Unchained - Sharplink CEO on Why ETH Will Soon See a Boom in Demand: Bits + Bips - Ep. 934
Episode Date: October 29, 2025In this episode of Bits + Bips, former BlackRock executive and SharpLink co-CEO Joseph Chalom joins hosts Austin Campbell, Chris Perkins, and Ram Ahluwalia to discuss why the Federal Reserve may move ...to ease rates despite a “Goldilocks” economy, the growing role of stablecoins in foreign exchange and settlement, and how major banks like JPMorgan and Citi are expanding their use of blockchain. The conversation also explores Japan’s first yen-backed stablecoin, the implications of AI for the labor market, and the generational shift that could make crypto wallets the default interface for finance. Plus, the implications of CZ’s pardon and why it’s “bullish” to have Mike Selig chairing the CFTC. Sponsors: Binance Mantle Hosts: Ram Ahluwalia, CFA, CEO and Founder of Lumida Austin Campbell, NYU Stern professor and founder and managing partner of Zero Knowledge Consulting Christopher Perkins, Managing Partner and President of CoinFund Guest: Joseph Chalom, Co-CEO of SharpLink Gaming, Inc. Links: Reuters: Fed poised to cut rates this week, with more easing likely on tap WSJ: Trump Considers Fed Chair Selection by Year-End From Slate of Five Finalists CoinDesk: Gov. Waller: U.S. Fed to 'Embrace Disruption,' Pitches 'Skinny' Master Account Idea Reuters: World's first yen-pegged stablecoin debuts in Japan EF: ERC-8004: Trustless Agents Bloomberg: JPMorgan to Allow Bitcoin, Ether as Collateral in Crypto Push Unchained: Trump Pardons Binance Founder CZ CNBC: Trump names Michael Selig to chair CFTC; Selig cites crypto capital goal Timestamps: 🎬 0:00 Intro 💸 3:23 Why the Fed will likely still cut rates despite a “Goldilocks” economy 👷♂️ 6:47 Why Joseph says the labor market is at a “moment that matters” as Amazon cuts 30,000 jobs 🏛️ 8:26 What Chris shockingly heard at a recent Fed conference ⚖️ 10:15 What could force the Fed to become hawkish 🚀 12:33 How the Fed is “frontrunning innovation” 💴 14:46 Why Japan’s first fully yen-backed stablecoin, JPYC, is significant 🌍 17:36 Why Chris is so excited about stablecoins disrupting FX markets 🔗 22:55 Why L1 tokens may be the next “strategic commodity” 🏦 26:25 How major banks are joining the stablecoin race 👛 31:33 Why retail adoption could explode in the coming years 🤖 33:37 How AI agents could soon manage our payments 💡 36:34 Why JPMorgan decided to accept bitcoin and ether as collateral ⚖️ 44:04 Was CZ’s pardon fair, and what about “pay to play” concerns 🐂 54:55 Why having Mike Selig chair the CFTC is “bullish” for crypto Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
There's a fear that when AI starts to materially disrupt,
potentially have once in a generation interruption of white collar markets and knowledge workers,
the Fed may want to get ahead of that labor market potential significant downturn,
because when the labor market turns, it turns very fast and very hard,
and it's very hard to reverse.
This may be the first time the Fed's really been front-footed on innovation,
not just leading in like a rate cycle, but trying to truly lead it transforming that system.
Hello, everybody, and welcome to bits and bibs, exploring how crypto and macro collide one basis
point at a time. So I'm Austin Campbell, self-described in recovering grouchy fixed income
trader and professor at NYU Stern. I'm your moderator for this show because, to be honest,
we drew lots. Somebody has to keep Chris under control, and I lost, so I have to do it.
With me today are Chris Perkins, part of the city crypto mafia president of coin fund,
and somebody who I can assure you has some heat on some macro topics and investing.
We also have Ram Alawalia.
Ram is the founder of Lumida Wealth and is also joining us for Money 2020,
so took time out from partying and gambling to chat with us.
Thank you, Ram.
And then finally, today our guest, Joseph Shalom, the CEO of Sharpling, NASDAQ ticker, S-Bet,
The former head of digital asset strategy at BlackRock for five years with an over 20-year
career at Black Rock and friend of Chris Perkins, probably the most dangerous thing on the list
that I've said.
Today, we're going to be talking about a number of different things, including Fed decisions,
the inflation backdrop payments, U.S. and China trade deal optimism, a bunch of stablecoin news
around Citiboyne, the first yet in stable coin. J.P. Morgan, and
increasing their presence in crypto, the CZ pardon, and a new CFTC chair being named.
We're optimists around here.
We'll get to all of these.
Hey, everyone, just a quick note that after the Bits and Bips group chat,
I interview Unchained Executive Editor Steve Erlich about two articles that he wrote for the
Bits and Bips newsletter.
One about how locked tokens are being put in deaths, thus giving the locked token holders early liquidity
via shares in Dats.
The other one is about how Bitcoin makes.
mining stocks are soaring. But it's not for the reason you think, and it might be bad for the
Bitcoin mining industry in the U.S. So stick around after the group conversation to hear about
these insights. And if you haven't yet subscribed to the Bits & Bips newsletter, be sure to do so.
There's a link in the show notes. And now on to the show.
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So without further ado, let's get started with the Fed and inflation.
So for those who are unfamiliar, every so often a group called the Federal Open Market Committee meets.
This is 12 people, seven Fed governors and presidents from regional banks across the United States.
They're the ones who vote on interest rates.
They're meeting this week.
They're expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points.
But this is not the only thing they do.
These are also the leaders of the Federal Reserve and have many other topics on their mind.
So starting with the macro backdrop, we have.
have a cooling employment market. Unemployment claims arising. Today, the news is out that Amazon
might be laying off up to 30,000 people per Reuters. Inflation remains above trend at 3%,
above the 2% target, but not catastrophically so. And according to Deutsche Bank economists, Powell is likely
to keep options open and not pre-commit to a particular action through year end. So starting there,
Ron, let me throw it to you. What are the implications of what's
going on with the Fed and what should we expect from the market?
Sure.
So first off, I would have characterized the backdrop differently.
I'll share my screen.
We'll look at initial claims.
These are just seasonal fluctuations that happen as the economy transitions from a summer
economy to a back-to-school economy.
We've seen this last three years in a row.
There's a spike in initial claims.
There's some softness in the labor market.
People call for the Fed to cut.
And then you see unexpected economic strength in Q4.
That's going to happen again.
this year, I believe. Against that backdrop, you have productivity growth, increasingly driven by
AI levels we haven't seen since the late 90s. You've got unemployment rate at 4.1%. Sky's not falling.
We're seeing strong earnings growth again from the regional banks last week, the megabanks before that,
and the S&P and the industry just hit all-time highs today at 6,800. The Fed doesn't need to cut.
They didn't need to cut last year as well. When they cut last year, the 10 years,
you're worn out, stock markets ramped. It's okay. I'm not going to fight the Fed. The fact that the Fed
is cutting into Goldilocks, this is Goldilocks. I think I'm the only one saying this is a Goldilocks
economy. Objectively, look at the data. People just don't feel like it's Goldilocks in their head.
They feel bad because of headlines and geopolitical risk and they don't like what Trump is doing
with the East Wing. But fundamentally, this is Goldilocks. So when that happens, though,
you should be owning risk assets.
And so like that initial claims.
This is initial claims.
You can see there's some noisiness around the data.
You know, don't forget like data series, like the non-farm payrolls,
which was supposed to come out the first Friday of the month,
which didn't because there's a shutdown.
It's extremely noisy.
Like the confidence interval is like 100,000 plus or minus.
It's just noise.
And the most valuable, reliable data subject to audit is company earnings.
data. Company earnings data. And every week during earning season, my team and I go through the
companies that report to the day and we compile highlights in our newsletter. We don't see weakness.
You don't see weakness. There's company specific weakness. Okay, Tesla missed on new order. That's a
eocentric. But credit is good. Economy is fine. Earnings is good. CapEx is strong.
That's the story. This is Goldilocks.
