YouTube headline, which, you know. It probably is. I'm just saying that you got, but when you get BITX quoting him as questioning Bitcoin's
Starting point is 00:35:34 core promise and you get, you know, Max Kaiser saying things that feel like, you know, it's just exasperation, you know, what he's talking about. And it's like it's the same stuff, right? No matter how you want to slice it, it's the same, it's the same stuff. It always happens. And, you know, at the same time, I don't know how many I've lost count. but dozens of analysts saying Bitcoin will drop to this level, will. You know, there is a big difference.
Starting point is 00:36:06 I mean, Mike knows this and I know this and you know this. You'll never hear smart analysts saying this will happen. You'll see the smart analysts will say it could happen. And here's why. And there's this and that and various qualifiers if you read it. But there are so many people who claim to have absolutely perfect knowledge. of where it's going to go. And by the way, you see exactly the same thing at tops,
Starting point is 00:36:30 where people are saying, I am sure that Bitcoin is on its way to all-time highs. You see the same thing. So this is not, I'm not, this happens in both, both times, right? You know, when it's topping is when everybody is sure it's going higher, and it's bottoming, everyone is sure it's going lower. And we're seeing a lot of sure it's going lower.
Starting point is 00:36:50 Dave, I mean, absolutely. And because we're now all competing with polymarket, and other outlets that were given real time and, you know, dopaminergic dynamics. So if you don't do that, it means you're on a big platform like Morgan Stanley or Goldman, where unfortunately you still have a very large entrenched audience. Yeah, I mean, that's certainly true. I mean, it's just, you see this stuff, and it's in a couple months from now, it'll be obvious. Now it doesn't seem as obvious, but we saw the same thing.
Starting point is 00:37:28 I mean, I will never forget, I mean, literally never forget the twin 60,000 peaks in, it was at 22, 21. I don't remember anymore, 21. The first time, it was literally three weeks of the funding rate on the perp market being, you know, anywhere from 50% to over 100% annually to be long. And then when it cracked, it, you know, violently, you know, basically got cut in half, give or take. I mean, a little bit less, but not by much. I mean, quite violently. Then it recovered. And it jammed up to 69th outs and crazily enough in the summer.
Starting point is 00:38:04 And the same thing recreated, but at that time, it lasted less than a week. And then we all know what happened after that. And so, but at the time, you're looking at it saying, oh, my God, what the hell is going on? And, you know, I got sucked in. I'm not going to lie. I learned my lesson. And I, you know, leverage. That was the last time I ever was levered on Bitcoin because, you know, as Mark
Starting point is 00:38:24 Yes, God show this morning, you know, when it comes, you know, comes to trading for my own account. If I'm not sitting in a screen doing it professionally, I suck. It's one of those things you don't want to be a part-time trader. You don't want to be a full-time trader or you want to be an investor. Neither. You know, there's no middle ground there. Mike, you lifted your mic.
Starting point is 00:38:44 I'm at the risk of interrupting him. I'm very fearful. And Dave, I encourage you to interrupt me all the time. You'll make it better. So as we were speaking, the Trump brothers, Trump Jr., and Eric, We're on CNBC and there were some IBs on the Fin, the crypto chat in Bloomberg kind of making fun of them. That also is part of the juxtapitishes of what's changed. I mean, I love getting in Bitcoin because it kept me away from all these silly New York millionaires that, you know, that you're seeing now.
Starting point is 00:39:13 This is a system. They are the system now. That's what shifted. Another thing is we mentioned, someone just mentioned Ibit. So I just look back. If you look at, since Ibit's traded, the average is 48. Right now to 39. So it's below that average.
Starting point is 00:39:25 So anybody who's bought this is losing. But if you look at the mode, the mode is right where it is at 39. It's right at the most widely traded price, which is December. So I just compare that to QQQ over the same time. It's 20% above its mean. And I just look at this is, okay, so we've jumped on to sell side, sold the ETFs like they're supposed to. I used to be in that, say, biggest pump in history. To me, the signal is it's absolutely done.
