We Study Billionaires - The Investor’s Podcast Network - BTC064: Bitcoin and Fidelity's Director of Global Macro Jurrien Timmer (Bitcoin Podcast)
Episode Date: February 9, 2022IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN: 01:01 - Who influenced Jurrien and what was sage advice he received when he was first learning? 05:21 - What are some of the most important variables he looks at for... cycle timing? 13:58 - How much can the FED realistically raise rates in the current cycle. 21:25 - How Jurrien thinks about earnings growth decline and P/E stagnation during a bull run. 28:45 - What Jurrien's long-term secular outlook is for equities and bonds. 30:55 - How does the FED respond to inflation in 2022? 35:26 - Why has Fidelity been so early to Bitcoin compared to other Wall Street banks? 35:26 - Why Fidelity views bitcoin differently than other digital assets. 35:26 - What differences does Jurrien see with Bitcoin compared to other assets he's studied through the years? 35:26 - Bitcoin Stock to flow (supply model) versus Bitcoin Demand Model (S-Curve). 51:49 - The Volcano Bond and how it might be used as a model in the future. *Disclaimer: Slight timestamp discrepancies may occur due to podcast platform differences. BOOKS AND RESOURCES Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community to engage in meaningful stock investing discussions with Stig, Clay, and the other community members. Jurrien Timmer's Twitter Account. Link to Fidelity's recently published white paper on Bitcoin. New to the show? Check out our We Study Billionaires Starter Packs. Browse through all our episodes (complete with transcripts) here. SPONSORS Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors: Bluehost Fintool PrizePicks Vanta Onramp SimpleMining Fundrise TurboTax Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm
Transcript
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You're listening to TIP.
Hey everyone.
Welcome to this Wednesday's release of the podcast where we're talking about Bitcoin.
On today's show, I'm super excited to bring you this conversation with Urien Timmer.
Urien is the director of global macro investing at Fidelity.
We cover so much ground in this conversation to include his expectations for the fixed income and equity markets going into this year.
Why and how Fidelity has been able to be so progressive and early to Bitcoin when everyone else on Wall Street has taken so much time to FDICT,
figure it out. We talk about a lot of his incredible charts and much, much more. So without further delay,
here's my chat with the brilliant Urien Timmer. You're listening to Bitcoin Fundamentals by the
Investors Podcast Network. Now for your host, Preston Pish. Hey, everyone, like we said in the
intro, I'm here with Urien Timor. Urien, I've been a fanboy. I've been kind of stalking your
Twitter profile and your charts that you're posting on here are just fantastic and you're posting
so many of them that have just added tremendous value to me. And I really try to, as an investor,
I'm constantly trying to understand where I'm at in the market cycle and you have provided that
in spades. I guess this is my first question for you. So whenever I've heard interviews with people
like Stan Drucken Miller and some of the greats in investing, Stan talks about how he had a person
very early on. I think he was right out of college and the mentor said, watch the Fed, watch what
they do and watch them very closely and then develop your smaller micro thesis off of that.
I'm curious for you, having been in the investing space for decades and extremely experienced
and in charge of macro at Fidelity, did you have a mentor like that? And if you did,
what is some of the things maybe advice-wise that just shaped you and information?
influenced you to become the investor that you are today?
Thank you very much for having me on.
I would say my mentor was Mr. Johnson, the then chairman of Fidelity, we call him Ned.
But, you know, he personally hired me at Fidelity 27 years ago, and I was hired there to
work in the char room.
So I was hired as a technical analyst, which is why I guess I'm such a visual person.
but Mr. Johnson was and is a very visual person as well. And so, you know, I worked in the chart room,
which of course were, you know, floor to ceiling, 30 foot long charts. He taught me a lot of what I know.
And, you know, he was a really valuable mentor. You know, he would come over, you know,
it's kind of funny, but he would be on his way to some board meeting and he would sneak into the
chart room and grabbed me and we, you know, spend a couple hours there and then his assistants
would be looking for us like Mr. Johnson. You need to come to the meeting. But his passion,
you know, what was charts? And so I learned a lot, a lot from him how the markets fit together.
He would just draw on the chart physically going back to the 60s and explain the 1968 speculative
blow off. And I, you know, I use that today, you know, because we have the meme stocks. And
There are a lot of similarities, and that period was not well documented.
And so the kind of, you know, the oral history was extremely valuable.
What would you say some of the critical variables were that he would look at?
Was it currency and interest rates that he would be particularly paying attention to as the bigger,
broader waves in the market to kind of understand how everything would else, everything else
would be getting bumped around or QSN to maybe some of the bigger, broader brush strokes?
He would look a lot at the internals of the market. So, you know, are our small caps confirming
large caps? Or what are the breadth numbers? Topps and bottoms, do you see the greed and fear
show up in the markets? Did you see the capitulation watching the money flow? And obviously,
all the other elements that you just described, you know, weave into that. Obviously,
my background is actually a bond person because before Fidelity, I worked in New York for a
Dutch bank running a bond desk for them. We would execute back then, they were Eurobonds for
the Belgian dentist, you know, kind of maybe you're too young to remember that. But that was like
a whole thing in the 80s and 90s. And that was a very valuable learning experience because
Because if you want to understand the stock market, you really need to understand interest rates.
And obviously, the Fed plays a very valuable or very important role in that.
