The Wolf Of All Streets - US Senate Drops Crypto Draft. Rules Incoming #CryptoTownHall

Episode Date: January 13, 2026

In this episode of Crypto Town Hall, the panel dives into the latest U.S. Senate draft amendments to the crypto market structure bill, exploring bipartisan compromises on stablecoin "rewards" (not yie...ld), ongoing banking lobby influence, and the fluid markup timeline. Discussions cover the temporary protections banks may secure, and why many in crypto believe tokenization and automated sweeps will render much of the debate irrelevant in 5 years. The conversation also touches on Fed independence tensions, Powell’s recent statements, CPI data quirks amid grocery affordability concerns, potential DeFi regulatory impacts, and why Bitcoin may be coiling for a breakout despite short-term chop.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Good morning, everybody. Welcome to Crypto Town Hall every weekday here on X at 10.15 a.m. Eastern Standard Time. If you are not already, give a follow to Crypto underscore Town Hall, the account that's hosting this so that you never miss one of these spaces. As usual, there's no lack of topics to discuss with our esteemed panel. So we are going to get into all of that in a moment. But first, we do have a lot. an awesome sponsor today, who we've been having every day for a while here, ZeroG. AI is reshaping the world, but right now it's stuck in the hands of just a few big players. But what if AI could run openly, verifiably, and on-chain? That's what ZeroG is building, the world's first decentralized AI operating system open to everyone. Imagine a network where you don't just trade tokens, you train, store, and run independent AI models at scale. No lock-ins, no black boxes, no single point of failure. Just quick, cost-effective, auditable AI that anyone can build.
Starting point is 00:01:00 If you believe the future of AI should be a public good, not another corporate monopoly, join us at 0.aI. That's the number 0g.aI. So the topic of the day here, U.S. Senate drops crypto draft, rules incoming. It seems that we have a situation where potentially the industry and Coinbase in particular may be pacified because they're offering enough. and we have this bipartisan offer basically coming out of the Senate Banking Committee, amending the crypto market structure bill to allow effectively some stable-cord coin rewards. You're not allowed to call it Gild.
Starting point is 00:01:41 Stable coin rewards under certain conditions. So maybe it's enough for Coinbase to get behind it, enough that the banking lobby doesn't freak out on the other side, and maybe we can push forward. Llamis says we're ready to go. Let's get this done. And the markup for this bill is on the 15th. There's a markup later coming from Ag, I believe later in the month, but making some progress here.
Starting point is 00:02:03 Listen, we got Ron on stage. Dave, I know you want to unpack this, but since we do have Ron and you're our go-to policy guy, where are we at with this? Yeah, there's a lot going on. You know, I've been a subtle calls already this morning about it since the bill text did drop around midnight last night. So it's been a lot of folks reviewing it. and got plenty more calls here. So I do apologize. I do drop halfway through because we're still trying to kind of parse through everything going on.
Starting point is 00:02:30 But to your point, this is at least right now, it seems like the yield issue is going more in favor to the banks. Obviously, a lot of the centralized exchanges in crypto would not be happy to your point, Coinbase. But that's, I mean, largely, the crypto industry as a whole would be not too happy with that kind of middle deal struck. You know, we just got reports actually that the drafter of that center, also Brooks from Maryland. that she's not fully sold on the compromise text either so we could see that changing as well. But overall, this, you know, when it comes to kind of a product that has a lot of input from a lot of stakeholders here, and we saw everyone ranging from the banks to even the Indian tribes trying to get in on this legislation. And that's on top of the backdrop of a lot of things that have
Starting point is 00:03:12 happened over the weekend, especially the bank lobby. You know, they got this little small win here on the yield, but they have a lot of issues facing them with the credit card cap that Trump was proposing on Friday, that's going to be a huge vector. We saw that element come into play in the Genius Act markup. So I'm very confident that we're going to be seeing a lot of drama around credit card interest rates during this markup as well. And plenty of other issues that it seems like we've come down the pipeline. So I'll pause there.
Starting point is 00:03:40 But overall, nothing is set in stone. This is very, very fluid. But it seems like they're still powering through, at least on the bank committee right now with what they have. I mean, it's very, sorry, I hit the wrong button. Sorry, it's very hard for the average person to look at what's going on and not get even more disgusted with how the sausage is made in D.C. I mean, it was a great tweet from Mike Novagrats who basically said, we got to get it done. Everything's political.
Starting point is 00:04:14 You know, basically, you know, it's up in the air. I mean, look, let's call a spade a spade. The banking lobby, and today J.P. Morgan's, you know, earnings dropped. The banking lobby is subsidized to the tune of over $100 billion a year in excess interest rates because of these oligopoly rules that protect them. They donate a lot of money, i.e. bribe a lot of politicians in order to keep those rules. This is all of that. At the same time, the fact that the politicians are holding hostage in industry is despicable,
Starting point is 00:04:51 but the industry is essentially also knows something that the banks don't know, which is none of this is going to matter in five years. Let me repeat that because I want the listeners to understand what I mean. Right now, if you ban yield and ban rewards, the banks get a temporary reprieve. But once Coinbase Cracken and every other FinTech that gets banking licenses and gets the ability to be able to offer payment services, can actually operate and offer automated sweeps using tokenization so that investors or savers can keep almost no money in their deposit payment account and have it sweep and convert
Starting point is 00:05:36 automatically either via defyre or their own centralized exchange to from some investment that pays yield or has as appreciation, you know, potential like Bitcoin. At that point, the number, the amount of deposits instead of being $7 trillion or more, we'll go to half a billion, you know, half a trillion maybe because it'll just be enough, you know, minimums that are there. And the world will change. Right now we all have to keep money in our checking accounts or in savings accounts at deposit institutions that pay basically nothing because it takes days to get money back and forth. Even inside Citibank, for those who don't know this, if you have an investment account, and so let's say for the sake of argument, you have a, you have a
Starting point is 00:06:19 have a high yield, something that's yielding in your investment account. You have to give yourself over a day for that to settle and then to transfer it to pay. So it takes time and it's hard so people don't do it. All of this is going to get automated in the next five years. You can take that to the bank. And so as a result, none of this is going to matter. So the industry kind of knows this and therefore as long as they get the infrastructure to allow tokenization and to allow what the kind of services that I'm talking
Starting point is 00:06:49 about they don't really care they're going to fight it but they're going to take what they can get meanwhile the senators are going to take their donations i mean bribes or well maybe i meant donations i don't know but they're going to take that and and and classify the banking industry so they like codac can think that you know they're going to keep this forever well they're not going to keep it forever but the fact that they're keeping it for now is reprehensible okay that's my rant this morning scott Sorry. It's a good one. I guess the next question, Ron, specifically, what's our timeline now and how do you handicap the odds of us actually seeing the Clarity Act to proof?