Starting point is 00:39:50 You have to look for something that has already happened. You look, give me the hopium that we've had before. Remember before when Trump hated it? It was a great reason to love it. When Biden hated it was great reason and love it. Well, look forward to the ETFs. There's a great reason. Now there's nothing to look forward to that I see.
Starting point is 00:40:04 Maybe you can come up with something until we reset the whole space. So I look at it. As anybody who's bought this space is realizing, yeah, it's a poor performer. It's over. For it to recover, we need to see the beef. And that's what I point out. At least maybe see Bitcoin hang in there and when the stock market drops 10%. Or it just there's no signs of beef.
Starting point is 00:40:24 And I don't see it. And I think until something changes, you're just going to see the continued liquidation. And that's partly just looking at performance since an ETFs, which some of us figured would mark the peak. So far, they've marked a peak. Anybody else have different? Well, I was going to say it's not even just necessarily, I guess, the ETF's marking a peak. In this case, Steve McClark, you and I have discussed this before. But like anybody who's looked, and I think, Steve, we were talking about this in, like, 2017.
Starting point is 00:40:55 But right, when futures launched, it was the dead top of the market to the day. We do have a long history of institutional products, not necessarily being positive catalysts in the short term. No, that's exactly right. And the futures product really was the, I mean, that was the top at that point in time. But if remember four years before that, the top was marked by CME futures product. Well, CME futures product and then the futures ETF launched it. I mean, marked the top four years later. But the reality is, it's, you know, we're in a four-year cycle due to the way that Bitcoin's mine, and we're still in it.
Starting point is 00:41:38 And even though these institutional products do oftentimes mark the top, it's usually exit liquidity excuse. It's like, okay, this futures ETF launched in October 2021, you can blame me for that. But all it did was give, you know, the miners an excuse and some of the OG's excuse to say, okay, well, now, now's the time to, you know, sell my Bitcoin because somebody's buying. Same thing this last October, you know, there just wasn't a whole lot of liquidity in the market. I don't blame finance or, you know, or anybody, you know, there was no nefarious activity. It was just, you know, sellers were looking for news to sell. And that, you know, October was the top of the market, regardless of what happened.
Starting point is 00:42:28 And we're in a bare market and we'll probably be there for, you know, until the coming October. So for you, it's the cycle. Right. I mean, we talked in October. We wait a year and all as well and all of this news is irrelevant. Well, it's interesting. Just for your cycle, this kind of correspond with when I expect rates to start coming. down because, I mean, Powell's going to be in office and, you know, through the summer.
Starting point is 00:43:01 It's going to take a while for Trump to get a confirmation on, on Warsh. And then you've got to wait until the next Fed meeting before rates can start coming down again. I think everybody agrees that, you know, the, you know, rates probably should be around 3%. And that means you're looking at September, September, October is when, you know, money printing starts happening in larger terms. Jeff. Yeah, I just wanted to add. And we have to be a little bit careful, I think, in drawing false equivalence of the past
Starting point is 00:43:42 to predict the future. And while I don't disagree with anything that Stephen is saying as potential catalysts for Bitcoin to participate in a risk rally, I think we have to remember the Bitcoin movement at some level is driven by an energy that is, I would say, somewhat youthful. Like, it's driven by like those both who are like potentially fighting the monetary system as is, but really kind of as an alternative to it where young people can have like a chance to participate in wealth creation. And there's like a significant change, I think, in this cycle versus the past.
Starting point is 00:44:27 which is in the past, there was a little bit of this hyperfinancialization of like a world where there was just no growth to be had, reasonably speaking, outside of government spending. So it made sense that like in that kind of, you know, productivity deflationary environment, if you will, that that Bitcoin could be a store of value. But you have to think, like, the optimist in me and the optimist of young people, you know, ultimately would prefer. further being genuine productivity gains and growth. And I do think in 2026 plus, the possibilities of what is happening within the technological frontier with AI is not to be dismissed. I genuinely think it is one of the competing mind shares with Bitcoin, but in a different direction, maybe with some more positivity. Though I think there's also a lot of kind of chaos and negative energy that will come arise as soon enough as these companies try to actually share more
Starting point is 00:45:31 transparently their profit mission and their public mission. But all that aside, I worry, actually, that in a environment where like rate... Sorry, my mic was up. Oh, sorry, no, I was going to say, to cut it short, like, I worry a little bit that when we get ray cuts, the greatest beneficiary of that is going to be credit. And credit right now is going towards funding growth for AI productivity gains. And so if the excess capital that is going to seek growth is actually chasing those types of opportunities rather than like a, I don't know, like a principal preservation mode to where like we think that inflation is the problem where you want to like store value.