But interest rates is probably the backbone.
It's probably the most important thing you can know when you're trying to understand the stock
market because that interest rate goes right into the discounted cash flow model.
And it's a very big variable.
You know, most people think about earnings and obviously earnings ultimately will drive the market.
But the interest rate side of it is a very valuable component as well.
You often hear, especially with younger investors that back in the 80s, we had the 10-year treasury
at 16%. But what's often missed or not put with that is what the inflation rate was, right?
So you were dealing with 100 basis or 200 basis point spread back then, even though the nominal
yield was call it 16%. Today, when we're looking at these spreads right now,
It's astronomical. We're dealing with a 10-year around 2%, and inflation prints of 7% for a negative 500 basis point spread, which you tell me, you live this, but when I'm looking at that, I'm saying, that's crazy, especially when you're comparing it to any type of historical context for anybody alive right now. This spread seems to be a somewhat eyes popping out of the head kind of moment. How are you interpreting it?
You're referring to real rates, which is really an extremely important driver.
And historically, generally speaking, real rates are positive to varying degrees.
And that's probably how it should be.
But you do have periods where real rates have been negative.
And one of my many, many charts that I've created, I look at kind of the length and stability
of a business cycle going back to the 1800s.
What I found is that the longer the cycle lasts and the more stable it is, those tend to have
modestly positive real rates.
And that's very important because if real rates are too positive, it kind of chokes the economy.
But if they're too negative, it can create basically misallocation of capital or other
instabilities in the markets.
And we look at today, if you look at the CPI, obviously at 7% bond yield as at 1.8, real rates
are minus 500, as you pointed out. The tips market tells a little bit of a different story,
and we can talk about whether the tips market is manipulated by the Fed, which owns 29% of it.
But the market's expectation of inflation is that it's not going to stay at seven, but it's
going to moderate. And that's probably, I think, a reasonable outlook just because of base
effects. But even then, the five-year, five-year-four, tips break-even is 2.1, and the 10-year
yield is 1.8 or so. So you still have
negative real rates and a year ago they were a lot more negative. They were about minus 100.
And you have to go back really to, obviously briefly the early 80s. That was a really crazy
time with the Paul Volcker Fed, you know, really slamming the brakes on inflation. But those were
very short episodes. But to look back in history for a more sustained period of negative real
rates, you have to go back to the 1940s. And there are definitely some parallels with the World War
to 1940s period of financial repression and today's climate, right? So in 1942, the U.S.
joined or mobilized to join World War II. The Fed was not yet independent at that time. That
happened in 1951. That was the Treasury Fed Accord. So the Fed was basically tasked by the Treasury
to monetize the debt. And the debt to GDP went from about 35 percent to 116 percent
in the span of three, four years, so a very, very rapid increase in debt. And the Fed basically
capped short yields and it capped long yields, the T bill at three-eighth, I think, and the 10-year
or the long bond at two and a half percent. And inflation ran at five, six percent, and in some
years a lot higher than that. And the Fed, to be able to protect that yield to cap basically
increase or grew its balance sheet tenfold from 1940 to 1940 to 1940.
So that was a very significant period of financial repression. If you were a bond investor back
then, you would have gotten two and a quarter percent Kager, a compound annual growth rate from
1942 to 1951, which is when the Fed gained independence. And you would have earned about
300 basis points of negative real return. Fast forward to today, very similar story, although
there might be a fork in the road now with the Fed, at least planning on raising
rates by about 200 basis points, which the Fed raised rates at one point during the 40s, but it was
only by, I think, 50 basis points from one to one and a half percent. So maybe we have a fork in the
road now, but you have to go back to the 40s to find a period where you have this rapid
increase in debt because of the pandemic, of course, and then the Fed not explicitly monetizing the
debt, but certainly being on the bid side of all those treasuries being issued.
So, I mean, they were effectively implementing yield curve control.
They weren't referring to it as that when we look at where we're at right now,
you know, they're saying they're going to raise rates.
I suspect that maybe in March they will.
But I think we're going to get to yield curve control pretty quickly here in the coming two to three years.
I'm curious if you would agree with that.
And then what would that look like if you do agree with that?
Certainly the main conundrum in the bond market right now is that yields still
are so low, right? So the Fed is removing itself fairly quickly now via first the taper,
now the turbo taper, that will be done in March, and then presumably they will start hiking rates
in March at a pretty fast clip until they get to probably around 2%. At least that's what the
market is saying via the Fed Fund's futures curve or the Eurodollar curve. They're saying that
the terminal point for this Fed cycle will be around two. The Fed's dot plot has the endpoint closer
to two and a half, but I mean, it's not a huge difference. But the question is, at this point,
the long end of the bond market remains very well controlled. The question is, you know, why is that
is that demographics, is that baby boomers always solving for income? And you can kind of, you know,
connect the dots all the way into the stock market for that as well when you look at valuations.