Starting point is 00:07:30 Yeah. So what's going to happen now is, again, there's two versions or two half of this bill. So the first half, the banking version is going to vote this Thursday. It's in the Senate Agriculture version, the second half. That's going to be coming out hopefully next week or later this. this week and then gets a vote probably in two weeks in the Senate Agriculture Committee. Then they'll combine those two bills together and then it's off to the Senate floor. So, you know, there's a lot of-
Starting point is 00:07:56 The other issue that you didn't mention, but I'm curious, in this draft, are there prohibitions on politicians issuing meme coins or did they table that? I believe some of those provisions are in there. I need to re-look at the latest draft, but I do believe they added some of those provisions on politicians holding meme coins and such. Again, more going after the Trump family probably into the peace of Democrats here, but that's likely included in this job. I'd be checking. Let me make this interesting. I would say that find someone in the crypto industry who thinks that a sitting politician or a politician running for office should be able to issue meme coins. And that would be, you know, other than the people who run
Starting point is 00:08:39 pump.funk or fun or whatever platform that is being used, I think that pretty much overwhelmingly people would say, no, that's probably a bad idea. So, you know, yes, they're going after the Trump families. That's what they did. But do we want to see an Elon Omar coin or an AOC coin also? The answer is no. So I think that, you know, while Trump may not like it, the truth is, it should be about the issuance, the holding of it, you know, whatever, the water under the bridge. You know, I'm just curious what people in D.C. are thinking because this sounds like it should be contentious, but probably shouldn't be, right? We had another one yesterday, right?
Starting point is 00:09:17 Eric Adams, who I interviewed and had a rump pole. So I don't even understand the mechanics of this. If we want to dig into it, but he's the ex-mare of New York, but somehow, I mean, one tweet. So let me start here. My assumption is that much like Muley and a lot of these others, Huckedua, somebody basically encouraged someone on his or his team to launch a token. with promises and then Runk pulled the token, unbeknownst to the celebrity who's doing it,
Starting point is 00:09:49 but whether that's the case or not, basically launched a New York City token, but launched a New York City token to stop homelessness or to stop anti-Semitism and anti-Americanism. Last I checked, he's no longer the mayor of New York, so I don't know how an ex-mare can launch a token. But let me just finish for people who didn't see it, it ran up to 580 million or something. Like we haven't seen meme coins running that high at all. And then rug pulled the liquidity for 2.1 million, something like that. But people were like, and then he rug pulled the liquidity.
Starting point is 00:10:20 Dude, I wouldn't know how to rug pull like liquidity. There's no way Eric Adams was like in the back end, like looking at the LP and managing this. Right. But it was a straight up rug pull. All the liquidity was pulled. They made a couple million bucks. And here we are. Well, well, there's two things here.
Starting point is 00:10:37 So let's unpack it into two bits. bit number one is should sitting politicians be allowed to monetize their fame via meme coins. That is the ethics provision that the Democrats have been championing, but I think that most people, most reasonable people would agree as long as it's not overtly targeting anyone in particular, that it's a bad idea. Just like I think most reasonable people who aren't in Congress believe that congressional members and senators and staffers shouldn't be able to insider trade, of course,
Starting point is 00:11:09 to why nobody is suggesting on that, that they have the same sort of rules that Wall Street has, which are well-trodden. I don't understand. I'll never understand that. It's not about blocking it, it's about reporting it and putting conditions on it. But that's number one.
Starting point is 00:11:24 Number two is gonna be in the meat of the Ag Committee because the CFTC, which has never had authority to regulate anything other than derivatives, once they have the ability to regulate actual tokens, are going to need rules. And one of the rules that are going to want, some of the rules are going to be about anti-manipulation, which should go straight at rug pulling.
Starting point is 00:11:45 And if people criminally pump the price of a token and then extract value from it, and don't disclose how it's working to individuals, they're probably gonna have rules to block that. But that's gonna be at the agency level. I mean, for those, I mean, Ron, you know this, but probably a lot of people don't, that Congress will pass these seemingly long rules.
Starting point is 00:12:05 Like Dodd-Frank, I think there's things in Dodd-Frank from over a dead. decades or decades ago that never got implemented or are still pending. So a lot of the way the sausage is made in D.C., and for those who are listening, you should understand this, is Congress will pass a rule that directs the agencies to create rules. That's what they do. They don't actually write the rules.