I would take the other side of that in that you saw Fed Reserve Governor Chris Walker in July
dissent and focus on the fact that, yes, looking backwards, the labor markets have been
actually really robust and resilient.
The American economy is consumer driven.
But there's a fear that when AI starts to materially disrupt, potentially have once in a generation
interruption of white collar markets and knowledge workers, the Fed may want to get ahead of that
labor market potential significant downturn because when the labor market turns, it turns very
fast and very hard and it's very hard to reverse. You know, I think over the last period,
as long as we've remembered, the Fed has prioritized price stability, obviously their primary concern
and they've been very, very hawkish.
But the labor market is coming to a moment that matters.
Anecdotally, lots of companies are slowing down hiring.
And, you know, anecdotally, lots of people I know with really, really good educational backgrounds,
graduating top universities are having a very hard time finding white collar jobs.
And I would bet that they're more worried about that hard shift.
on labor and the dislocation coming from AI, that is just harder to reverse. So while you look
backwards, it's been Goldilocks, you can make an argument. There's a labor demand cliff coming.
I don't know, from my perspective, I was just checking out Polymarket. And now I can access it on the
world app for the first time, which is pretty cool. We're investors in World's not in Polymarket.
But Polymarkets make it clear that the rates are coming down. And I think we know that that's absolutely
going to happen. This is a government that's very focused on expanding our GDP, both real and nominal,
and they will do whatever it takes to do so. They're also looking to put assets in the hands of
retail. Like, they opened up, Trump opened up this retail account for kids that are born now,
and we're trying to make sure that they're sharing in those assets. So that's what this,
that's what this government's thinking about. I had the opportunity to go to the payments conference
at the Federal Reserve last week.
And I couldn't believe what I heard.
Started with Chris Waller, Governor Chris Waller,
who I've an incredible amount of respect for,
got up on the stage and he's like,
everybody, it's time to embrace the disruption.
And like to hear that coming out of a Fed governor
who is positioned potentially to be the chair,
and I'd be thrilled if he is, is nuts.
He talked about opening a skinny account.
And what is this Fed trying to do?
They're trying to make sure that we lead,
that we innovate, stable coins are everywhere.
I sat next to him at a private lunch.
And he's just like, you know, I recognize the opportunity of stable coins four years ago.
No one was listening to me at the time.
But now they're listening and we're going to be all in on this.
And so you have an entire government that's focusing on growing the pie, growing the GDP.
I don't know if they're going to be successful or not.
It feels like we're in a very good macro environment for asset prices, particularly in crypto going into the end of the year because of the, of the,
derisking and the stimulus that they're looking to inject.
I mean, I'll go a step further than ROM and jokingly call this the check market,
which is to say you can kind of take whatever you want from the picture that's being painted right now.
If you feel like there's room to cut, it's because of the employment story that Joseph just told
and fears of disruption in this market due to AI displacing many forms of labor and also maybe
some of the impact around geopolitics. Like, certainly there's a narrative there. If you want to be
hawkish, you've got labor, or I'm sorry, inflation, sort of above trend. And you're looking at that
and saying, wait, wait, wait, we need to be concerned with that one. I think we need to be hiking.
And so one of the things that I would expect is that it's going to take a dislocation in one of
those two things to cause anybody currently at the Fed to change their mind as from where they
currently hold it. So I think the current path of cutting will continue because the votes seem to be
there for that. Ram, I agree with you. That's very good for risk assets right now in the current
backdrop. But to me, the thing we're watching for to change this path is, does unemployment
really crank up because that would be a sign that many of the hawks are going to flip? Or does
inflation really crank up, which would be a sign that many of the doves are going to flip. But in the current
state, I think we're just kind of living where we are. The thing to me that's news,
out of the Fed, and I'm going to pile on with Chris here. I was at the Chicago Federal Reserve
Payment Symposium a little bit back. And the number one and number two topics of a symposium
that historically has been around instant payments were stable coins and AI. Right. We were looking at
a full-scale modernization, not just of U.S. banking rails, but an acknowledgement that the line
between retail payments, you know, business to business payments, settlement and global
money transfer is now blurring. And at the same time, a lot of both optimism and concerns about what
AI is going to do. There was one presentation that was on screen that only afterwards was revealed that,
no, that was entirely fake. This was completely AI generated. And even though the real person it was
based on is sitting right there and it looks identical, none of that was real. So there are a lot of
questions around how are we going to handle these things? I think, and Rahm and Joseph, I'd be curious to
hear your view, this may be the first time the Fed's really been front-footed on innovation,
not just leading in like a rate cycle, but trying to truly lead a transform in that system.
I 100% agree. I've never seen in my life a regulatory climate that's been this permissive
and this constructive. Fed Governor Waller, to Chris's point, Fed Governor Bowman about a month or two ago,
SEC Chair Paul Atkins. And you've got also, of course, the Besson, leading the charge.
here. This is extraordinary. I mean, this is a bigger deal than Glass Eagle. I was trying to think back
in history. Like, when's the last time we saw something? This is a bigger deal than Glass
Eagle. And then before Glass Eagle, well, you have to go back decades. It's actually been more
regulation, not less since then. So I agree. I'm not worried about this labor market dislocation.
You know, labor market's clear in a competitive free market open economy. And labor becomes more
productive with AI. We're seeing that in measured higher productivity growth. And employers are going to
hoard labor. They don't cut when their earnings are going up. They can actually make more money with
talent when commingling that talent with labor. So this is a good story. Labor growth is slowing down
because you have less immigration. That's it. So the supply of labor is going down. Therefore,
you'll see job creation come in at a more measured pace. That's a normal thing. All right. So
moving on to our next topic, to get to global money flows and modernization, the world's first
yen stable coin launches in Japan. So JPYC became the first fully backed stable coin denominated in
yen. It's backed by JGPs and domestic savings. The stated goal there is to issue 10 trillion
yen, so roughly 66 billion in current numbers, over three years. No transaction fees initially.
It's monetizing via the interest on the reserves.
all three of Japan's megabanks appear to be jointly involved in the launch.
The bank of Japan is saying stable coins could partially replace bank deposits and global payments on the back of this.
But to be honest, is uncertainty around domestic adoption.
Global use is definitely targeted for trade flows.
And also, I want to say in particular, congratulations to Neoto-san and the JFSA as well as Usheedasan and the previous team.
there are many people there who have been working on clearing the path for this for a long time.
As Rahm said earlier, it's a remarkable regulatory environment as we've turned the corner here.
So I want to start with Joseph.
I believe you have some views here.
What do you think the impact of this is going to be?
It's interesting.
If you take a look back six months, the narrative coming from Washington and globally was the U.S.
was at risk of potentially losing its reserve dollar status.
You had China and others threatening not to buy U.S. treasuries.
So clearly, Secretary Bessent, the Trump administration, believe that U.S. dominance in crypto markets,
U.S. dominance in tokenized assets, if backed by U.S. denominated stable coins, is a double positive.
One is you'll have more and more of the world's financial transactions, not just global trade.
denominated in stable coins like Tether, U.S.DC, and others that are overwhelmingly
USD-based. But second, people forget every single stable coin needs to be backed by a U.S.
Treasury. And if you look at the likes of Tether and Circle, I think collectively they're a top
15 creditor of the U.S. government. So if you can believe that the world is tokenizing all
financial assets, they're going to be paid for and transacted in stable coins, which are
U.S. dollar denominated.
And that creates massive demand for U.S. Treasuries.
This is a win, win for the U.S.
It's a win for Washington.
And I just spent three weeks in Asia and the U.K.
And there's real fear that these local currencies are going to lose their vaulted status.
So I'm not surprised that Japan is doing this.
I am surprised that Europe and the UK seems to be very, very far behind in solving this.
But smart move by the Japanese government.
And I think there's enough global trade and enough intra-company trade in Japan to support
this what you call a $60 to $100 billion stable coin effort.
And I do think it'll be successful.
I just think the U.S. dominated stable coins are going to actually bring the U.S.
back to strong reserve status in global financial services. So this is a win for Washington,
and you're going to see others trying to chip away and preserve their own reserve status.