Maybe it's just the fact that the economy has become so financialized that the economy is just
highly levered to low rates, right? And already the kind of the average mortgage rate is now
above 3%, about 3.5%. So there's been a fairly quick increase in that. So maybe the market
just recognizes that long yields can only go so high before it starts to essentially slow down
the economy. And that will get us to kind of the inversion of the yield curve quicker. And so
So maybe the Fed does not even need to do yield curve control. But I would say, you know, if the
10-year really shot up well beyond 2%, and my fair value, if you will, is around 2, 2 and a quarter,
so I don't think long yields would go much higher than that anyway. But, you know, let's say that
the 10-year goes to 3%. At that point, I could see the Fed maybe getting into a more explicit
form of financial repression, which would be through yield curve control, presumably. So at
I could see it, but maybe the markets are just doing all the heavy lifting for the Fed,
and the Fed won't even have to go there.
But it's interesting, you know, I've studied the Japanese cycle quite a bit, the US around
10 to 15 years behind Japan in terms of the overall demographic trend.
We're not going to end up as bad as they are in terms of, you know, the outright shrinkage
of the population, but demographically, you know, the age dependency ratio growth in the
labor force all heading in the same direction.
And, you know, as you know, in Japan, yields are around zero.
The Bank of Japan's balance sheet is, I think, 128% of GDP.
So the Fed is only at 36%.
So like the Fed is still has a long way to go to get to the Japan levels.
But the Bank of Japan owns half the debt stock in Japan, and it's buying half the flow.
And so it's not maybe explicit yield curve control, but the Bank of Japan is a very large
player, and it just basically has tamed the bond market into submission. The volatility of the long
JGB, the Japanese government bond, is three, whereas the volatility, the annualized volatility of the
U.S. long bond is 11. So there is no yield, there's no volatility. There are days where the
JGB market doesn't even trade. The Bank of Japan is really the only player there. And so it wouldn't
shock me at all if five to ten years from now the U.S. is in the same boat, and whether the Fed has
to do it explicitly or whether market forces will do it for them, we'll have to see.
When we look at the current cycle that we're talking about right now, the trends when you're
looking at the yield curve inversion kind of suggest that maybe around the summer time frame into
the fall is when that inversion might happen. Is that the timeline that you're kind of looking at,
or do you find that too hard to even kind of forecast?
When I look at the curve, and obviously the three-month-tenure remains very steep because
the Fed has not begun lifting rates yet, and the long end is pretty stable at around
1-8-19 or so.
But the 2s-to-10s curve obviously is flattening pretty dramatically.
I think it's around 60 basis points.
And it's actually interesting that the two-year note is still as low as it is.
It's just a little bit above 1% even though the Fed Funds curve,
is pricing in about 200 basis points of hikes over the next two years. So you would think the two-year
node would fully reflect that. But it doesn't for some reason. And maybe the bond market just
assumes that the Fed will not be able to do all the 200 basis points. But the Tuesday
is around 60 and flattening fairly quickly. And so at some point, if the market perceives
that the Fed is not going to stop at, let's say, four or five hikes and not even at eight hikes,
but maybe go to 9, 10, or 11, which is kind of what we had in 2018, where the market was
completely chill for two years while the Fed was hiking rates very, very consistently. And then the Fed
was perceived to go just a bridge too far, and then the market fell, had a pretty sharp correction
of 20%, which was very short-lived, and it caused the Fed to pivot. But still, maybe, maybe
there's an element in the market that thinks that the Fed is just talking very hawkishly
and letting the markets do their work for them, but that they don't actually have to see it
through all the way to the end. And I think that's a very important open question, because right now
financial conditions are tightening, but they remain quite loose. The yield curve is flattening,
but it remains positive. My expectation is that the headline inflation numbers will moderate,
rate, and I think it's just the math of the base effects will likely make that happen. But if
inflation moderates not back to 2%, where it has been over the past decade, but to 3 or 4%, and that
causes the Fed to then say, you know, we're not going to stop it, two, we're going to go to three.
Because if you look at, you know, the natural rate, R-star, which is a theoretical rate that
it's not a market rate, but it's a theoretical construct on the basis of labor force growth, productivity.
there's some kind of risk premium in there as well. It's actually fairly easy to retrofit
the Fed's natural rate number through those three variables. But if the natural rate is somewhere
around half a percent, and that's a real rate, and inflation moderates to, let's say, three and a half
percent, and the Fed goes to two percent, guess what? That still leaves the Fed well below neutral,
and it will leave the real Fed funds rate well below zero. So I think that's the Fed funds rate,
So I think if that actually happens that way, that's probably going to mean a soft landing
for the markets and for the economy.
But if the Fed feels the need to move the goalpost yet again a year from now or what have
you, because inflation is not coming back down, then that's a whole different ballgame.
And then the Fed will have a lot more wood to chop.
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All right, back to the show.
In this chart that you're talking about, I know that you recently posted this in the past
day that you're talking about.
So we'll have a link to that in the show notes for people that are wanting to see that.
Do you were a person that, in my opinion, was truly ringing the bell at the top of this
market cycle, assuming everything keeps unfolding in this direction that it appears that it is.
Back in November, December, you were making posts.
and I'm just going to read two of these posts from, here's one from the 7th of December.
You said earnings growth is slowing.
The Fed wants to taper.
So what's next?
We are bound to get more choppiness.
The same thing happened in 2018, 2016.
And you say, like the seasons, it's a natural part of the market cycle.
On 2 December, you said, earnings have done all the heavy lifting for more than a year now.
The combination of slowing but positive earnings growth and a sideways down, PE, multiple suggests a flat,
out of the bull market slope. I remember looking at these posts, and these were just two examples,
you had a lot of examples with a lot of charts. And I was like, hey, Urian's like ringing the bell here.