Starting point is 00:12:26 They direct the agencies and they put conditions upon them and they limit their jurisdiction or give them jurisdiction. Then the agencies get to work and write rules. So within that process, there's yet another round of lobbying and another. round of and public comments and all sorts of other stuff. So what you're talking about with rug pulls, that will 100% be something that the CFTC will be addressing. And by the way, the SEC has a lot of rules there, some of which don't work anymore because they're outdated, but they're also going to be addressing it. So expect the agencies to do that. I'm sorry for
Starting point is 00:12:58 getting into the sausage, Scott, but it is important for people to understand what the timelines are, as you ask about timelines, you won't see a rule that actually impacts the market probably for 12 to 18 months, even if it passes and gets signed by the president at the end of February. Am I getting that right or wrong, Ron? I'm pretty confident. No, 100%. But you're right.
Starting point is 00:13:22 This is like the starting gun, and we kind of seen that with the Genius Act. We're going to the rulemakings now of the Genius Act, and that's obviously huge for the banks. It's huge of the circle. It's huge of the issuers. And so there's a lot of lobbying focus on. just that piece alone. And so that's why in many people's minds,
Starting point is 00:13:39 you want to have a more favorable administration potentially to be the ones having those rules crafted. And those rules can take two to five years. In your case, Dr. Frank, it's been like 10 years for some of these rules. Some folks are trying to delay and stuff. So there's a lot of lobbying tactics that happen behind the scenes after Bill signed the law here.
Starting point is 00:13:58 And that's why a lot of folks are saying, hey, we want clear regulation. We don't want rulemaking. We want like clear outline positions, because the rule being can happen underneath Gensler 2.0 because it can happen in four years from now. Yeah. That's true, but two things that do mitigate against that.
Starting point is 00:14:13 First, Trump, the Atkins and Sillig, you know, basically the agencies, they have three years. The midterms don't, won't matter. It wouldn't matter if Trump got impeached. They're still there, right? So, you know, they do have three years to get rules done. The second thing is the, with the Loper Bright case, which ended Chevron deference,
Starting point is 00:14:34 Gensler 2.0 would find it dramatically harder in this case, which is why Paul Atkins this morning said passing bipartisan market structure of legislation will help us future proof against rogue regulators. I mean, to me, it's hysterical. I mean, I agree with Paul completely, of course, but it's hysterical that the sitting head of the SEC is a warning about future rogue regulators. But there we are. That's the world we live in, which is your point, right? So the other, the point is, though, before people get despondent of what I'm saying, understand that investment in the industry and entrepreneurship will start the day that there's legislation signed is when all the big companies are willing to start putting their chips on the table in terms of entrepreneurship and moving in directions. Yes, some of it, some of the things they may want to do, they may need to wait, but a lot of banks, there's a lot of capital on the sidelines. that is saying, well, without legislation, we're not going to risk it. But once the legislation drops, we kind of know, you know, within, it's going to be nuanced.
Starting point is 00:15:41 It's going to be the difference. So there is a wall of money from traditional financial institutions that will go from a trickle to a flood once, in fact, the legislation passes. So it's by far, it's not at all insignificant. It's quite significant. It's just you need to temper your expectations of what it's going to mean. Okay, that's way too much talking about rules. Can we talk about the Fed now, Scott? Are you talking about it?
Starting point is 00:16:07 I have added. I think we've covered that one. Yeah, Fed's fine. So, you know, yesterday I made the point that because the reaction was perfect. Sorry, that Powell going out and attacking the president by, you know, with his video, was politically, astute. And it was in the sense of he got exactly the reaction that he wanted, which is turn the debate into Fed Independence, yada, yada, yada. The truth is, now that we actually know what happened, I think he has completely fucked his legacy. Because, yeah, half the country will ignore it,
Starting point is 00:16:49 but half the country won't, which is this didn't come from the White House. This was- wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. You believe that the White House saying this didn't come from the White House is confirmation that it didn't come from the White House. No, no, I mean, the White, the process This is the process. I am not saying that someone in the DOJ didn't ask Trump, hey, do you want us to proceed and him saying, yeah, damn it, go get that guy. I'm not saying that he didn't, but there was a very big difference
Starting point is 00:17:13 between the White House signing off on a process and instigating that process. It is very clear because Annapolina Luna basically said it. I mean, she took responsibility. She said, listen, we asked the DOJ, we referred this to the DOJ in July of 2025. And the DOJ, from, July of 25 until two days ago or three days ago said, you know, we're sending information
Starting point is 00:17:38 requests to the Federal Reserve and got un-gots. And so that's nothing for the people who don't know, you know, whatever. And so the DOJ is like, okay, well, what's the next process? What would you do 100% of the time? A hundred percent of the time when you're sending information requests that are ignored, you look for a subpoena. Anybody who's ever done discovery in any look at any legal or action or arbitration knows that's the next thing you do. Now, in this case, did they go and ask the president or his staffers, should we proceed? I'm sure they did, and I'm sure the answer was yes. But there's no question that this is not an indictment, which is what Powell said. So he basically lied that this is a subpoena to get information they've
Starting point is 00:18:19 been previously asked for. That is very, very clear. Now, should they have been conducting an investigation? Well, you can debate that. But, That's not the way it was portrayed yesterday. And I think that that is very important because a lot of people reacted and just assumed Powell wouldn't lie about it. And he did. And, you know, if you're the head of the, you're literally the most powerful person in the United States who is never elected, literally the most powerful person without, it's not been, that was unelected. And you lie in a video because of a political food fight. I think you tarnish your legacy.
Starting point is 00:18:57 I think that's why markets basically are shrugging it off saying, eh, no, it doesn't know big deal. It's just politics. I don't know what you think about that, but I think that it's important because, look, I'm not defending anybody. I'm just saying you shouldn't, this is the kind of thing that should never have happened. I don't, when I mean never have happened, I mean, they should have given the information. And then were the administration to pursue an indictment, yeah, then I think you get to some very interesting issues.