I'll chime in. Joseph, I agree with you. I think that stable coins are going to, we've talked about
this before, really extend U.S. dollar reach. It's pretty ironic. Like when I was in Wall Street,
and I was running derivatives businesses, yen used to scare the bejesus out of me because I was
uncollateralized for so long. I'd have to wait for the stuff to come in and settle. And I was like,
gosh, if I can settle this stuff quick, where is the yen stable coin? Because that is going to give me
the most utility of anything because I would, you know, I would pay out. I'd be waiting and
waiting, waiting because my client, of course, would make me just take that risk. And I hated that
risk. So with stable coins, that goes away. We call that risk in Wall Street. We called Hurst that risk.
And the reason why we called Hirstat risk is because in 1974, there was this German bank called Hirstat.
And it blew up because it paid out and it didn't receive and it went bankrupt.
And it's ironic because after that, the BIS, which sets global capital rules for banks, they set up B-CBS, which helped address that issue.
And what the irony is, is that you have the BIS now that's been really anti-stable coins, even though like these stable coins are literally going to solve the problem that brought them into existence.
we're going to eliminate settlement risk.
So I'm excited about that.
I'm even more excited about the FX markets.
FX is a $7.5 trillion a day market.
You can't trade FX if you only have dollars.
Like this gets me super excited.
I want to see that type of real-time trading.
I think it's going to be great for the economy.
It's going to be great for the Japanese.
Look, Joseph, you're also right.
The Europeans are behind.
Why are they behind?
I think it's because of the way they calibers.
right to the regulatory capital.
If you have to reserve two or three percent for every single euro and you're only making
two or three percent on that float, it's really hard to scale.
I think that that jurisdiction is going to have to figure it out pretty quick.
Otherwise, they're going to be left behind.
Do you think, Chris, that the stablecoin market replaces or disrupts the FX market?
Like, do these converge?
I thought it was a great, you know, a plot on that list.
Yeah, of course.
It's like, we talked about this, I think, in the past where let's just talk of the equity markets, right?
I have a choice.
Do I buy an equity, like, as I do today, or do I buy a tokenized equity?
If I'm a fiduciary, I have to buy the tokenized equity, assuming liquidity stays the same, right?
Why?
Because if something happens on a Saturday and there's a risk issue, I have to manage my risk.
How do I settle them?
I settle that in stable coins, right?
So all things being equal, the tokenized product is a better product.
FX the same. Do I want to have an FX product that settles T plus two or do I want
have an excess FX product that settles real time? If I'm a fiduciary, what do I want? It's just
a better product. So again, like I used to run the largest FXPB in the world. I was managing
that Hearst at risk and people say, oh, CLS, we solved everything. CLS handled, doesn't handle every
current. Austin's shaking his head. I want to hear his take. But these innovations drive better
markets. And I'm sure the CEO of Sharplek is going to talk about where much of that,
many of those stable coins live today. But yeah, it's a better market. It's a better system.
And like the fact that some regulators are pushing back, especially the guys sitting in their ivory
tower, the BIS, saying this is going to be a problem. I think they have to get back to first
principles. Like stop trying to defend your and create modes. Move forward and understand the risk
mitigation that you that you achieve through stables.
Yeah, I was shaking my head about CLS because CLS, although useful, is a very limited purpose entity.
Chris, like you and I have both been derivatives traders, right?
Like, there are many forms of settlement that need to happen, some of which are 24-7 across
global venues, potentially in different currencies where CLS is at best a very small part
of what's going on.
And to your point about everything being on chain and preferring the tokenized version,
And if I can have, call it a 24-7 global Omni-Ledger, Joseph, if you know one of those, let us know,
right, where I can put everything on it and then be able to transact.
I'm going to be able to do things like clear our global interest rate derivative framework,
24-7, eliminate like the double-margining problem.
These are very real structural financial improvements.
And to pile on with what Joseph was saying, one, I do think this is a huge win for the dollar.
Dollar stable coins are the leader, as more things.
move on chain, that reinforces their power. But I would also say, I think it's going to be a big
win for anybody who's a fast follower. So I think Japan has done something very smart here. You want to
get into this game. You want your currency to be used for things like trade settlement. You want it to
be used on chain as collateral. You want to start building those reps early. And to their credit,
the JFSA has been early to a lot of things in crypto. Like I will remind people they were one of the
best at regulating exchanges. So FtX Japan is one of the few entities that's, you're a few entities that's
So there is a track record here, but moving early is going to matter. If I was a smaller country
with limited state capacity, had no intentions to do a stable coin, I would be existentially
worried even about the continued existence of my currency right now.
Yeah, and I think it goes beyond currency. People forget that most assets today trade on a venue
specific basis. Like if your stock is listed on NASDAQ, you're trading on Lasdaq. If you're
Deutsche Borse, you're trading on Deutsche Boris. When you end up getting a global sediment layer
that's decentralized, and I'll posit I'm an ETH and tokenization maxi, that's going to reap real
repercussions on global capital markets in Europe and the UK and areas that are already
struggling to list innovative companies and retain innovative companies. And when you start getting
that decentralized settlement layer, we're pretty much
anything can trade with anything programmatically, composedably across borders. And I know there's a
lot of regulatory hurdles. I think it's going to wreak havoc on those secondary and tertiary markets
who've relied on the venue moat to keep capital markets in their jurisdictions and in their
native currencies. And I think Europe and the UK will be the biggest losers in this regard.
This also makes like tokens like Ethereum, Savannah, the layer one.
where these assets live, very strategic suddenly, right?
Like, if you have trillions of dollars of stable coins living on Ethereum or layer one of your
choice, how can you not as a government have an arsenal in that?
Like, what commodity is more strategic?
Like, I guess oil is very strategic for sure, but this becomes a core important strategic
commodity that you have to have.
All right.
On that note, we do have to flip to an ad, but then we're going to come back in our
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So let's keep talking about stablecoins.
Chris Araf, former employer, City, has announced that they're partnering with Coinbase
to test stable coins for cross-border payments.
for corporate clients.
The goal there being to simplify crypto to fiat conversions to speed up settlement times
and targeting what they said was 24-7 institutional demand for programmable payments.
What impact do you think it's going to have that the big banks are now getting into this game?
I'm happy for my old colleagues at City to be leaning forward.
If you know anything about City, the Crown Jewel is something called TTS.
It's Treasury and Trade System.
I think I'll murder it, but it's the payments business of the world.
They pay DoD.
They pay the world.
And they've levered, when you become a managing director there, they'll pull you aside and say,
it's the network.
It's the network.
We've been here for hundreds of years because it's the network.
And the network they refer to in their moat is the correspondent banking system.
And so I'm really happy that they're now leading forward and saying, well, wait a second,
you know, we need to be able to settle and pay in real time using this new technology.
I wish them all the luck.
But there's also this other debate going on.
And this was at the Fed.
And this is the debate around tokenized bank deposits.
And a lot of banks are like, no, no, no, no, no.
tokenized bank deposits are better.
They pay yield.
You know, we're all about tokenized bank deposits.
And like, Mike, I've been trying to get my head around this thing.
I don't understand it.
I don't understand the utility.
I understand money markets.
I understand stable coins.
These tokenized bank deposits.
I was literally sitting next to Waller at lunch.
And Governor Waller, like,
explain. And I guess the consensus at the Fed Payment Center was like, this is going to be an
internal tool for the banks to move assets through their ecosystem. Maybe that's it. But I'm still
struggling with that one personally. I wish I was a little smarter on that subject. But look,
great news for City. Congrats to them. And again, it's a better product. Like, you don't have a choice.
So good luck. I think it is also with J.P. Morgan, who've really been leaning
into those bank deposits. And Chris, they don't pay interest. And it might be that J.P. Morgan has a
big enough old garden. They have, you know, one of the large, is the largest bank. They believe,
you know, crossing and moving across accounts and netting with tokenized deposits is better for them
in the long run. City obviously is going in a different strategic direction, I think a more forward
direction. So I do think it's worth contrasting with what you've seen at J.P. Morgan to date.
Baram, I think I might have interrupted you.
No, no, I think that was great.