And I don't know that everyone's paying attention. But so far, I mean, you have nailed this.
If you could just, and I know people hate this question, but if you could just say two or three or
four things that for you are really important indicators to kind of pay attention to that you
think, hey, this thing's starting to run out of steam. I know you mentioned the two in 10 on the
fixed income side, which I think is a really important chart. But what are those things that you're
paying attention to to be able to make such a bold call like this? So generally speaking,
there are three pillars to a bull market, right? There's obviously earnings growth. You're not going
to have any bull market without earnings growth. You know, abundant liquidity tends to be a
hallmark of a secular bull market or a cyclical bull market for that matter. But I think we're in a
secular bull market that started in 2009. Third one is just interest rates because that feeds directly
into the denominator of the discounted cash flow model. And there's other parts as well. You know,
how much of earnings are being paid back or returned back to shareholders via dividends and now
increasingly via share buybacks. And so the payout ratio in the US, which is around 75%, is a very
important driver and that's driven on the margin by buybacks. But, you know, last year or really the last two
years was a period where it was nothing but tailwinds for the market, right? And so the S&P from
the March 2020 low has gained, I think, 116% to the most recent high on January 4th. Contrast
that to the historical Kager of 11%. Right. So 50, 60% per year is not normal. Obviously,
it came off of a massive decline. So I'm not being completely fair here. But we had obviously the
liquidity impulse from the fiscal side, the CARES Act, the fiscal stimulus. We had all the liquidity
impulse from the Fed through zero rates, sharply negative real rates, 120 billion a month of QE.
And we had, you know, the 10-year trading at 1%, a half a percent, one and a quarter percent.
And that feeds directly into the market. You know, I always get not annoyed, but people make bold
pronouncements about bubble this. I don't see many people actually quantifying it, but you can
actually quantify all of this through the DCF, the discounted cash flow model. That model has a lot of
flaws as well because there are so many variables that you can never isolate one thing. But
my work suggests that a year ago, six, seven, eight months ago, the 10-year yield was about
100 basis points lower than where it should have been based on the financial repression from the Fed
through quantitative easing. That 100 basis points, when you plug that into the DCF, it elevated
the PE by six points. That was a 25% inflation, asset price inflation. I wouldn't quite call that a bubble,
but clearly asset valuations were inflated by about 25% directly from the Fed. The good news is that a lot of
that has reversed. Instead of six points too high, the PE is now two points too high, which is not, you know,
not the end of the world. But that liquidity tide has gone back out. Interest rates are
normalizing. They're getting closer to where they should be, which for the 10 year in my view is
around 2, 2, 2 and a quarter percent. But at the same time, earnings growth is also slowing, right?
Earnings grew 48 percent last year. They are right now expected to grow about 8 percent. That's using just
the sales side consensus estimates. So in 2022, it's really just coming down to just earnings.
And it looks like we're going to have mid to high single digit earnings growth.
We're not going to have that liquidity buffer.
We're not going to have that super low interest rate tailwind.
And this is why you're seeing the rotation in the markets, right?
Guess what?
The meme stocks, which don't necessarily have either earnings or stable earnings,
are not going to make it without earnings growth because they don't have that liquidity
tailwind to drive them higher.
So you're seeing the markets actually, as much as the market feels like a roller coaster,
it's actually very disciplined and very mathematical and very rational.
And what you're seeing with this rotation is the rotation from the small cap growers,
you know, non-profitable tech, the retail favorites, SPACs, IPOs, towards value as rates rise,
financials and energy tend to do well.
And now I think increasingly we'll see a rotation into quality, consumer staples,
utilities. Utility stocks are so boring. They have a .6 beta, which doesn't get you very far in a
secular pool market, but they have a dividend yield north of 3%. They're growing earnings by 6, 7%.
That's a 10% return right there. And in a market where, you know, as you pointed out when you were
highlighting some of my tweets, you know, in a market where you no longer have all of those tailwinds,
you're likely to have a wobble, right? Because you have P.E. Multiple compression, which we're already
seeing, the PE based on 2022 earnings estimates is already down four points from the high, which
is good. It's a good thing. It should be happening because it was artificially inflated earlier.
When the PE is compressing and earnings growth is slowing and the Fed is tightening,
that's the period when you tend to see wobbles in the market. It's not necessarily to start
of a bare market. I don't think we're in a bare market. I think this is a mid-cycle correction, and I think
the Fed will look at the yield curve, for instance, and if the yield curve goes inverted,
my guess is that the Fed will back off. And I think the Fed, the reason why they're being so
hawkish is they're letting the markets do a lot of this stuff for them. So I think this is an
environment, and we've seen this in the past. We saw it in 2010. We saw it in 2004, I think.
We saw it in 2018. You know, the bull market was intact, but you can't go up 50% per year,
especially when some of these tailwinds are turning into headwinds.
And so this is when you tend to see these kinds of corrections.
But it doesn't mean the end of the bull market.
I think the bull market remains intact.
Really?
So you're thinking that we could still make new highs in the equity market right now?
Based on my mostly technical work, I think we're in a secular bull market that started in 2009.