Starting point is 00:19:23 Yeah, I think we should go around the panel. Yeah. I'd love to hear what's happening. I can't believe not one hand on this. Come on guys. Okay, David, go. Hey. Yeah, I mean, Powell is what Powell is.
Starting point is 00:19:38 My big question is about today's print around CPI. You know, BLS was shut down. So there's some questions as to this data and to what extent it's really realistic. But I think the more interesting thing to look at in terms of CPI is basically the cost of groceries as well as also beef. I think food at home was up something like about 7% and beef was up like 8. This goes back to the affordability issue. And my big question here is about inflation. And what point in time do we think Bitcoin actually turns into an inflation hedge?
Starting point is 00:20:14 Well, I have a question. And I'm curious what other people are seeing. I literally bought steaks to eat last, to eat tonight yesterday and paid $12.99 for T-bone steaks at Publis. I mean, that's lower than Costco's price. And so everyone keeps saying how beef is going up. And, you know, I like to cook. So I cook. I have a barbecue in my condo roof.
Starting point is 00:20:38 So I'm sensitive to beef prices. They are not up. At least, at least I don't seem to be paying it. And I, you know, and I'm probably one of the least price sensitive consumers you're going to find in a supermarket. I don't know, Dave. Maybe you get your beef off the back of truck. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:20:52 I mean, I'm just surprised by that. But whatever. Anyway, but you're right. I mean, look, the data, I mean, the data was good data. There's no way around it, right? You know, it's, you get basically anything that's below consensus these days is going to get, you generally get people a little bit happy, but, you know, whatever. I'm curious what people are thinking.
Starting point is 00:21:16 Look, the problem with the CPI data is that it doesn't necessarily reflect what the average American spends. And a lot of it has to do with things like, you know, rising and lowering of oil, gasoline, housing. For the most part, you know, if you just talk, you know, if you think about your average American, they either have a mortgage locked in or they have rent locked in. And they have other things that are locked in as well. And despite the volatility of prices for a lot of these large items that have an outsized effect on CPI, you don't see it, right? So even though right now in a lot of regions, housing has come down quite a bit, whether it's cost of apartment or the cost of a home, you know, sell price of a home.
Starting point is 00:22:16 So your average American isn't really seeing it. And if you also think about the other side of what are they seeing, they're seeing things like, you know, groceries. That is, you know, groceries and gas are the two things that are going to affect most Americans. And when you can't afford your groceries and at this point, more groceries, you know, the cost of food has gone up quite a bit over the last four or five years. And now it's anchored at a spot.
Starting point is 00:22:45 People are struggling to pay their credit card bills, which is what they're using to buy groceries, right? and now you've got, you know, increasing debt, increasing debt service, and, you know, and now we're at a point to where delinquencies are at highs not seen since the financial crisis, as well as, as well as complete defaults on things like autos, credit card, even mortgages. So we're starting to see that really creep up, which is why the Trump administration is attempting to put a 10% cap on on credit cards. It's really interesting because that would very much be a Democrat policy
Starting point is 00:23:28 and the Democrat Donald Trump is coming out. But the minute he does it, all the Democrats that would previously support something like that all of a sudden, you know, hating on it. Same thing with housing, you know, attempting to restrict corporations and hedge funds from buying single family homes. I do love that Gavin Newsom jumped on. board alongside Trump on that one to try to, to try to prevent that in California. But the reality is, is that is where the crisis is right now.
Starting point is 00:24:00 And the steps that the Fed could make to actually tamper that would be to lower short-term rates, which governs things like auto and credit card loans. So, but instead, they're keeping. The Fed rates artificially high. If you look at a yield curve, it's obvious that the Fed funds rate should be 25 or 50% lower. But they're also increasing their balance sheet to be able to relay repo facility to the banks. So they're helping the banks. And right now what we're seeing, and this is kind of going way back to a conversation earlier in this,
Starting point is 00:24:47 is, I mean, the banks are fighting back right now. The banks and their minions, which are, I mean, anybody that's speaking up right now to support Powell is bought and owned by the bank lobbyist. I mean, you can tell both sides. Republican Democrat doesn't matter. The ones that are speaking up are the ones that are the most owned by the banks. And they're fighting back on credit cards. They're fighting back on the homes. They're fighting back on the attacks.
Starting point is 00:25:17 tax on the Fed and they're now fighting back on, you know, on the Clarity Act. Now, by the way, I'm probably the opposite of everybody else on this call where I don't believe that you should be able to distribute yield from, you know, from stable coins. This space was downloaded via spaces down.com. Visit to download your spaces today. Because, you know, distributing yield would make it a security because the underlyingness is security. And there are securities rules, you know. I mean, these are essentially, if you were distributed yield, you would be a money market mutual fund. And if everybody else is having to play by the rules, so should the stable. Can I pull on that string a bit, Stephen?
Starting point is 00:25:57 Because I think. Well, let me keep going. And then we'll go back to that. Let's pick a pin in that way. But my main point I want to make is, it's like, I mean, there is, you know, we're seeing a, you know, full-scale attack right now from the bank lobbies. and it's on several different fronts. And what Trump is trying to do is tamper it down. He's doing it in his own way, which is never, you know, never very popular.
Starting point is 00:26:23 But he is he is doing it and they're fighting back. And, you know, the swampiest of the swamps is the Fed. And that's, you know, that's that's the organization that funds all the things that the swamp's doing. And the minute you start attacking the Fed, you know, that's, that's, that's, you know, that's, that's when the swamp goes up in arms. So anyway, I'll pause. No, I think that's completely right.
