Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - Bitcoin, The US Election, and AI w/ Bill Barhydt | EP #113
Episode Date: August 7, 2024In this episode, Bill and Peter discuss the latest Bitcoin price drop, why it happened, how the upcoming elections might affect Bitcoin and future crypto legislation. Recorded on August 6th, 2024 Vie...ws are my own thoughts, not Financial, Medical, or Legal Advice. 05:42 | The Volatility of Bitcoin Prices 21:39 | Trump at Bitcoin Conference 57:52 | Can Bitcoin Secure Your Retirement? Bill Barhydt is the founder and CEO of Abra, an all-in-one mobile wallet that allows its customers to buy, sell, trade, store, and borrow cryptocurrency. Barhydt is a serial entrepreneur who has worked with NASA, the CIA, and Goldman Sachs. Learn more about Abra: https://www.abra.com/ Follow Bill on X: https://x.com/billbarX ____________ I only endorse products and services I personally use. To see what they are, please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: Get started with Fountain Life and become the CEO of your health: https://fountainlife.com/peter/ AI-powered precision diagnosis you NEED for a healthy gut: https://www.viome.com/peter Reverse the age of your skin with Oneskin; 30% here: http://oneskin.co/PETER   Get real-time feedback on how diet impacts your health with levels.com/peter _____________ Get my new Longevity Practices 2024 book: https://bit.ly/48Hv1j6 I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now: Tech Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's been going on? We've just seen the Bitcoin price drop from 68,000 down
to a low of 49.8. This is another example of not understanding the nature of
exponential growth. What are we gonna see over the next few months as we head
into the election cycle? I do think the tides are changing because they're
getting tired of losing. It's like which way is the wind going, right? Exactly.
Five, 10, 20 years from now,
where's the price per Bitcoin going to trend towards?
As we approach this so-called fourth turning,
what is the dollar?
It becomes easier to define what a Bitcoin is
than it does what a dollar is.
There's gonna be a second coming for crypto
when it merges with AI in the next three to five years. Hi everybody, Peter Diamandis here and welcome to Moonshots. At this moment,
the price of Bitcoin is $56,086 and my blood glucose level as measured on my levels app is
110 and I
Measure my blood glucose level like I measure Bitcoin because it's important for my health
If you want more information about Bitcoin, you can look at Abra We're gonna be talking to the CEO of Abra in a moment
Or if you want information about about levels, I'll have my team put some information down below
about levels, I'll have my team put some information down below. Take a moment and introduce you, Bill Barheit is the founder and CEO of Abra.
It's an all-in-one mobile wallet that allows its customers to buy, trade, sell, and store
and borrow against cryptocurrency.
He's a serial entrepreneur, he's worked at NASA, the CIA, and Goldman Sachs.
I mean, the perfect combination to talk about cryptocurrencies.
We're going to do a deep dive right now.
What just happened in Nashville with the presidential candidates in Japan in their recent Bitcoin
drop, his predictions for the future and why it all matters, and most importantly, the
merger of AI and crypto.
What does the future look like when these two super exponentials are colliding with each other?
Alright, if you like conversations like this, please subscribe so I can bring those individuals to you. Let's jump into the episode.
Hey Bill, good to see you my friend. Where are you today?
I'm at home. I just got back from my sauna and cold plunge, so I'm good to go. Let's do it.
Longevity in Bitcoin, abundance in Bitcoin. That's what it's all about, right? It is I want to dive in, you know
There's a lot happening in the market. There's always a lot happening in the market, but you were just in Nashville
I want to talk about what you heard there
What the presidents are saying what's been going on? We've just seen the Bitcoin price
Drop I'm not gonna call it a crash as people are it dropped from 68,000 down to a low of 49.8
It's recovered since then we're at 56,000 at the moment, but it's always been moving back and forth in that in that channel
What's your reaction to people who are like calling this a crash and are just you know flummoxed about the price coming down 10k
Yeah, I mean this is another example of not understanding the nature of exponential growth
And you know if if if you're looking at something in a base 10 chart and it's growing exponentially
You get a lot of noise
Right. So what you need to do is zoom out
My favorite chart is the 15 year log chart for Bitcoin because it basically looks like
a straight line up and to the right, which is exactly what you would expect when you
have something that shows exponential growth over time, which I know your audience loves
to hear about because we're all about exponential technology and Bitcoin is one of the best
examples of that in software that we've ever had.
So we get these oscillations.
The short-term oscillations are a function of market liquidity.
This past week we had this so-called carry trade in Japan which blew up, which we can
get into if you want, which basically was a result of long-term interest rates in Japan
being out of whack with the rest of the world, which traders were taking advantage of as
traders are known to do.
And when that blew up, what happened right? So so so there's these short-term
Fluctuations that are always going to happen. I think that ultimately
Bitcoin as a scarce
asset
Guaranteed scarce is going to act as a liquidity suck for non scarce assets
I can give you other examples of that in history.
We didn't invent this idea. We invented the digital version of this idea. Ask any family
that has intergenerational wealth why they collect art. Why did they not leave the money
in Weimar papers or other currencies that don't exist anymore, right? Because they knew that those things were not only scarce
because the dead artists couldn't make anymore, right?