So historically speaking, if you go back to the 1800s, S&P goes up about 1011.
percent nominal. It goes up about six and a half percent real. Within that very, very long, long
history, you tend to see secular bull markets and secular bear markets. And when you look at,
for instance, the 80s and 90s, which was a secular bull market, the 50s and 60s, which was another
one, what they tend to do, and I recognize that the sample size is very small, but they tend to go
up above average for about 18 years by about 18 percent per year, 14 percent in real terms. And
If you just extrapolate those two cycles onto the current one, which in my view started in
2009, we're going to end up, or I shouldn't say that, but we could see an S&P of around
8,000 in the next five years.
So I think this bull market is intact.
I think demographics has a lot to do with it.
Millions and millions of baby boomers, retiring, solving for income, not finding it in the bond
market, but through the mechanism of this financial engineering in the stock market.
So the big growers, big growth stocks, buying back shares, increasing the payout ratio and
returning the earnings indirectly because buybacks are not a direct return of shareholder cash,
but indirectly, you're seeing kind of a cash yield on the S&P of around 3, 4%.
And that doesn't sound like a lot, but it's better than the 2% you get in the bond market.
And I think that is the fuel for why we're seeing valuations be elevated and why the return
profile is elevated. So my sense is that that's the secular backdrop and I want to play the
long game, right? I mean, obviously catching the cycles and, you know, adjusting the amount of
exposures you have based on these various tailwinds or headwinds, I think is important. But that
really long wave, I think is really the most important thing. And I think we're still in it.
For that thesis that you're describing to play out, it would really involve inflation to come back
down into a 2% kind of range or maybe even lower and be able to hold itself there, not just
come down for a two-quarter kind of blowout period. Because like you said earlier, it's all
about the discount cash flow calculation, right? And if we're running inflation at 5% or 4%,
these PE ratios cannot sustain themselves at what has been historically for the last 20 years
in a very low, well, maybe not 20 years, but since the 2008-2009 crisis to be an extremely
low interest rate of one or two percent. So you really think that they're going to be able to get
the supply chains and things like that under control based on what you're saying, you're in?
It's a great question. My sense is that inflation will come back down, but not to the levels
that we were used to, you know, prior to the pandemic, right? So the Fed was obviously, as we know,
chronically underachieving its inflation target of 2%. That was more around 1.5 to 2%.
I don't think we're going back to those levels. I think we might see three, three and a half.
But I don't think that is a cycle killer. If we go to five, six, seven, eight percent,
totally different story, of course. But I think, you know, when you look at, for instance,
the 10-year growth rate in the labor force or any demographic indicator, it pretty well
explains where interest rates happen and likely are going. And so if we are going more in the
direction of Japan, Japan gives us a perfect taste of what might lie ahead, then I think inflation
and interest rates will stay low and maybe inflation will be above the level of interest rates,
which means we'll see negative real rates, again, which we saw throughout the 1940s for a pretty
prolonged period of time, but not to the level where it becomes highly unstable. So I do
think that inflation is not going to explode or continue to explode higher. I do think it will
normalized. But structurally, you look at the labor, the labor markets, you look at real
estate prices. Those are the two components that I think will keep inflation somewhat elevated,
maybe by 100 basis points over what it has been. But to me, that's not enough to end the bull
market. But as you point out, there's a very clear inverse correlation between the PE ratio
on the S&P and the long-term inflation rate. And I tend to use either a five-year Kager or even a two-year,
just to smooth out those year-over-year base effects. So I think the stock market will survive that,
but I think the bigger question is what happens to the stocks to bonds correlation, right, to the 60-40
paradigm, because many, many, probably most investors are in some form of 60-40 because that has
been the M.O for the markets for the last 20-plus years. And so if inflation does become more
structurally elevated, will that cause the 60-40 inverse correlation between the 40, the bond
side and the 60, the equity side? Will it cause that to flip? And that, of course, is a big deal
because if you're an investor and you're in this diversified balance portfolio, you need to make
sure that that 40, you know, we're not obviously getting a lot of yield out of the 40, right?
where nominal yields are 1.8. Real yields are negative. So you're not buying bonds because they're
such a great value. And we know, of course, mathematically that if you buy a bond and you hold it to
maturity, the yield that you're buying on the bond is your return, right? So right now, if you buy a 10-year
bond at 1.8 and you hold it to maturity, you're getting 1.8% nominal. And if inflation is going
to be at 3, you're going to get minus 1.2 negative. So you're not buying bonds because
they're such an attractive bargain, but people have been buying bonds and for good reason, because
they are a diversifier. They zig when the stock markets zags, and generally speaking, that has been
the case over the past 20 years. So if that were to change, and that's not a prediction, but if that
were to change and inflation would be presumably the force that would make that change, then we need
to look elsewhere for real stores of value instead of bonds. So to me, that is.
is the bigger implication for maybe a more structurally higher inflation than what we've seen.
Dureen, all I heard was Ray Dahlia's Risk Parity's Dead. I'm joking with you. I'm not putting words in
your mouth. I'm just joking around. I agree with that. I think it's going to have problems moving
forward, but that's my personal opinion. Fidelity has a PDF released to their clients in January
of 2022, just recently, titled Bitcoin First.
In it, it has, I'm going to read two quotes from this document, at the very beginning of the document.
It says, Bitcoin is fundamentally different from any other digital asset.