Starting point is 00:26:48 And I think that, but your point about security is really important here. Remember, and that's why I made the statement that I did in the beginning. You know, security's rules were designed. And the banks managed, there was a huge fight about money market funds, not too long ago. You have to be old enough to remember it. I'm pretty sure you and I both do, which is that's why the reason savings accounts even exist today, given the state of technology they shouldn't is because they were able to have money market funds and they use the notion of breaking the buck you know for those who remember that as part of this
Starting point is 00:27:23 but the whole reason savings accounts even exist is because the securities laws create unnecessary friction and moving money from savings to checking and back and forth that's well there's there's two things here you're so you're talking about money market funds that are administered by the bank. I'm talking about money market mutual funds. Well, same. I mean, well, same in a sense. I mean, they have been people, the banking lobby has managed to pour sand into the gears of progress many times over the last 20 years and on many, many, many issues. I mean, I could talk about stock loan is another great example, but there's lots of them. The fact that a new technology that is somewhat sand resistant is coming to the fore is a very big deal.
Starting point is 00:28:11 trying to do is fight a rearguard action to stop it and slow it down. That's what they're doing. And you're right. I mean, there are plenty of Republicans bought and paid for by the banks. There's plenty of Republicans bought and paid for by all the NGOs and all the other crap, all this, the fraud that's coming out that that's being there. There's a reason why nothing happens in D.C. because all the, there's a reason, it's totally tied to the fact that the Beltway and the environments in, you know, in Bethesda and Northern Virginia are among the most profitable or most richest counties in America. It shouldn't make sense that that's the case in any rational sense,
Starting point is 00:28:46 but it is because proximity to government equals wealth. And so they fight it. And the banks are not the only ones, but you're right. They're the swampiest of the swamp. And so that's what's going on. But the technology will win in the end. The question is here, we're trying to figure out what in the technology will win. How long will it take?
Starting point is 00:29:03 And, you know, people fight. I mean, I have memory, Stephen. I'm writing a book. I've told people this. few times. And they just wrote that one of the chapters where, you know, we were all talking in 1990, believe it or not, about when markets will go fully electronic. And most of the people, they're a technologists in the room, and I was head of electronic trading from Morgan Stanley at the time. Most of the people in the room said it would be two or three years, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:31 maybe five at the outside. And I said it would take 15. And they all thought I was nuts. And I said, well, it's because people are going to fight like hell to keep things inefficient. Well, there's no difference in what's happening now. The banks are going to fight like hell to keep markets inefficient because inefficiency is where they're making, that's why J.P. Morgan made $25 billion in interest differential profit that they reported this morning. So that's what's going on. I mean, let's just call it. It's money. Just follow the money. Right? I think we're saying. Steve, yeah, Steve, I think we're saying it's, yeah, we're basically saying the same thing, but, but, you know, there, there are some nuances, but I, I, I do agree with most of what you said. But yeah, I mean, the banks did make an exception for themselves
Starting point is 00:30:16 in the way that money market funds or money markets are regulated. And stable coins should be, if they're managed in the same way, which they very easily can be, should be allowed to distribute interest at those levels. If it's, If it's not, which is basically what they're trying to do. They're trying to make an exception to a money market mutual fund, which is a security. But the smarter path is to compete directly with the money market funds at the banks. We tie this into clarity and stable coins and crypto, since we're not in banking town hall, unfortunately. Yeah, I mean, Jeff Park just tweeted something, which I thought was funny.
Starting point is 00:31:06 He posted a hot take. I'm curious what people think. He said that if clarity does not get passed because of all this infighting, that that's probably the most bullish thing for Bitcoin. You know, mostly because it stands in opposition to all the corruption and everything that's going on. Maybe for Bitcoin, but certainly not for the rest of the market. No, no, definitely not for the rest of the market. But that's for Bitcoin. I'm curious, you know.
Starting point is 00:31:28 Ron, you're throwing up the 100%. You agree? I mean, kind of similar how we saw with the Genius Act and the proliferation of stable coin activity, the moment it was signed the law. You know, the rulemaking is ongoing. to your point earlier, I think it would be a huge boon for the markets. If we got clarity passed, obviously it depends the devil's in the details here. But yeah, I would say at least if there's one asset, it's been fine. It seems like it's going to be Bitcoin if it doesn't happen.
Starting point is 00:31:52 But also, you know, to flag two, the SEC is going through Project Crypto, and we should be seeing innovation exemption allegedly sometime in January. The details are still pretty thin, but you know, when it comes to thing like tokenization, like that's what large amount of speculation is in regards to that exemption. So we could be seeing a lot, you know, positive activities even without legislation that affects assets other than Bitcoin. So I think, you know, keep an eye on that too. It feels like the, you know, the market and all of the coins that are out there, alt coins or, you know, coins that have foundations or are slightly offshoreed.
Starting point is 00:32:25 I mean, these people have spent the last five, six years with the current landscape and regulation that is there getting set up. So if anything, if this doesn't pass, it benefits the things that are kind of already out there and just slightly stucing. potentially new projects that are being launched that might want a little innovation around like a cap table. But I still don't see looking through this how it really changes too much, I would say, for like the proliferation of tokens as like a tool or asset, you know, that's being used. I don't know. I'm just not seeing like too much in here. You know, like maybe a little bit around custody, I would say would be important, some clarity for. holding different assets and yield.
Starting point is 00:33:10 So it's like tiny things. But like, you know, per usual, they have stuffed so much crap in here that makes absolutely no sense. And it doesn't even look like it's been written by someone that really understands too much about what's going on. You know, with regards to the meme coins being launched, there was already a rule out there that you couldn't launch something like that. And this just reinforces it. I mean, that's why Trump launched his token before he got in the office. And maybe Eric Adams after. Yeah, it's like it's already, it's already been set up.