You know, briefly, a city invested in BVNK, which is a striped competitor, focused on merchant acquiring.
That was a very thoughtful move.
They partnered with Coinbase on this.
So the incumbents are responding swiftly.
The CEO talked about the Stable Clinic initiative on their earnings calls.
This is a CEO-led objective.
I wouldn't underestimate Citibank around this as much as I'd love to see them disrupted.
actually in Long City have been for a while around this.
And I think Austin, I think you and I spoke around this a few months ago,
you thought that some of the big banks would have a natural advantage here.
I think that's true.
I would love to get your take on this.
I think, one, the banks are going to be forced to evolve.
As Chris said, it's just a better product, right?
Like take international wires, which are kind of a broken space right now.
I have T plus five in huge fees versus a couple of seconds to send Chris or Joseph.
for raw money on chain. Right. The just commercial weight of that improvement will drag the banks
along kicking and screaming or they'll die. Right. This is a sort of like the internet hits book
selling moment for payments in that regard. Now on the form factor, I've been a little bit of a
skeptic around tokenized deposits being the ultimate settlement thing because I think we kind of
got to bank deposits being used for payments at scale accidentally. Right. If you rewind to like the
1970s, the majority of payments being made were made cash and cards were only starting to come onto the
scene, right? Like, banks were not integral to like buying coffee. And as a result, I think they've
sort of stumbled into a digital monopoly that was not deserved. But the problem with bank deposits
is these are incredibly not fungible items, right? Like maybe a little while ago, we'd feel very
differently about deposits at JPMorgan versus deposits at Silicon Valley Bank, as an example. And so,
when the deposits themselves are not fungible because to move between banks, you're moving
credit risk and balance sheet assets around, it does beg for a simpler solution. And you end up
at sort of a least common denominator of acceptable, which is like a box full of T-bills or
overnight lending secured by treasuries, which everybody will take. And so I think what we may end up
is a slightly different layer cake in the future, which is to say banks probably should start
thinking right now about taking well-designed stable coins as deposits themselves.
I think we've been speaking to the institutional and commercial side of these banks,
but there's a massive generational shift where, especially outside the U.S., there are more
and more young people who are about to inherit tens of trillions of dollars from our parents
and from us, who are more likely, especially outside the U.S. to have a crypto wallet,
than they are to have a deposit checking account at Citibank.
And I think on the retail side, you're going to see money movement almost entirely
denominated in crypto-to-crypto wallet movement, instantaneous, low gas fees, easy to handle.
I think we've been more focused on this idea of commercial and institutional banking.
But I think on the retail side, you're going to see lots of people who've never walked into a bank,
who may not even have an ATM, they get their credit relative to the collateral in their
crypto wallet.
And I think the crypto wallet is just going to end up being the form factor for how people
store and move money on the retail side, especially outside the U.S.
and in developing countries.
I mean, I'm going to pile in there and say, I've got some students who have bank accounts
who have never walked into a bank branch, Joseph, right?
Like, they've got so far or something like that where everything was done on
online already. And like if you ask them, their like personal nightmare is what do you mean I have to go
somewhere physically in person to do it? Like, this is great. I've got a phone right here. Right. And so I think
this digital nativeness, right, of people who grew up with the technology, who are used to using it,
who understand it, who trust it, not say the current 75 year olds who are like, I don't know about this
PayPal thing. I can't open the phone up and take the money out is going to be a generational shift that
forces people in this direction. I don't know if it's just stable coins. Like, honestly,
I think for retail, obscuring the difference of what they're using and just making it easy
is probably the winning play. But to your point, being interoperable with everything brings you
there. There's a post-retail demographic that's coming on the scene too. It's called AI agents.
I'm serious. That's the next one after this, right? And like you just saw a pretty interesting
release with something called X402 standard that allows now agents to to pay themselves.
else micro payment to micropayment to micropayment.
So like that's the other part of this economy that we haven't even,
we're barely touching the surface and there's innovations every single day.
But I imagine at some point in our lifetimes,
those micropayments are going to probably outpace the human ones that we're talking about.
Yeah, Chris, I'm going to geek out here for your audience,
which is read ERC 804, this idea of trusted, trustless agents who understand boundaries
and registries.
I think it's going to be sooner than we all think that there's going to be some sort of digital wallet twin that understands our preferences, our risk tolerance, can help build portfolios for us, can help move money. We'll just do payments for behind the scenes. And over time, I think that's going to start melding not only with your wallet, but your prediction markets. And I think there's a world that's coming much faster than we expect.
and it's agentic money, a digital twin of your wallet.
And I'm not exaggerating.
I think most of us are going to have that in the second half of 2026.
Somebody asked me a question today.
How are they governed?
How do we govern these agents?
It's pretty tough because, like, we always talk in defy.
In a way, it's simple, even though our politicians haven't figured it out yet.
It's like, leave the technology out of it.
We're going to make sure that we enforce activities, institutions, individuals,
behaviors, and activities.
go after it, leave the tech out of it.
So, like, what do you do when you have, like, the technology and behaviors in a vertical,
you know, how do you govern it?
That's going to be, as somebody asked me today, I didn't have a good answer.
I think you're right on the mark, though, Chris, is, yeah, you're going to see these agents.
You're going to have the keep my fridge stock agent, keep me fed agent, it goes in orders
Uber Eats, it knows my calendar, which is another agent.
You're going to have the agent that does the send $200 to that person in Manila, call it
foreign remittances agent.
You're going to have agent that does subscription optimization.
I'm probably paying for things I'm not actually using.
So I agree.
I think you're going to have all these microagents, which will have approvals and spend limit
controls and some kind of orchestration agent, probably run by a big tech company or
Open AI.
I hope it's not a big tech company.
I'm just saying that's probably the base case.
So yeah, it's still, you know, still exciting times to early in the use case.
adoption. All right, I'm going to bring this back around to the other side of the bank thing,
since Chris was talking about strategic assets earlier as well. Chris, J.P. Morgan has stated
that they're going to start accepting Bitcoin and ETH as loan collateral, allowing institutional
clients to pledge them by the end of 2025. Sounds like they'll be using a third-party custodian
to avoid directly handling the crypto, but it expands on some of the prior moves to accept
Crypto-linked ETFs as collateral and JPMorgan's own efforts in the payment space.
This is something of a symbolic shift.
As we all know, Jamie Diamond has been one of the biggest Bitcoin haters out there, but now
his firm is starting operating in this space.
So Chris, how real is this?
And then, Joseph, I want to hear from you.
What do you think the implications are of adding ETH to that list as well?
I really want to hear from Joseph.
I mean, Barrow Lens seems to be like one of the first ports of call for, like, utility
and really unlocking, you know, the value of these assets.
Like, we know that crypto, it's private property in the internet for the first time.
It has value.
How do you unlock that value by borrowing and loaning against it, right?
It's a super important, just table stakes foundational layer of finance.
We saw, you know, I think Catcher Fitzgerald's jumping into it.
They were early.
The fact that a prudentially regulated bank now is now saying, wait a second, we're going to do this as well.
It really got, like, caught my attention because when I was,
was in the bank.
Like, we have these, like, regulatory capital rules where they treat different assets
differently.
And it's really nerdy stuff.
But, like, you could barely start any business even if you wanted to with crypto because
you had to hold, like, almost 100% collateral capital against it.
It's really hard to make a profitable business.
And so, like, my question is, is, are things changing?
Because I haven't heard that.
And then number two, if you're that guy, like, like Joseph, right?
Now you have an equity.
The equity rules are much more.
favorable when it comes to borrow land than the native rules. So like as I start thinking about the
unlocked the potential of that's like like ESPET, I mean, to me, this is like, wow, this is just so much
more much more utility than than some of the native assets. But I'm really curious to hear what Joseph
has to say. Yeah, I think, I think that this is a watershed moment. What's interesting is for at least
the last five years, banks have not been able to touch Bitcoin or Eith.
But what they've been doing is market making, the ETFs that we launched at BlackRock and Franklin Templeton and Fidelity.
They've been in this room.
They just haven't been able to touch it.
I think it's a major signal for both Bitcoin and ETH.