Starting point is 00:46:25 I have a I have like this unease that like we can't just hope for like rate cuts to be the thing to drive Bitcoin. I think there's actually at this point lots of other things that would benefit far more likely that will consume capital, including housing. That that won't that won't necessarily trickle into Bitcoin as like the first of the waterfall. Did we lose Jeff? Sorry. Yeah. I think Jeff was finished. I just, I couldn't tell your speak, your mic was going on and off and on and off. Yeah, I, I'm having some tight, shockingly, having some tightening glitches. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:11 I mean, can I jump in, Dave? Yeah, of course. Thanks. I, back to the tectonic shifts changing. This is not like past cycles, especially on the global spend and the productivity, investment, or the investment may attract dollars away from Bitcoin, I would say, yes, that will happen, especially at the government level and in the U.S.,
Starting point is 00:47:40 but globally I still think the nature of Bitcoin being a common, fungible, global asset does differentiate it and it was set fit for purpose for what's going on. So to compliment you that, yeah, Jeff, you are right, I think that there is more competition for capital besides a store of value. There are proper investments to make. There's still too much uncertainty. And there's a balkanization where global shared asset like Bitcoin or common will be still maintain a pretty significant portion,
Starting point is 00:48:20 especially given where it is versus other assets. So that's it. Okay. Anything else do you want to talk about, Scott, this morning? No, I think we're done. And my, my, I literally can't get this thing to work. Gary, what are you saying, Gary? Crypto's boring.
Starting point is 00:48:43 It is boring. It's dead. Let's all go away till October, November. Put your bids in it, 42, 44, and I think we just take a break for seven, eight months. I mean, it is certainly the dominant opinion. I mean, I tend to think, however, being putting in my contrarian hack, just remember one thing. Every time people are certain that something will happen, It doesn't or very, very rarely.
Starting point is 00:49:09 And every time people are convinced that something can't happen is when it's most likely to happen. You know, this notion there are no catalysts. I mean, yeah, I mean, all it takes is one decision from some large player and all of a sudden things change. I mean, I would say that, you know, sitting here in this literally $2,000 range, it makes almost anything possible. Now, I am not, I don't have hugely strong opinions on this other than. And the more bored we all feel and seem, the worse it is. There's one other topic, since this is crypto town hall, not Bitcoin town hall, is one other topic that is, I'm curious if anybody cares about.
Starting point is 00:49:49 I mean, the fight on Monday was about Mike's making his famous comment that I, that is, that drives me nuts, which is that there's 21 million competitors to Bitcoin. But I have seen more posts this week from people claiming that the all coin markets has what soured people on crypto and has dragged Bitcoin. down than I have ever seen before. And frankly, I'm sympathetic to that. I always have been. I thought that there's a lot of shit coins which have zero value. In fact, that the only people got enriched were the founders and the early investors. And even if those coins have, you know, are representative of networks that do have value that the token holders don't get it. You know,
Starting point is 00:50:29 Bruce, I saw you see, you saying something. I don't know if I remember you saying this, but certainly quite a few people have said it. It's not like anything has changed, but the question is, is this the final dissent of all coins that have nothing behind them and that that is actually what's been killing the market? Or do you think that this is just everyone's bored and they all go down together and when people get excited, they'll go up together? Well, there's some altcoins that have some value and, you know, there's some interesting
Starting point is 00:51:00 things going on. You know, there's like some coins working on AI and stuff like. like that, but I think that, you know, generally the scamminess, I mean, it's interesting when we get outside our bubble. You know, I was talking to somebody who's, you know, really prominent in the space and really, really successful, you know, a couple hundred million net worth, very, very respected VC type who has been in crypto, you know, as long as I have. And this person was saying that they're just embarrassed to even mention Bitcoin when they were at, like, in mainstream investment circles or among other, you know, wealthy people because it's just thought of as scammy.