Starting point is 00:33:45 But to me it's like, you know, what, like they try to say things like, what is a mature blockchain system? It's like, you know, and at the same time, if people want to launch things, like if you want it to launch an Eric Adams token and you can do it from the border of Miranmar, you know, and Thailand. And then, you know, you get a half a tweet or something saying, even, you want to, you. And it's, you know, you get an AI slop tweet from someone that looks like Eric Adams that says that this is his token and have fun guys. It's still going to run. And so I don't know. It's a lot of this activity. I think it's almost like the ship has sailed in a way.
Starting point is 00:34:22 It's like it's now so decentralized. Like Scott, you were saying, you know, you wouldn't even know how to, you know, rug pull. It's like, unit swap's pretty easy now. You know, you have two tokens in your wallet. Add liquidity, done. one button remove liquidity. You know, like you could, anyone could do it.
Starting point is 00:34:41 So it's, I just feel like we've gone. I didn't realize they'd made drug pulling so mainstream. Hey, you guys asked for you X and you got it. So it's so easy. Everything is so easy and it's so decentralized to a point where it's just, I don't know how this affects too much outside of potential institution things. But I really think on the periphery, all the activity is just going to continue.
Starting point is 00:35:07 Well, here's the thing, Joe. Except for the institution thing, that's like, I can't think of a good analogy right now, but you are talking about billions upon billions of dollars of profits made on Wall Street because the entire process of raising capital for companies is unbelievably intermediated. There is huge rent-seeking that goes on
Starting point is 00:35:31 because of the stuff that was done in the 30s of, and 40s after the Great Depression. And so here we are with the new technology that allows for things that didn't exist, that arguably are partially securities, et cetera. I mean, you think about the capital stack of a company. If a company wants to sell a revenue stream,
Starting point is 00:35:51 in a future revenue stream, not stock, but sell a future revenue stream, crypto enables that. And it could be very, very clear and open, et cetera. But if you try to do that in the United States, anyone who thought about trying to do that in the United States, was stopped by Gensler, right? So they came up with this notion of governance tokens,
Starting point is 00:36:10 which are complete nonsense, right? Because it doesn't necessarily give you anything in terms of economic rights. The thing that clarity will do, one way or another, is create a path for companies, not foundations or other bullshit, but companies to create assets that have value that could be passed on to investors.
Starting point is 00:36:31 And that is very different than meme coins. So we always focus in the crypto, In fact, all we've talked about here so far are meme coins, but there's an entire notion, whether it's layer one's that get utility or other tokens that have utility, all utility tokens in some shape could be either securities or non-securities, but at the time and the date that it doesn't matter, that we don't care whether it's security or non-security,
Starting point is 00:36:56 but there's a well-tron, a well-understood path to be able to raise money and get instant liquidity. Companies are going to use it. And you'll see an enormous blood of innovation in terms of capital raising. And Wall Street is definitely not happy about this because it will take out a lot of the intermediation. But when you take out the intermediation, what does that mean? That means that both investors and entrepreneurs do better. And so that's what's really at stake here.
Starting point is 00:37:26 I mean, we always miss the forest for the trees, but that's the real big deal here. Does that make sense to you? couldn't you already today just you're talking about having a security token like you said that securitizes a future cash flow or something right you could already technically do that today badly i mean yeah it the rules have there's seasoning there are so many rules and that's why when ron said and it's a very important point that ron made when ron said that project crypto is going to have all these exemptions that are eventually when they come out with that companies will have the ability a path. But if you look at reg A and reg A plus, I mean, there's a reason why they failed.
Starting point is 00:38:06 You know, all these people say, well, in the jobs, that green, it is really fucking hard. If you're an entrepreneur and you have to spend half a million dollars on legal fees to raise money as a fixed cost, you're not doing it as a small entrepreneur. You're going to raise private angel funding and you're going to go through BCs because it just doesn't make sense. Yeah, that's what, I mean, I think those things are disruptive, right? like being able to tokenize your raise, right, have transparency. There's interesting tools that can be built around that. You can help entrepreneurs, you know, if you've got kind of a, you know,
Starting point is 00:38:39 if you're a young kid and you've got a good company at the start, you know, you're not liquid. Maybe there's a way to easily do secondaries, you know, it's like, oh, I got a, you know, I started something. I bust my ass for two years. This thing's worth, you know, on paper, $12 million. And I have 50% of it. I, you know, want to start a family and get out of my mom's basement.
Starting point is 00:38:59 Um, you know, maybe I can sell a little bit of this, you know, and it not, you know, cost lawyer fees and actually not get discounted 38% because no one, there's no transparency there. I think a lot of this is like accredited investor rules, right? How come like, you know, it's great, but like how come like Gary Tan gets to put 25k into, you know, Coinbase and make $400 million, right? Couldn't a bunch of people just put like $8 in and everyone get a brand new house? So there's, I think there's things that are there. But again, it's like those aren't tokenization, you know, rules. It's like crypto just wanted to help disrupt these things and that technology. And it just so happens to be the best technology for it. But it's not crypto doing it in
Starting point is 00:39:40 per se. It's these old rules that are in place that are breaking everything. So I get some of that stuff. But it just seems like there's so much in here that's missing the point. Oh, I'm sure you're right. I'm sure you're right. But I think your point is there's a nuance here. Crypto by its nature can be significantly more transparent than the previous method of trading securities and issuance and all this other stuff. I mean, we can't ignore that. You know, real disclosures and among how things work,
Starting point is 00:40:13 as well as open, there's so many different parts of the technology that you can have much more transparent capital raising. It might finally be the fulcrum issue that can make the accredited investor rule go boom because it's one of the worst rules It's a rule that's literally at this point only a wealth transfer from the poor to the rich or from the average of the rich.