I think it's legitimizing them.
And I think there's an investment thesis for people to have it in their portfolios.
There's a reason why Sharplink, where the second largest ETH debt, has gathered basically over the summer,
three and a half billion of ETH, you know, as basically the highest powered money for the next
generation of finance. And I'm talking about supporting trillions of stable coins, RWA, which is at
the early stage. But I think the second message here is that everyone in crypto is looking for
growth. And I think this decision plus the wipeout in the perps market is basically going to
start really differentiating between quality growth assets and non-quality growth assets.
And, you know, you have this debt phenomenon where basically Bitcoin, ETH, and Solana are
probably 99.9% of all debt assets because they have the most utility and the most promise.
But I do think this is going to be a further differentiation between quality crypto assets,
which have a use case, a business model, a mega theme, and those that just basically are being used
for either trading purposes or speculation purposes. And I think this is another watershed moment.
I would just remind people that on October 14th, when BlackRock was issuing its earnings,
Larry made a statement, and he did in his annual letter last year, that all assets will be tokenized.
most of it is happening on Ethereum over 80%.
And to date, there's only been about 30 billion of tokenized assets, and this has been
happening over 7, 8 years.
Wait till you see the largest financial firms in the world, not only tokenize all equities,
but tokenize the largest ETFs.
You're going to see a boom for ETH and the Ethereum network.
And that's why we're very bullish in gathering as much of this as we can at its current prices.
but I think you're going to see a massive differentiation between stable coins, Bitcoin, and
ETH and everything else.
Yeah, and I'll add to that.
I agree.
It's a watershed moment.
You have a couple trillion dollars that's now eligible for bank financing.
So banks are going to lend against this.
You're going to have high net worth and ultra high net worth investors and OGs and Bitcoin
and Ethereum and soon will be sell on a two that not can get liquidity in their holdings
without having to sell and pay tax.
less sell pressure.
You're seeing offerings like Rain Card.
Rain Card has raised a couple hundred million dollars.
They allow crypto natives to walk around, spend against their crypto assets on chain, and live
a life like Mark Zuckerberg.
And Mark Zuckerberg isn't selling metastock.
He's borrowing a 30% loan to value from a big bank against the value as holdings.
So, yeah, this is a big deal.
And what's going to also happen is more of these assets.
are going to enter capital markets and the banking system, which is incredibly ironic,
especially in the wake of choke point 2.0, where they were debanked, ostracized,
and JP Morgan would cancel accounts.
If you disclosed, you had crypto, you could get canceled.
This was just two years ago.
Now you're getting benefits in the form of liquidity if you custody your assets at a bank
or if you contribute your capital in-kind to an ETF.
And, Ron, wait until we see creative,
ways not only to pledge your Bitcoin and eth as collateral, maybe you're going to be able to
soon pledge state teeth as collateral in some manner and then earn yield while you're
while you're using the asset as collateral. That is extremely productive and also differentiated over
Bitcoin. I mean that happens. That is essentially the liquid staking argument, right? Like I recently
helped some folks write a comment letter on that for the SEC where it's like you could almost
have the best of both worlds here, right? You have a,
an asset that is productive contributing to the governance of a network, generating some sort of
return for the holders and is liquid at the same time. The funny part is, like, people act like this
is an alien thing, but we have a whole market where you can, like, hold the asset and earn something
and then trade it right now. It's called the bond market. Right. So, like, this is not an alien
concept for people. But I think, as Rahm was saying, all of this is now breaking to the mainstream
in a way that's going to be transformative for the assets that achieve it. One of the most bullish
things as well is that traditional finance hasn't caught up. Like if you look at accounting standards,
for example, on LSTs, they're intangible assets. So if you're holding those on your balance sheet,
you have to mark them down to the lowest level over the reporting period. As these things get
sorted and they're going to because we've got a government that wants innovation to happen,
we have so many unlocks that are coming on, that are coming along, that are on the horizon,
that are inevitable. That's a very bullish place to be. Well, speaking of potentially being available in the
U.S. at some point, the founder of Binance, CZ, was pardoned by Donald Trump. As a reminder for everybody, CZ pled guilty. It was a plea bargain, not a trial, to one count of willfully violating the Bank Secrecy Act by failing to maintain an effective anti-money laundering program at Binance. He served four months in federal prison for this. And as a long-time banking person myself, I will point out, this is not unique to the crypto industry. There are countless banks that have engaged in similar.
conduct. And even though in the Binance case, there were allegations that CZ knew about this,
again, the same has been true in the banking space. So if you were to look at the history of like
TD Bank, Deutsche Bank, Citibank, HSBC, many others, I'm not sort of picking and choosing favorites.
This is a common problem. And in all of those cases, while there were large fines, people
largely did not go to jail. So Trump granted a full pardon to CZ. After Binance had already
paid a $4.3 billion fine as part of the settlement. The White House framed the pardon as support for
crypto innovation and stated that CZ had been unfairly targeted. CZ said that he was grateful in pledges
to help make America quote the capital of crypto. The critics on the left would say this points
to a possible conflict of interest given Binance's ties to some Trump linked projects. But I want to
start with what do we make of this? What do we think of CZ's pardon? What is it augur for
finance and the regulatory landscape.
Look, I think a lot of people misread CZ.
I know I did, and I think now he will go out in history as one of the most
incredible fintech entrepreneurs of all time.
And somehow he's not on the Forbes list, which makes no sense.
He should be like top 10.
It's one of the most valuable exchanges globally.
I think you actually have the nail on the head, Austin.
There's a disparate treatment here between him and what others did.
Now, you know, there was an early.
exchange that was founded by these Microsoft dropouts. And they were bigger than Coinbase back in the
name. I'm trying to remember the name of it. But they also had BSA, AML, and fractions. They didn't
shut down due to that. So I think in the case of CZ, as was the case with those entrepreneurs
too, they were focused on building a business and just did not understand the compliance
obligations that go with launching a business that moves money and touches money and touches
the banking system.
I think there's an interesting question around, is there a political angle here?
You know, was there any donation made?
You know, you've got to ask ourselves that question, right?
Is there any potential link between the World Liberty Financial Stable Coin and CZ and
Binet's the best exchange for distribution, but they already have their own.
native stable coin will we see an announcement there if we did that would be that would look a bit
funny right but i don't know austin what's your take on is you think there's a political angle or
well i'll i'll pause you to say finance no longer as their own stable coin as the guy who used
to manage the reserve before it was shut down dFS put it into that yeah which you know i'll
maintain by the way that was an own goal both politically and um like a geopolitical level for the
United States. You know, Joseph was talking earlier about the importance of stable coins for the
dollar. And here we had one of the fastest growing stable coins onshore. It was a top three stable
coin. It was in New York. It had reserves that were fully sufficient, fully disclosed. By the way,
I know this because I was managing them. And then when they had to liquidate it, they took it from
$23.5 billion to zero. And it did absolutely nothing to the market. Everybody got their money back.
right like we had it and probably the biggest beneficiary of shutting that down is tether right which is
offshore and not nearly as transparent so i think that was a huge mistake and then it just leads to this
overwhelming sort of pressure by at the time the bide administration on crypto in ways that were
fundamentally unfair like i've been critical of cez's pardon not because i think cz shouldn't have
been pardoned but because i kind of think it's a half measure without stepping back and asking
why are we doing this disparate treatment thing?
Like, what is going on with the Bank Secrecy Act?
That it's okay for HSBC to launder tens of billions of dollars for the cartels.
And if you read that case, there were allegations like literally having boxes
specifically made for the exact size of the teller windows to like shoot them through there.
Right.
Nobody raising red flags about this.
Nobody went to jail.
But of course, in crypto, you go to jail.
I think there needs to be bigger and deeper reform to prevent these issues.
and also, Rom, to your point, when people are starting up a business,
helping to educate them and get them up to speed on what is going on with anti-money laundering compliance of why that matters,
rather than just chopping people's head off with an axe immediately.
Right, right.
So the coin they had was Binance, USD was shut down under showpoint 2.0 with taxes.
That gap is still there.
Couldn't they do a deal with World Liberty Financial, let's say?