Starting point is 00:51:37 And I get a lot of people that, you know, I run my mouth on politics, both. Bruce, you know what? Yeah. It has been scammy. Well, yeah. I mean, you got, I mean, the Trump, Trump, Trump coin and Melania. And there is a lot of, I mean, there was a lot of grifty projects going back 2016 and earlier. You know, and there's this, I saw this movie, one of these action movies with Jason Statum and the, one of
Starting point is 00:52:01 One of the like, I don't know, villains or characters was this, like, ridiculous slub, overweight guy wearing all Gucci and a $5 million watch. And he's got like fake teeth and all this other stuff. And he's a crypto guy. And it's like they're making a character tour in the movies. And, you know, I'll run my mouth on, you know, national or even local politics. And very often people be like, oh, yeah, you're the Bitcoin guy. You know, that's it. Like that's the end of discussion.
Starting point is 00:52:29 Like, oh, you therefore must be a scammer. and you must be a low quality person because you're involved in in this scammy asset class. I mean, look, I've said it multiple times. And when I first said it, I got a lot of pushback. Now everyone seems to agree. I said it that, you know, months ago that the Trump of Melania coins were that that wasn't the ringing the bell for the top of the market, but it damn well was close to it because it turned, it was the firepower again. the ammunition for the half the country that hates Trump to say, hey, let's sell it.
Starting point is 00:53:08 And one of the big problems with the Epstein files is people are turning on Trump because he campaigned on releasing the data and there's all this redacted information. And he hasn't said boo about it and keeps trying to distract people from it instead of confronting it head on, which might go down as one of the biggest political own goals in history if it continues. So, you know, it's, and so what does that do? Well, if you associate crypto and Bitcoin with Trump and now three quarters of the country is pithed off of them, what is that going to do in terms of it? And honestly, politicizing an asset, this two shall pass, right? You know, if you're trying to buy Bitcoin for what you think is going to happen over the next 20 years, well, Trump won't be in politics in two years or three years, right?
Starting point is 00:53:52 So, you know, where's going to be the next set of direction and what's going to happen? And I think that that matters. But, you know, look, there's a lot of time that this could get, this could get, you know, kind of smoothed out or create or fixed in a sense. But there's no doubt that that caused an issue. I mean, Gary, you're in those circles. I mean, you know, you're one of those people I was just talking about. I don't know what you think about Trump particularly as you haven't commented,
Starting point is 00:54:19 but I know you're disgusted by the redactions and what's gone on. And frankly, I think we all are. I don't know anybody who's support. I'm disgusted by everything I read in the newspaper. There isn't anything I've seen in the last two weeks that gives me any fucking hope. It's really depressing. And I do mean that because I do not think people invest. Like there is no scenario that anyone, even what you just said,
Starting point is 00:54:45 hey, I know when people are really bored, there's no fucking scenario where Bitcoin is going to do shit here for the next seven months. And the audience needs to understand that. They need to be extremely disciplined in their bids. This is my opinion, okay? This is my strategy. I am not going to chase Bitcoin here. I'm going to let Bitcoin get beat up.
Starting point is 00:55:05 There are not any organic buyers. The adults in the room are so pissed off with the fucking state of this industry. Like, I'm disgusted, man. Like, it really feels like Mickey Mouse. I have invested a shitload of money in this space, and I am really exhausted from the hopium. And there are too many people communicating to large audiences their book, man. And it's not cool.
Starting point is 00:55:37 Like, I don't think it's cool. I think a lot of people are, you know, talking their book. Nonetheless, I just don't see, like, exactly what you said. People are embarrassed to talk about it. Okay. And this industry is going out of its way to alienate gold, the gold people, the silver people, the equities people, the bond people, Wall Street. And the truth is, guys, without Wall Street, Bitcoin is just going to sit here between 30 and 70, 80, 90. It doesn't, it needs outside money.