Starting point is 00:40:33 And so, yeah, and there are people the SEC who kind of know that, but they need to concentrate, they're focusing on the technology to be able to use that. And I think they're going to use it as a lever to try to move that. But that's a totally different case. I mean, we're really down the rabbit hole here. But the point that I was trying to make is there are lots and lots of tokens in the crypto ecosystem that stand to benefit. from clarity and that's where people are placing their bets or starting to. I think, you know,
Starting point is 00:41:03 we'll see that and we'll talk about that as we get closer. But you're right, the devil's in the details, man, you know, and the details are evidently, you know, pretty obscure. Yeah, I just don't, you know, I don't see this making a huge difference. I see it taking a lot more time than people probably want. And, you know, again, things can change from administration to administration. And we have this like, I guess, small window potentially here where things are a little bit more loose, I would say, from a regulatory standpoint. But I actually think it's just like a next generation age out thing. And like then millennials get the keys to the kingdom. You're going to see just a lot changing, but it's just going to take a little bit longer than people want.
Starting point is 00:41:49 It could be. Scott, any other topics? There's nothing super pressing on the docket that I see. I mean, you know, it's basically regulation the Fed. I mean, it's sad that we have to be macro and politics phone every day. But you can just make, you can make, you know how much money you can make right now? You just short Bitcoin and 94 and you long it at it 88, 7 and uses infinite money glitch. If I do that, it will finally be the breakout or the breakdown.
Starting point is 00:42:18 Or I'll get or it'll go to 90. So I'm going to 96, stop me out. And that's what it'll go back to 84 and stop me out. Please, dear God, every time we hear the word infinite money glitch, it breaks. So please start tweeting that and get it viral because that's when Bitcoin will go back to all-time highs. Exactly. I mean, all kidding aside, I mean, it's like I still keep seeing, and I posted a somewhat longer form post this morning, people who keep thinking that Bitcoin is, you know, collapsed because BlackRock manipulated
Starting point is 00:42:51 it and all this other stuff. I mean, it's really, I mean, if you, if you sat down and actually look back at the anatomy of what happened in 2025, with hindsight, it's pretty clear, right? You know, you have distribution from older holders. You got turbocharging distribution from older holders where they could, on a tax advantage basis, swap their Bitcoin for Bitcoin treasury companies. So you had a huge amount of supply. Then you had the Bitcoin treasury companies effectively collapse causing, you know, in a way and go to discounts even, which is a eerie historical rhyme, I guess, you know, to GBT. And then you had October 10th. And then when the market is now down, you have all the four-year cycle people saying, ah, well, okay, this is
Starting point is 00:43:38 time to take our bats and balls and toys and leave the playground and selling. And so the question is, was all that selling exhausted in December? And I personally think, yes, we'll see. The market certainly feels like that, but we'll see where it goes. I mean, I think there's a coiled spring in Bitcoin. I don't know about the rest of crypto. I think there are some tokens already showing it.
Starting point is 00:44:02 I mean, things like BitTencer, which are way off the lows. Salana has been basing around here, et cetera, et cetera. Ethereum for sure is around here. So if it wouldn't take a whole lot of, positive price action. And it's weird to say this. It sounds backwards, but it wouldn't take a whole lot of positive price action to change sentiment and cause FOMO. I mean, you always say it, Scott, the best advertisement for any of this stuff is number go up. But part of number go up, the first part of number go up is it doesn't really go down as easily anymore. And I think we're
Starting point is 00:44:40 in the, it doesn't go down as easily anymore stage. I mean, what do you think? I 100% agree. Here we at 93, 457. So, Joe, I'm not saying it publicly. Go for it, no. If you guys have the juju around when you short it goes up, over my lifetime, that is like maximum juju. So I could take a hit for the team here
Starting point is 00:45:07 because it is 100% guaranteed that if I short it here, it is going to 100. The last time I did that, Joe, then mo me $5. I was on a face with Janish who was talking about Zcash. And I said, okay, I'll take some of my shit coins and I'll and I'll put it into into which have gone down. And by the way, Zcatch is probably slightly even as bad as it's been since then.
Starting point is 00:45:30 Outperform those other shit coins. So whatever. So I took some small shit coins. I switched it to Zcash and I said the rally's over. I'm in. And of course it dropped 50% from that point. Exactly. Not 50, yeah, 35, 40, but whatever.
Starting point is 00:45:44 I mean, it always tends to happen that way if you're not really paying attention. But Bitcoin does feel the supply demand dynamics on Bitcoin are very, are very different than people think they are. And I guess there could be there could be some, you know, it's a new year. Like there could be some tax harvesting at harvesting that was done by a lot of people last year just based on, you know, we did hit all time highs and, you know, maybe people kind of took that hit. So, you know, you could just see kind of like a little bit less pressure to the downside right now. We, you know, who knows what happens with the, the Fed chair in May, right, and money printer. And now with what Jay Powell has kind of decided to do. I mean, it just seems like,
Starting point is 00:46:25 he seemed a little ragged, you know, and tired Sunday night dropping videos. I don't know. Maybe he doesn't feel like he has the power if he moves out of that position, but he seems distracted. I think, I think he's pissed and he took the opportunity to go after to, to, to express his anger. Yeah. My father used to have an expression. Mad is bad. Right.
Starting point is 00:46:47 It's like the Lincoln hot letters, man. You write the hot letter and then eventually it just, you know, you negotiate. And that's always the smarter term. You'd think someone like that would learn that. But $8 trillion in money markets out there that could flow into the economy. You know, I don't want to say it, but, you know, if Dems squeak out the midterms, like the banks will rejoice. So we could be in a more money printer-ish-type scenario by the end of the year.