I will speak here on this one and say,
I'm not sure Binance wants a single specific stable coin going forward.
They may now see that as a single point of failure problem.
And this is an own goal geopolitically by the U.S.
We could have had a U.S. stable coin on there.
Joseph, you've been trying to buy it.
I'm sorry.
No, I just, I'm less focused on the pardon angle as I am on the implications,
which is I would anticipate weekly held opinion that in the first half of next year,
you're going to see Binance U.S. reinvigorate. My sense is you're going to get a lot of advertising on
this podcast and it'll no longer have the disclaimer not available in all jurisdictions. The real
interesting thing is will they find some way to link the order books? Because the order book
oversees dwarfs anything you would see in a U.S. crypto exchange. And if they're able to find
ways to link order books legitimately. I'm not suggesting they would do it illegitimately.
You're going to see a lot of pressure on U.S. and other crypto exchanges who've had that
regulatory moat and barrier. And I would anticipate they will be very aggressive to take advantage
of this pardon and the clean slate. It's harder to do when you start seeing turnover at the
SEC and CFTC later in administration. I would assume they're going to be.
extremely aggressive, and I think that'll put a lot of pressure on other participants here.
Yeah, I guess I'll just chime in. So I think it's really important to distinguish C-Fi from D-Fi.
The D-Fi argument is completely different. This is technology, and it's the way people use it that
needs to be regulated. Finance is a C-Fi. It's a centralized entity, and it really should be
following the laws that apply to it. It's full stop. Austin, love your take.
The thing that really got me back in the day was what I saw that, I think it was a CFTC court document that said, hey, you could barely even, you know, buy an AK-47 with that $600 or whatever it was.
Like, that set me off, like, to the moon.
I got so angry because I was in Iraq and I was on the receiving end of those AK-47s and it's not fun.
And it's like totally inexcusable to have that type of approach, you know, when you have buddies who were killed next to you, like that is no bueno.
know. And so long story short, but you go back to 2004, they really have crypto. It wasn't going to be
invented for another four or five years. So, you know, then you start thinking and you're like,
wait a second. Before I joined crypto full time, I really had to come to Jesus with myself. And I'm like,
listen, I cannot be involved in any kind of money laundering. It's so core to what I think about.
I went into the OFAC website. I looked at every single fine. And to your point, Austin,
it was all banks. And I'm like, what is going on here? So, so like, we really got a step back.
This is much bigger. We have much bigger issues than going after a CEO. And like, why aren't the other
CEOs doing in jail? Double standard for sure. Yeah, I would say in many ways I regard finance as a symptom
of the problem rather than the problem itself if we're thinking about what's going on. And by the way,
back to the value of the blockchain, like consider how compliance works in the traditional financial
system, right? Like, let's say Rom owns a bank and he's got a bunch of customers.
And he's trying to figure out, can I do business with these customers?
Well, what he's got available to him is basically the information those customers have given him,
what he can verify in government records and other sources like that,
and then the transaction data that he's got.
So if we have a chain of events, right, like to construct something that actually happens in the market,
where ROM's got a customer who sends money to a bank that Chris owns,
and Chris's customer receives it.
They spend money with a card that goes to a business that Joseph is servicing.
And then that business pays a dividend to an owner in a bank that say, I own.
And then that owner is the one who sends money to a terrorist organization.
How the heck would any of you guys have known about it?
You wouldn't.
Everybody is kind of looking at their own feet with a flashlight.
And then we're expecting this to be an effective situation for policing money laundering.
In many ways, Chris, you raise part of the answer, which is when you get to decentralized systems that have a lot more metadata attached to them, even if it's pseudonymous, right?
Like, I'm not saying docs everybody here.
That's crazy.
But the pattern recognition gets much better.
And as you unmask the bad guys, you can start to see flows.
And if you were to have, I don't know, something we've discussed earlier, a U.S.
stable coin with freeze and seize capabilities, now you might have the ability to reach in
there and take that money out.
While again, having created a system where in the first place, we didn't have to KYC
everybody to make that work.
So to me, sort of the thing that I would hope to see come out of this.
and I'm going to say so far we haven't seen much indication of it, which I find disappointing with the current administration,
is that if we really want to move in this direction, we can build a much better platform to stop the actual crime part of this from happening.
Because one end of the disparate treatment, Chris, as you said, is exactly that Cizzi was punished.
Bank executives were not profoundly unfair.
But the other problem is we have one system where we're constantly critiquing it for money laundering, which is crypto,
and another where far more of that is probably occurring, which is banks.
and we just seem to be ignoring it, which I personally find to be a bit of a problem.
All right, Chris doesn't want to dunk on that, which is a good sign.
So final quick topic here, back actually to what Joseph was just saying about the importance
of the government and their operations here.
So there was a whole brouhaha around Brian Quintens becoming CFTC chair and his nomination
being opposed by certain figures in the crypto space that led to it being withdrawn.
But I have good news.
our long national nightmare is finally over.
We have a nominee for the CFTC chair.
And it's Michael Selig.
He was previously the head of the SEC Crypto Task Force,
was also at the CFTC with then commissioner and chair,
Jean-C Carlo.
And he has pledged previously to help make the United States
the crypto capital of the world,
also had a long career as a private lawyer,
was involved with the digital dollar project.
Like, Chris, I'll say you and I both know Mike
and think very highly of him,
but I want to punt to the group
group, maybe actually starting with Joseph on this one, how important is it to have a pro-crypto
CFTC chair for enacting some of the things that we want to as an industry?
Very simple. Two reactions. One is bullish. This is really, really important. You're not going to
have that interneccccccernetcent warfare that we've seen between the SEC and the CFTC. They can
essentially coordinate. But at the same time, I also think we,
need there to be beyond regulatory clarity, you still need to have supervision because I think
this industry has proven they can't necessarily always police themselves. I do think you need to
have clarity. You have to have a pro-crypto leader, but you can't abdicate the responsibility
to enforce those clear laws. I think what's more important to me personally, and this is a personal
opinion is to do to have a separation between the SEC and CFTC the idea that the SEC chairman would
run both i don't think would would be the greatest precedent unless we want to have a unitary
regulator like you have in other jurisdiction so um clearly bullish and i'm also glad we have a
precedent of having two independent uh chairman uh for both SEC and CFTC
The one criticism I've heard of Mike Selegg is that they said, oh, he's too close, sidecar of Chairman Atkins.
Take real offense to that.
I mean, Joseph, I totally appreciate we've got two different agencies here with two different remits.
But they're focused on the same principles and they have to be coordinated.
Like, we want them to be coordinated.
They used to have a joint CFTC SEC committee that was like supposed to come together to address novel issues.
that was disbanded in 2014.
Like, what the hell?
And so, like, I don't think that should be a criticism.
I think that should be an incredible tailwind
and something that he should underscore during his confirmation hearings.
I'm a person who's going to work across agencies to get this thing right
because it's really hard.
It's really complex.
I mean, I've met with both Chairman Atkins and Mike Sealing in the same room,
talking about the same principles.
I'm excited about the path forward.
this isn't missing. I think the big question now is how fast can we get them confirmed,
who are going to be the other commissioners, and then let's get to work, guys. We're running out
of time. We've got a lot to do. I'll pile in to say, I don't think those issues are even unique
specifically to just crypto, right? Like the, call it, discoordination between the SEC and the CFTC
has been a problem writ large, certainly under like Gensler's SEC with regard to how crypto was
handled. But even if you just look at some of what happened with Dodd-Frank and sort of,
of the brouhaha around swaps and who governs security-based swaps and where's the dividing line and
how do we have coherent frameworks for these? Some of these even remain unanswered to this day.
Like I will remind everybody there was a stable value study that was supposed to be completed by 2011
that still is literally not complete partially because of these coordination issues between the regulators.
I'll also say speaking to Chris's point, I think what's important for our regulators and it's
something we failed at recently in the United States is having independent, thoughtful regulators
who are going to listen to all sides on an issue. And I think Mike is one of those people knowing
and personally. You want the critics in the room, specifically the informed critics, right?