No other digital asset is likely to improve upon Bitcoin as a monetary good because Bitcoin
is the most relative to other digital assets, secure, decentralized, sound digital money,
and any improvement will necessarily face tradeoffs.
That's the first quote.
Here's the second quote.
Other non-Bitcoin projects should be elevated from a different percentage.
perspective than Bitcoin. This is a Fidelity document. This is not something that we're reading
off of a blog from a person like me saying these things. I'm blown away. So it appears Fidelity
really understands Bitcoin and they've understand it for a while. This isn't like a new epiphany.
So why? How? What's going on within the company for you guys to be publishing things like
this? So that paper was published by my colleagues at Fidelity digital assets, so FDES, we call them.
And, you know, they know what they're talking about. You know, we were an early mover or an early
adopter of Bitcoin and now, in general, the blockchain, more generally speaking, but we've
been involved in this space for a while. I kind of went down the rabbit hole about a little over a year
ago. I wrote a published a white paper as well, where I likened it to a digital,
form of gold. You know, I mean, it's certainly not novel. I mean, that's a lot of people
think about this. I think, you know, the points that the paper makes are very well made because,
you know, when you look at the trilemma of the scale and scarcity and security, you have to
make tradeoffs if you want to make Bitcoin more scalable. It's going to be maybe not as
secure or not as decentralized. And so I think the paper correctly distinguishes Bitcoin from
other crypto assets or other digital assets. So Bitcoin is not the same as Ethereum. I think that
there is a place for both, but they're not, I wouldn't even count them as the same asset class,
right? So to me, what I looked at when I fell down this rabbit hole is I ended up looking at
a thousand years of history and I looked at the role that gold has played in the past and the
role that Bitcoin can play. And, you know, Bitcoin is extremely unique. And I think that,
you know, the paper cites that because you have both this.
The scarcity component, the supply component, you also have this whole network effect.
And that's why when I look at kind of valuation for Bitcoin, you know, most people that
I read are looking at price, but they're not looking at valuation.
I think valuation is the most important thing always, right?
Because a car could be at a high price or a low price, but what's the value of the car,
right?
That's the most important thing.
And so that's why I combine kind of the stock to flow type model with the S curve model,
I look at historical S-curves, whether it's internet adoption or mobile phone subscribers historically,
and I just regress the number of addresses for Bitcoin against those historical S-curves.
And Bitcoin is the only asset class that I know of where you have both that supply scarcity
and that exponentially growing demand side.
Ethereum has one, but it doesn't have the other, although they're certainly trying to go
in that direction.
But I think the Ethereum skeptics would say that that may be the direction where they're going
into now in terms of managing the supply growth, but that doesn't mean it won't change in the future.
And of course, Bitcoin can't be changed.
It's immutable.
And so that's why that combination of supply scarcity and exponential demand growth or exponential
network effects, I don't know if any other asset class that combines those two.
So I think it's a point that they make that is very valid.
One of the complaints that you hear from a lot of people that are skeptical of the stock to flow
model is that they say that it's just supply. There's no accounting for demand there. When I first
saw you start posting about this and putting them on the same chart, which was the stock to flow,
and then you mentioned the S curve was your demand model. I was just like, oh, I love this,
because it kind of addresses that counterpoint that you often hear when people were talking about
stock to flow. What variable are you using for this S curve? Are you using just wallet addresses or
some type of hash piece? What is it that you're looking at in order to model that S curve out?
To your first point, so the stock to flow model, I think, has been obviously, at least until recently,
very accurate in explaining the price of Bitcoin. But I think over the long run, especially as
the stock to flow model just keeps pointing, you know, exponentially to higher prices,
it left me unsatisfied because there has to be more than the supply scarcity, right?
If there's not a demand for something, it doesn't matter how scarce it is, it's not going
to have a value, right?
So I think the demand side of the equation is, I think, by far the most important one.
And I look at just the number of addresses with a value greater than zero or you can use
value greater than $1,000, just to make sure you don't have duplications. And I think with the value
greater than a dollar, the number of addresses right now is about $40 million. And it continues to
grow to new highs. And the math exercise actually is relatively simple, right? So I just, I looked at
mobile phone subscriptions historically, and I looked at internet adoption historically. And I just
regress those two curves to the last 11, 12 years worth.
of demand for Bitcoin through the number of addresses. That spits out a formula, and then you can
extrapolate, and that's always a dangerous thing to do, of course. But if you assume that the S-curve
is how this works, and that's how Bitcoin will continue to grow, what you get is this exponentially
growing curve that becomes more asymptotic over time. And it departs from the stock to flow,
because the stock to flow on a log scale just keeps going up in a straight line, whereas the demand
curve becomes more asymptotic. So I've been quoted as saying Bitcoin could see 100,000 in the next two
years, and that number just comes from the intersection of those two models, because that's the last
time that the supply model and the demand model meet. And from that point on, the demand model goes up,
it still goes up at a lesser pace. And at that point, those two lines start to diverge for good.
That's really all it is. But there are a lot of examples of this, right? I've compared the whole network
effect for Bitcoin to Apple computer's network effect, right? So as Apple grows its revenues,
its stock price goes up exponentially from that. It doesn't go up in line. And this is Metcalf's
law, of course. Bitcoin is following in the same path. And so I think there's some very robust
logic to why Bitcoin should see higher values as the demand curve evolves.