Starting point is 00:47:15 So that's all good things for Bitcoin. So it definitely feels different than it did two months ago with regards. Like you guys were saying, downside. So I think it pops here at some point, but it's going to take me shorting it to make that happen. Could be. You know what? You know what? If we all get together and short, if it gets to 94 right now and we all get together and short it,
Starting point is 00:47:36 I guarantee that could be, we can talk about clarity and the fad. That will be the catalyst that sends this thing. I could see the article now. It's like crypto, Twitter space drives Bitcoin to 100K with, you know, their $2,500 shorts. I can see it. Yeah, we could, you know, we would be viewed as the saviors of crypto. I'll think it. Probably worth it.
Starting point is 00:48:01 I want 1% of all Ethereum gas fees in perpetuity. Yeah, I mean, I think the bigger story, though, just to get back to the market structure, I'm just reading more tweets and I haven't had a chance to read the draft, but evidently there's an entire section, Title III on DFI, that is potentially ridiculous. I mean, I saw someone commenting, it seems a lot like what Sam Bankman-Fried was trying to push back before he fell from grace, which we all know how ridiculous that was. So I don't know. I haven't read it yet, so that might be hyperbolic nonsense.
Starting point is 00:48:36 But I think tomorrow that's probably going to be a lot of what people are talking about. Because defy is extremely important to the ethos of crypto and to the disintermediation. And it will always seem like the entrenched incumbents will try to squash it by regulating it and pushing it to where you have to go through intermediaries. And I think that's going to be the big issue. But having not read it unless someone on the panel has, I mean, Lawyard, have you looked at it yet? No, not really. Telling that out here, sorry. Yeah, no, I don't have anything to that either.
Starting point is 00:49:09 I just think it's going to be a big topic. If that's, in fact, true and that's where the battle lines really are going to be drawn, then this whole thing may just die. Looks like what it does is it gives the SEC power over what they're calling an alternative trading system and treats them like regulated securities platforms. So under the current usage, many dexes would have what they call like this, alternative trading system like activity. So it's like treating uniswap like NASDAQ.
Starting point is 00:49:48 Well, not like NASDAQ, like, I mean, speaking to someone who's built and run, how many, three, four, ATSs are much lower touch regulatoryly than exchanges. That isn't necessarily the worst thing. The biggest deal, by the way, for those who care is what will CFDC do because most of the defy, I mean, Uniswap is obviously, you know, then being an alternative trading system, I mean, is not, wouldn't be that big of a deal if depending on how the rules were written. But the perp-dexes, that's a far bigger deal, right? You know, hyperliquid and modified models where non-custodial, you know, non-custodial exchanges or, you know, or call them whenever the hell you want, how that gets regulated. That's going to be a very big deal.
Starting point is 00:50:36 Because really, at the end of the day, the thing that people, they're going to care about is KYC, which for the record, so before people think that I'm defending it, I don't. I think the current KYC AML processes are counterproductive and suck. But what I think doesn't matter, but the government thinks that that's really important. And so that's going to be where that meets the road. But I guess we'll see how all this breaks down. Well, I realize causation and correlation are not the same, but it seems to me like every time you speak, Bitcoin keeps pumping. So I wouldn't stop, but I don't know. I'll keep watching the chart.
Starting point is 00:51:09 Yeah, yeah, yeah. I've noticed that too. I don't know about me speak. Look, I think that the trading pattern, all kidding aside, the 945 Bitcoin gets smacked, which was happening literally. It was like 20 out of 20. It was like some huge percentage, like over 95% of days for, you know, over a month. That seems to have broken.
Starting point is 00:51:31 Now, I don't know why. I mean, there's a lot of possible reasons for that, by the way. There could have been, there are trades or derivatives that are often set by time period VWAPs that's a volume weighted average price over a particular time period. And it could very well be that there was a derivative in size that was being set from 945 to 10. I don't know that that's true or not. Obviously, I'm telling you, I'm ignorant. What I'm telling you is that it was something noticeable that was going on.
Starting point is 00:51:56 That seems to have ended. And that does matter. So, I mean, we'll see. But no, I don't believe I have that power. Sorry. If I did, I'd be a lot richer. Yeah, I don't know. I'll keep watching. I think so. I think I'm right, but I can't confirm. Okay, well, then I'll have to join Fred Kruger's marathon, you know, 24-hour Bitcoin space one of these days. But I think I'm going to pass.
Starting point is 00:52:20 Yeah, filibuster us to the moon. Yeah, well, if there's one thing that I do think the zombie fillet, the lazy filibuster should go away. And certainly I know I'm capable of doing a filibuster, but I'm. I prefer not to have to make you guys all listen to me, even if it did make Bitcoin go higher. Anyway, I mean, I don't think there's anything more to cover today, Scott. I think we're going to see mood. So 11-11, you make a wish.
Starting point is 00:52:48 It's perfect time to end. Yep, there you go. All right, well, I think we'll wrap and come back tomorrow. Another great conversation. Looking forward to what's on the docket tomorrow. Never a dull moment in this space, especially when you can talk macro and politics on top of crypto. Maybe we'll get a breakout.
Starting point is 00:53:08 Maybe we'll get a breakout. Joe, I'm just telling you all publicly, Joe is shorting heavy at 94. Awesome. Heavy. Go hunt him. Scott, I forgot to mention since we're Smelter Town Hall now, should we mention that Silver is trading towards 80, over 88, closing in on 89 right now? Yes, smelting Town Hall.
Starting point is 00:53:28 We're going to have to do that if crypto keeps remaining this morning. have to become like a medals show and have Peter Schiff hosted with us. Oh, please, dear God, no. At least people would show up. All right. You can't go out on a better note than that. We'll see you guys tomorrow. Thank you, everyone.
Starting point is 00:53:48 Bye.

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