Like not the hysterical sky is falling using the internet will kill us all. But there are many
deep critiques of this space. Joseph, I think you've had some of them about some chains in the past.
And on the other hand, I think we need the proponents in the room and we need to get to a good outcome.
and thus we really do need the SEC and CFTC, at least talking with each other respectfully.
They don't always have to agree, but they need to be willing to communicate.
Yeah, no, agree with all that takes.
I mean, these issues are legitimately difficult.
How do you classify these assets?
What's the taxonomy?
They have traits sometimes with derivatives or securities.
Ultimately, you need congressional action.
And we have that coming also with Clarity Act.
So I think the backdrop, you know, back to where we start is very constructive.
I believe it when I see it on the Clarity Act.
I hope you're right.
Yeah, I think going back to Dodd-Frank, that's going to be incredibly difficult to get all of that right in one shot.
But one, hopefully perfect is not the enemy of good.
And two, if you can't do the whole thing, guys, there is the whole idea of breaking it up into parts and passing each one.
So, all right, on that note, we have been rolling for an hour.
So this is where I'm supposed to say thank you to my co-hosts and especially thank you to Joseph Shalom for coming on.
This has been fantastic.
Thank you, Joseph.
Really enjoyed it.
This was super fun, the most conversational podcast that I've been on in a very long time.
So thanks for having me.
I'd love to come back again.
Thank you, Joseph.
We look forward to it.
So thanks for joining us on this episode of Bits and Bips.
We'll be back in a week to discuss more about how the worlds of crypto and macro are colliding.
Until then, take care of everyone.
Rom, have fun in Vegas.
Hi, everyone.
I'm here with Unchained Executive Editor, Steve Earlich.
Welcome, Steve.
Hey, Laura.
You wrote a really interesting article recently about how Dats are using locked tokens in what I will just call creative ways.
Why don't we first start with, you know, what are some of the common misperceptions about locked tokens?
Yeah.
So this was an important place to start the story because one of the things that we both know is that in crypto, they try to sort of appropriate traffic terms to make the industry seem more decipherable to,
out to people. And oftentimes, I've seen this over years and years, and I'm sure you have too,
Laura. The terms locked tokens and vested tokens or vesting become conflated, to the extent that
most people use them as synonyms. But that's very much not the case. Anyone that's ever held
stock options in perhaps a private, like venture back company knows exactly what vesting.
means. Typically, it means you get a certain allotment of shares, often with a one-year cliff,
and then perhaps quarterly or monthly vesting through four or five years. And the key part here
is that with options, perhaps, they're going to vest. They can be forfeited. They can be forfeited
if you leave the company of your own volition. They can be forfeited if you're terminated,
either for a cause or just downsizing. There's nothing to do with your actual cause. Nothing
to do with your actual performance at work.
Lock tokens, what I learned in the course of this reporting,
and it was kind of a suspicion I had as I went about the story,
is that they can meet a lot of different things,
and it really just depends on the person that you're asking.
Typically, lock tokens are presented as, like,
these tokens are behind some sort of vault and some sort of smart contract
out of circulation, and they're not supposed to move,
or I guess the perception is or misperception is that they're not going to move until some sort of quote-unquote vesting schedule has been met.
But what I found out the course of this reporting, and this isn't even just related to that, but lock tokens, they can move.
They can move between holders.
They can move between custodians.
Lock tokens can often be staked.
And really, it seems like the only common denominator between all the different ways of using lock tokens is that they don't enter sort of circulation.
to the extent that you can buy them with spot markets.
But there's a lot going on behind the scenes that falls under the, I guess, the term locked tokens.
So what did you find out about how DATs are using locked tokens?
So DATs are sort of following the playbook, first started by VC firms that would often buy
sizable allotments, eight, nine figures of these tokens, often at a discount.
And this discount can vary from 15%, I think, to as much as 60%, is what it's.
found in one of the companies I investigated.
And obviously, that can be very, that can be very profitable for these firms because they're
buying at a discount.
And then because of a lot of the hype surrounding that, especially in the late spring,
early summer, they still traded at a premium despite what could have been, despite a potential
illiquidity discount that was applied to the purchases, investors in the actual stocks.
seemed to ignore it. That was all part of the, all part of the hype. But then what really was,
I guess, doubly beneficial for these companies is that not only were they buying the locked tokens,
they were able to get those tokens and then issue shares that would become liquid much sooner
than the tokens, that then they could be sold on the public markets. So they got the benefit
of buying in bulk and a discount, but then we're able to basically sell these shares at a premium
that were backed by locked tokens to retail investors.
So it's a really terrific way to juice earnings if you're able to buy it, sizable discounts in bulk.
But retail investors don't seem to care about that when they're pricing these assets.
Oh, actually, there was so I understand what you're saying.
But also I thought that another group that was benefiting is the insiders who, like if they had been allocated locked tokens,
then they put them in this debt.
then they get liquid shares back that they that are trading at higher you know,
MNAV than one and then they can get liquidity faster and also yeah like a much higher
valuation is that. Yeah, that's true. I mean that that's part too because with some of the
companies that I looked at for the story and they looked at SWE group which partnered
with the SWEEF foundation. I looked at stablecoin X which partnered with the Athena
Foundation. I mean there's there's others too. They partnered with
the issuers or the insiders of these tokens.
And when they got, so when those foundations,
they put those locked tokens into the exchanges,
they then would get liquid shares back.
I mean, Sween Group, for instance,
they, in the SEC filings in the 8K,
when all this was announced,
there was language to the fact that tokens put into the debt
were going to be locked for two years
from, I guess, the finalization of the business combination agreement.
And to me, that immediately led to some questions because clearly they're changing whatever locked schedule was prior to these tokens, if they're going to say there's going to be a new locked schedule from here on out.
Then what I also saw in the filings is that many of those shares backed by the locked tokens and the tokens will be locked for about two years will become unlocked after one year, some as early as six months.
So that's clearly benefiting some of these insiders.
Those aren't even the most egregious examples.
I mean, I wrote a story a few weeks ago about an AI-focused blockchain called Zero Gravity.
And in that case, and this is an example where virtually everyone in the industry I've spoken to said,
this is the exact example of what not to do.
The founders of that blockchain put about $300 million of locked tokens into the stat,
and then they got liquid shares immediately.
And that's the most egregious example.
but this is certainly a way for some of the foundations to get liquidity for liquidity against illiquid assets.
So there's a few different opportunities for insiders in these groups to really benefit financially from,
I don't know if taking advantage of is the right terminology, but being creative in how they're using these locked tokens.
And you mentioned sweet group and stablecoin X.
And as you also said, there are other companies that are doing this.
These are just the ones that you happen to write about in the article.
How did they respond when you asked them, you know, questions about what they were doing here?
So it's funny.
Both Stablecoin X and Swee group, the rationale basically was, well, we looked at what everyone else was doing and we're the most conservative.
This is, or something to the effect of this is within market trends.
It wasn't necessarily like, well, actually, to be fair, I mean, Staplecoin X, they gave me a bit of a longer,
explanation and they also said that like look for some of these tokens if there's not enough
liquidity that can lead to jar in price movements upward down and they want to try to smooth
the market seeded with enough reclutity almost like a market maker to an extent i'll leave it to
people reading the story and listening to this interview to judge themselves if they think that's a
good enough reason but it was funny when i spoke to people they basically said well we're not being
as egregious as everybody else that was that was primarily the
the rationale. So, I mean, that's kind of what I heard. I mean, there's nothing ostensibly illegal
about this from what I can tell. It's just, again, being very creative and there's lots of
information like this hidden in SEC filings when it comes to these tokens. And it comes down sometimes
to the information asymmetries between the insiders who are putting all these deals together.
And then the retail investors that either don't have the time or don't have or just don't know where to look to find out this, this
information and it's important for people to have. So that's why we write about it.
Yeah. One other piece of it that I thought about was that by those insiders who had initially
been allocated the locked tokens by them getting liquidity via the DAT shares, they sort of, you could say,
you know, they're kind of like cashing out early and it might decrease their incentive to keep
working on the project and to, like, it's almost like their incentives are no longer as a line.
with the community. So that was like another kind of downside that I thought about.