And maybe other digital assets will do better because they are more scalable, but
at the same time, maybe they're less decentralized.
And that's why I would see, and I think my colleagues at FDAS probably agree, that
to me, Bitcoin is an asset class, like a store value like gold.
And the rest of the digital asset space is more almost like a venture.
asset. I put the rest of the digital asset space in the venture side of an equity portfolio,
you know, like venture capital, but I would put Bitcoin on the bond side of a portfolio
because to me, that's where you have a real store of value in an era of negative real rates
and financial repression. So they have similar volatility and all that stuff, but I would put
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All right. Back to the show.
had a lot of questions online for you wanting to get into a lot of the regulatory stuff.
And we're going to pass over that just because of some of the restrictions you have working
for Fidelity.
And I just want to put that out there so people know that we're not purposely avoiding the
questions.
There's just some restrictions that you're in can get into it.
So we're going to skip over that.
Turdemeaster had a really interesting question here.
He said, have there been any surprising market behavioral differences in Bitcoin as an asset
class versus other asset classes that you've studied throughout your career?
Well, certainly Bitcoin is probably more volatile.
It's interesting, right?
So the sharp ratio for Bitcoin, which is the annualized return over the annualized volatility,
over the past 10, 11, 12 years is actually the same as a 60-40 index.
Not many people know this.
But, you know, if something goes up 260 percent and has a volatility of 80, you're kind
of getting to the same place, but in a lot more of a non-linear way. And I think part of that,
you know, I think a lot of people think of that volatility as as a bug in the system and that it
will smooth out over time as Bitcoin comes of age, right? I like in Bitcoin as a teenager.
A teenager has great potential, but they can also, they can also wreck your car, right? So it's like,
there's kind of a binary side to that. But I think of Bitcoin as where gold was in the 1970s,
right, the gold was, it went from being money to being an asset class. And it went through
price discovery. It was a teenager. It was coming of age. It was very volatile. It went up a lot,
but it had huge, huge drawdowns as well. Bitcoin is doing the same thing, but it's a little bit
different because gold, of course, is a scarce commodity. That's why, you know, it's a store of
value. But there can be some supply response in gold if demand is very high, not a lot because
you have to mine it and all that stuff. But for Bitcoin, that supply response is even harder to
achieve because of the pre-programmed slowdown in future growth. So the volatility, I think in part
is because a lot of people pile in, right? We know about the hoddlers, but I also like to talk about
the tourists that just come in and they're buying it because it goes up and then they puke it out
when it goes down. And so you have that very speculative aspect of it. But the other part is that
you don't have the supply response if demand goes up. So therefore, that increase or decrease in
demand is completely translated into price movements, right? So it's a kind of a price in elasticity,
if you will. And that's a very unique property. And so I think it's actually more of a feature
than a bug. And it's not something that will go away. I think the sharp ratio probably stays the
same. And both the numerator and the denominator go down as there's more adoption over time. But I do
think the volatility is something that will stay around. I like this question. When will retail be
able to buy Bitcoin in custody through their Fidelity account? I don't know, but I know that
obviously we were disappointed that there's not an ETF physically backed ETF coming, at least in the
near term. We do think the market is ready for that. I think the asset class is mature enough
at this point that it can happen and maybe it will. You know, at Fidelity Digital Assets,
We do offer custody and all that stuff for accredited investors.
At what point it ends up in model portfolios?
I couldn't tell you.
But, you know, it's an asset class that's coming of age and it will become more mature
over time.
And so I think that's just something that we'll have to wait for.
Is Fidelity digging into Lightning at all?
I don't know the direct answer, but certainly the L2 side of overcoming the lack of
scalability is certainly an important part of the whole conversation about Bitcoin and how it can
be made more scalable, which of course is what other digital assets are already achieving.
So I think it's an important part of the conversation.
When I looked at this volcano bond that they're doing down in El Salvador, I found this to be
just such a unique security in that half of it is going to be paid as a special coupon.
And I think by setting this up, this structure up, you've opened up this market to the fixed
income space, and not necessarily El Salvador specifically, but something that could be templated
and used in other parts of the world that nobody, I don't think, has ever kind of thought
of a vehicle structure like this and how you got all this pent up capital and fixed income
that's earning a pittance in yield in my personal, I mean, negative yields, deep negative yields
that are chartered for only investing in the fixed income space. And now you have this really
unique idea where half of the amount that's raised is immediately converted into Bitcoin.
It's custodied by that entity. And then at a five-year period later, it's just paid out as a
special coupon to these fixed income investors. They now have direct access, not 100% performance,
but half the performance right there built in, and they're still within their charter constraints.
Is this something that you think is going to be templated into other parts of the world?
Outside of Al-Salvo, you can extract Al-Salvador out of this completely and just kind of looking at
the vehicle type that's being used here. It's certainly super fascinating, right? And it becomes a
question of, will a bond holder be able to stomach the volatility that might come from bonds like
that? And it's a conversation that I think a lot of corporates are having as well. I remember a year
ago when I had published my white paper, I had many, many meetings with corporate pension
plans, CIOs, even some treasurers of Fortune 50 companies. And they were all super interested.
They want to get involved, but the volatility is something that I think has kept a lot of
investors away from the space.