Starting point is 00:56:16 And as much as you may hate the outside money, we need to start being nice to people. if we want them investing in this space. And we need to clean our fucking act up. I've learned more about Bitcoin in the last four weeks about some of the lies that continue to be pitched in this industry. You know, the history, like, we're not the purest industry on the planet. And I think when you take the position of being Mr. Pure and you're not, it's a real problem. So I'll get off. I still love the asset, okay?
Starting point is 00:56:54 But I just think we're going through this junior high school to college kind of transition, and it's pretty painful. Yeah. I mean, I call it distribution is what's happened, what started in the start, but it really accelerated in July with, you know, OG selling. But now we have verbal distribution, and we've always had it. We've had multiple purists in Bitcoin saying, stupid shit. I mean, it reminds me of the Naster period, really, right? And Naster got crushed. They
Starting point is 00:57:26 went to jail or whatever happened. And then some other people won from it. We're just going through this really, we are though, Dave. We're going through a very, a very different distribution. And it's really necessary, man. Yeah. But the, but the rhetoric is, it is also going through the same sort of thing. I mean, you're right. You know, we talk about this all the time. And and it's already 1118, so I don't want to go down another rabbit hole. David, you had your hand up. So, don't want to you take us home. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:57:59 I just wanted to do two things. One, Jeff's comment about youthful energy going out of the market is spot on. I posted an article from Bloomberg in the feed that talks about kind of what are the broader consequences of the younger generation losing all this money, which arguably would be their own seed capital to spill over. into other sectors of the economy, like housing. I'll let you guys read the article. The other thing is, well, we're all bemoaning how the winter is here. I thought this program is about making money. Where do we go short? And at what levels? And what happens to strategy as this all falls apart? Well, that's if you believe it falls apart. I mean, I think that
Starting point is 00:58:42 Mike will tell us that. Mike, you think it's going to fall apart, don't you? I mean, look, my criticism of Sailor from the beginning has been the way that he buys. I mean, he always manages to do to buy the worst prices of the week. And even on the way down, I mean, it is, it is what it is. Smash buying the top is just to me a terrible strategy. But that's, I guess, for someone who spent a large part of my adult life building trading algorithms, I know there's better ways to accumulate. All right.
Starting point is 00:59:13 Michael Saylor does not know how to trade. you do clearly well that that's that's clearly the first part is clearly true you know me you know whatever I think I have some understanding but the the other thing that drives me nuts is when you become a caricature you know that's not good and sailor to people who don't actually agree with him and that's quite a few people even in the bitcoin community has become a caricature You know, it's like Tom Lee has become a caricature, you know, not for any reason the fault of his own because he's, he's very consistent. But when you're saying the same thing, people, you know, the memes just kind of fly, right? You know, Bitcoin is going to 200,000 as it drops.
Starting point is 01:00:00 And you say the same thing over and over and over again. People are like, oh, I just don't want to hear it anymore. And so, and that'll change as soon as Bitcoin starts going up, in which case, oh, my God, we forgot to listen to this guy. I mean, you know, it's crazy, but the world doesn't have the attention span. And we're surrounded by broken clocks. Yeah, I mean, exactly, right. So my only thing I want to say before we close is yet again to the 3,000 people who are on here, DM Weisberger, which is the account, you can click on my little icon and follow me.
Starting point is 01:00:30 You may think you're following me, but you're not if you're following at Dave Weisberger, because today I got the sixth time that X told me that they can't validate that I am me. So, I mean, take that with whatever great... Lucky number seven, dude. It's coming. Lucky number seven. I'll keep going through their process and they'll keep having a form letter come back to me, which obviously didn't get AI or human judgment involved. But that's X come for you.
Starting point is 01:00:57 I mean, they got a lot of work to do on their support. So anyway, thank you for those who are clicking. I can see some of you are. So that's awesome. And on that, I guess we'll be back tomorrow at 10.50. Actually, yeah, yeah, tomorrow at 1015. Why not? See tomorrow.
Starting point is 01:01:15 All right, guys. Have a great one. Bye.

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