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, there's a reason why there's vesting schedules for key executives
in venture-backed startups. You want to keep them incentivized to work over a long period of
time. And the same goes for token foundations and blockchain foundations. You want key people
there. Long-term interest alignment is critical. So if there are opportunities,
for early exits, sometimes they can be very difficult to say no to, depending on someone's
financial circumstances, et cetera.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, that was super interesting.
Thanks so much for sharing about your story.
Thanks, Laura.
Steve, you wrote an article for the Bits & Bibs newsletter on how Bitcoin mining stocks are
soaring, but this may not actually pretend good news for the Bitcoin mining industry, particularly
in the U.S.
What did you find with your article?
So this was actually a fun one to write because Bitcoin mining stocks and Bitcoin miners in general,
they have a soft spot in my heart.
I mean, they're sort of the unsung workforces of the entire industry.
Bitcoin doesn't exist if there's no miners.
Yet they continue to play second fiddle or have continued to play second fiddle to the ETF issuers,
to the debts, to strategy for years and years and years.
because of just some very challenging economics that they face.
Hash rate continues to go up.
They have to keep raising money to spend eight, nine,
sometimes ten figures to buy new miners every couple of years
in order to sort of maintain parity with this computational arms race to mine Bitcoin.
But they've caught a big break.
They are right now, it was smack in the middle of,
I guess the AI crazed, the AI bubble,
depending on how you want to see it.
And in a world where right now,
Sam Altman and Larry Ellison and all the like
are scouring the globe to try to find ways
to increase data center capacity
to run all these LLMs,
Bitcoin miners offer one of the few places,
or one of the few opportunities to have like turnkey facilities
to immediately increase scale.
So I spoke with John Todaro,
managing director at need of company and investment bank about how sort of the equities analyst the world is now
re-rating or completely changing the way that they're looking at bitcoin mining stocks and basically what he told me is that
bitcoin mining stocks now are not even brought to be or they're not being judged as mining stocks anymore.
They are being rated as HBC high-performance computing type stocks like these special cloud providers that can support
LLMs. And what we're seeing is a dramatic change in the fortunes of the stocks, which has just been
soaring over the last few months, while Bitcoin kind of languishes, goes down a little bit,
and that companies are crashing. So this is a really important moment for Bitcoin mining stocks.
And for them, for their shareholders, it's a very welcome change after a couple of years of having
to sort of explain themselves a little bit. And actually, I just, I just realized something.
So Bitcoin miners use ASX, and ASICs are computer chips that have been designed to specialize in a particular function.
And I thought that Bitcoin mining companies had ASICs that were designed specifically for Bitcoin mining.
So is it something that can actually be easily adapted to doing AI-type computing?
Good question. Not those machines. You're right. They use ASICs. I mean, those are that stands for application-specific integrated circuit.
It's basically just a fancy word for a computer chip.
They can only do one thing.
And in this case, they basically run the hashing algorithm that supports Bitcoin.
So those machines can't really be repurposed for anything else.
Some other proof of work algorithms that might use GPUs, those could be repurposed a little bit,
but the Bitcoin ones can't.
But what these companies really want, they want the power capacity, they want the rack space,
they want the infrastructure.
They will help pay for bringing in the Nvidia chip.
and all the other actual hardware needed to make this happen.
But factories and warehouses and fiber optic cables don't just spring up all of a sudden.
And that's what these Bitcoin miners have in spades.
And that's why they're the bell of the ball right now.
And how easy is it to switch from Bitcoin mining to this HPC
or high-performance computing type of work?
It's not as easy.
I mean, turnkey might be a little bit of a hyperbriolic term,
But it's not as hard as you might think.
There is investment that has to go into this because HPC computing is much more resource-intensive than even Bitcoin.
I mean, sometimes it can cost 20 times as much money to create an HPC-type facility as opposed to Bitcoin mining one.
But the trade-off is that unlike Bitcoin mining, where you don't know how many blocks you're going to mine in a particular quarter, it's a rat race, and you never know what's going to happen.
You can sign these 10- or 15-year contracts where you can come.
kind of have guaranteed revenue.
I mean, you're seeing this with core scientific and core weave.
So these companies now know that they don't have to play a guessing game.
They don't have to head, they know what's going to come as long as they meet their obligations.
But the flip side of this means that once these Bitcoin miners make the decision to really turn into HBC,
and at this point, John Todaro, who has spent before the article, told me that among all the major
public Bitcoin miners, the marathons, the riots, the clean sparks, hot eggs, terror wolf, iris, etc.
There's not a single one that's a pure play Bitcoin miner anymore.
And there were even a few a couple months ago.
Because of the long duration of these contracts, there is no, basically those facilities will not be able to turn back to Bitcoin, even if they wanted to for a decade, a decade and a half at least.
And that means that this is a major sea change in how these companies are going to operate because there is the risk.
I mean, we've all heard about the AI bubble.
There's so much money.
I mean, trillions of dollars potentially being raised.
to build infrastructure.
And a lot of companies that are using AI
haven't quite figured out how to implement them
into their businesses across any industry profitably.
I mean, even we're experimenting
with certain AI research tools and stuff.
So there's a lot of checks being written.
They're going to have to be cashed in the coming years.
And if, for instance, the AI vocal pops,
some of these Bitcoin miners,
they certainly could be left holding the bag
and having these big infrastructure outlays
where they have to raise debt.
They have to do other things to get the money.
And they may not be able to,
They may struggle on the back end of some of these deals.
That's the risk.
But right now, there's tremendous opportunity for them.
Okay.
And so, you know, you said in your article that you feel like this could either send
Bitcoin mining out of the U.S.
or just, you know, hurt the Bitcoin mining industry in the U.S.
But, like, why is this in the U.S. in particular?
Why isn't this affecting the entire industry, like even in other geographies?
So it comes down to sort of the image.
infrastructure that already exists in the US.
Like we have these facilities, we have fiber optic cable laid throughout the entire country.
So it's much easier to turn those, convert those facilities into HPC,
HBC like cloud facilities, then because it's much easier to turn those things into HBC facilities
than building it somewhere else around the world.
Bitcoin mining in a way, it's almost like water going through cracks,
or a river that finds its way alongside certain debris in a stream.
Like Bitcoin mining is something that doesn't need necessarily the same types of resources,
and still heavy ones, but it doesn't need the same type of fiber optic cable
and all types of other things like this.
So basically what Mr. Kedarro told me is that Bitcoin mining is going to continue
to move elsewhere around the world where there's cheap power sources,
but maybe not this very high-tech infrastructure that HBC computing really.
needs. So the implication for all this is that Bitcoin mining, which I think about 15 to 20 percent of
the global hash rate exists in the U.S., that might fall a little bit, which is a little ironic
given that President Trump back in July said maybe a little tongue-in-cheek that he wanted
all remaining Bitcoin to be mined in the United States. And his two eldest sons are involved in a
Bitcoin mining company in the United States. But it certainly seems that the percentage, the
the US percentage of global hash rate could drop as Bitcoin mining becomes a little bit more distributed
around the globe. And these facilities in the US, which can be more easily converted into HBC,
they take that step because it just makes more financial sense for companies to do that.
And basically, like the big picture takeaways here are, I mean, one, as I said before,
if the AI bubble bursts and these Bitcoin mining companies have taken on billions of debt,
billions in debt or gotten over their skis a little bit, that could lead the financial problems
a few years down the line. But then basically what liquid happened is some sort of new equilibrium
is going to be created between HPC computing and Bitcoin mining, which is not necessarily a bad
thing. And I don't expect hash rate to go down at all. I mean, maybe Bitcoin mining becomes a little
more concentrated or maybe it becomes a little less concentrated. We'll have to see what that happens.
We'll have to see how that all shakes out.
But, I mean, the big miners, the bit names, the microvetees,
they're going to keep pumping out more powerful machines.
So the hash rate's going to keep coming up.
The actual mix of hashing power is something to watch as the years go on.
Okay.
All right.
Well, super interesting article.
Thanks so much for sharing, Steve.
Yeah, thanks, Laura.