I mean, there's other reasons as well.
It'll be an important test case to see how these bonds do.
And I think, obviously, El Cervador is right there at the beginning of it.
And as other countries presumably adopt a similar structure, and we continue to live in this
period of negative real rates, solving that problem.
in the bond market, I think is a very worthwhile thing to do, whether it's exactly in this
structure or not. Who knows? Someone has to go first and try it, and then we'll see how it goes.
But there's a lot of money tied up in the bond market earning a negative real return.
And so any ways to overcome that either by going into another asset class, which, to your point,
not everyone can do, right? Investors often have to stay in their charter. That's why European
institutions by bonds with a negative yield in Europe because they're mandated to do so by the
central bank. So being able to play around with the parameters within that asset class, I think,
is something that's very innovative and interesting to see how it all plays out.
This is my last question for you. The conversations that you're having with some of these players,
I mean, we're talking billions and billions and dollars at the disposal of each one of the entities.
How has that progressed? Are they much more open to Bitcoin today than they were a year ago, than they were two years ago? Is this a linear interest or is this kind of an exponential interest? From your point of view, how would you describe that?
I would say, you know, a year ago, as Bitcoin was ratcheting up very rapidly and, you know, we published that white paper, I mean, I was having meetings every day with, you know, again, CIOs of humongous companies in the U.S.
And a lot of it was, you know, just curiosity and especially as a fidelity weighing in on the space
with a hopefully objective, well thought out approach. I think that there was a lot of demand for that.
But the caveats always generally were, you know, it's too volatile and it still is. And part of the,
I don't want to call it FOMO, but with Bitcoin not having really gone up over the past year and, you know,
in correction mode as we speak, there's,
There's not as much of an urgency, I think, to say, oh, my, you know, we've got to be in this,
or we're going to lose out. And I think part of it also is the regulatory side. You know,
my colleagues at FDAS, I think I don't want to speak for them, but I think they would
agree with me that some regulation actually is good or would be good because it will
legitimize the space. And I think a lot of that will come actually from the stable coin side
as well, which is also a critical component. And so a lot of big institutions are probably
still waiting for those things to play out because we don't really have a lot of new clarity
on the regulation side. The volatility is still there. And I think with Bitcoin, not at this
point at least going exponentially higher, maybe institutions have a sense that, okay, we don't
have to do this right now. Because, you know, if you're a CIO of a major corporate pension plan,
you need to answer to your board if you buy something that maybe you were earlier than you should
been and then it's down 50% and then you have to explain that. So I think generally speaking,
I think institutions would rather be a little late and have a little bit more of, not certainly,
but a sense of that they know where it's going. And I think the stable coin aspect of that
is a very important part. And of course, the Fed just released a paper on stable coins and on
central bank digital currency. I do think that that's moving in the right direction and probably
these stable coins will become regulated, as they probably should be, so that there at least is there,
there is that sense of security that if you own stable coins, that you know what they're actually
worth. So I think we're heading in the right direction. I'm sure the adoption is higher than where it was
a year ago, because, you know, I was kind of in those early conversations, but I don't know where
things go, you know, after that. But I think on the volatility side, on the regulatory side,
we don't have total clarity yet.
And maybe we won't for a long time.
Maybe the volatility angle will never really be resolved because, as I mentioned earlier,
it's probably more of a feature than a bug to the system.
So, Urien, I just want to tell folks, if you're not following Urien on Twitter,
you need to do that now.
I'm going to have a link to his Twitter account in the show notes.
You are going to be hard pressed to find better charts than these charts that he's putting out.
Is there anything else that you want to highlight or point people towards?
I would just say, you know, think about all these things hard before you get involved.
You know, like I have people still walking up to me or friends that, you know, should I buy Bitcoin?
And I say, well, you need to probably put 100 hours worth of work in it because otherwise you're never going to hoddle Bitcoin when it goes down.
And so only then will you have the conviction.
And the same thing is probably true for the traditional asset market.
You know, understand what drives markets, earnings, liquidity, interest rates, and take a balanced
approach.
And, you know, what I always tell people, which is more for long-term investors, which may or may not be
your audience, but having a plan and then just executing on that plan are the two most important
things, right?
So having a portfolio, whether it includes Bitcoin or not, that is right for you, that you're
buying these assets for the right reason because your time horizon, your risk appetite, your goals,
your financial needs. And then the hardest part is when you do see a drawdown, which we're seeing
in recent weeks, only then do you have the conviction to really stick with it. And sticking with it
is often the difference between making a decent return and not.
Love that. Absolutely love that. So like I said, I'm going to have some links there on the
show notes. You're in. Thank you so much for making time and coming on the show. I am just thrilled
to be able to have this chat with you. I could talk to you all night about this stuff. So thank you for
your time, sir. Thank you very much for having me. Appreciate it. If you guys enjoyed this conversation,
be sure to follow the show on whatever podcast application you use. Just search for We Study Billionaires.
The Bitcoin specific shows come out every Wednesday, and I'd love to have you as a regular listener.
If you enjoyed the show or you learned something new or you found it valuable, if you can leave a
review, we would really appreciate that. And it's something that helps others find the interview
in the search algorithm. So anything you can do to help out.
with a review, we would just greatly appreciate. And with that, thanks for listening and I'll
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