But the paper that was their alternative
was likely to fail eventually
because all government-issued currencies eventually fail.
So we just have a much infinitely better version of that now.
Well, listen, I wanna just start by saying thanks
for joining my moonshots to discuss this. For those of you, this is not financial advice, this is a dear friend of mine, Bill just I want to just you know start by saying thanks for joining my moonshots to discuss this
For those of you. This is not financial advice. This is a dear friend of mine Bill and I
Educating each other on what's going on and hopefully you as well
You know, I I do want to say full disclosure. I hold all my Bitcoin on Abra where
Where Bill is the is the CEO?
And so that's the disclosures. I wanted to make up front here, you know I'm also say that I don't I'm not here to give financial investing advice consider an entertainment value or informational value
Go to abra.com later if you want, you know to talk to an advisor, but this is not that so I want to start with
Some fundamentals here what moves the Bitcoin price, you know, I have to believe I want to start with some fundamentals here. What moves the Bitcoin price?
You know, I have to believe I have to imagine from my perspective, you know, we're coming into the halving
The supply is is dropping. We're starting to see presidential candidates and financial institutions talking about
You know buying a Bitcoin. I thought this was the perfect conditions for there to be this massive escalation
You know, I expected it to be you know north of 100 by now and then we see it drop down to 50
I do want to get a little bit of understanding
What's driving this and you know, we'll talk about where you expect Bitcoin to be in the long term the fundamentals of you know
And I've had conversations recently with Kathy wood on this subject and Michael sailor and and now you I'm hitting the triumphant
Triumvirate here. So what's draw what drives the price when it goes up and down?
Is it just supply and demand why why are we not seeing up into the right? Yeah
So so again, I would I would posit that over the right time
frame with the right perspective,
it is up into the right.
What happens when you zoom in, there's a lot of noise.
So let's talk about the noise.
Where does that noise come from?
Why does it not look like that on a line chart,
base 10, as opposed to an exponential log
chart when you zoom out?
OK?
Right, right.
The idea is very simple.
You have something that has a fixed supply and you are valuing that in something that
has an infinitely growing supply, namely the US dollar.
And the rate at which that supply is being created is actually increasing, which is not
supposed to be able to happen because it was originally
supposed to be based on gold, but we no longer do that.
So we can more or less we meaning our overlords can more or less create dollars at will as
often as they want, which is what they do.
So I think during the COVID lockdowns, we printed something like 25% of where we created
25% of the new money supply versus all dollars that had ever existed since,
you know, it's nice to be the king. Yeah. Well, okay, I guess, but they have the same money we do.
And so they're being devalued the same way we are. It's just, I'm guessing that they're wealthier than
a lot of the people at the bottom of the U S income pyramid who don't have assets, they can put those
those dollars into. Okay. So, so back to Bitcoin. So the reason that the price fluctuates
is a couple of things.
One, Bitcoin as a scarce asset generally
will act as a liquidity suck for dollars
that are floating around.
Most scarce assets eventually do.
Dead artists are notoriously good at being captured
by the wealthy over time because it
was one of the best scarce long-term assets we ever had. Central Park Real Estate,
yeah. Central Park Real Estate, exactly. So for the first time we have a
digital version of this that's mathematically provably scarce over time.
So naturally it's going to act as a liquidity suck, however it's a new asset.
15 years in the big picture is nothing.
We have to go back to oil as kind of the latest and previous new asset class.
I mean, obviously, oil has been around forever, but it wasn't as important to society until
we had combustion engines that would need it, and all of a sudden it became the liquid
gold.
So now we have a digital gold if we want to focus on its use as a store value and it's
still new.
Like I said, 15 years in the big picture is not a long time.
So you have the trials and tribulations of the fact that this is a new asset class, people
are still learning, people are still coming in, right?
It is not a hedge against anything yet because it's too new, right?
And so we're still at this point where it's being hoarded by the masses.
There was a book written in the 70s by an Austrian economist even before the internet
existed who predicted that if we had private money that was sound, it would slowly be hoarded by the masses before
it became useful.
And it's astounding to watch Bitcoin play out his kind of playbook almost to the letter
50 years before or 40 years before the internet.
So that's what's happening.
But in between, the government adjusts the liquidity of money, right?
So as inflation started rising, the government tried to take liquidity or money right so as inflation started rising the government tried. To
take liquidity or money out of
circulation. Right by by
basically- you know selling-
assets on its balance sheet
during COVID it was buying.
Assets onto its balance sheet
which had the wonderful effect
of of you know lowering interest
rates so. Anyway so so this has
the fact that risk on assets,
risky assets will go up and down in value
based in the short term,
based upon these changes of liquidity.
Neither of us would argue that one of the most important,
public investable technologies right now is AI
and AI stocks got hammered in the past few days, right?
Does that mean that AI is now worthless?
No, if you look at the same log chart
that I was talking about,
I would posit over the next, not in the last few years,
in the next 10 years, it's gonna look like,
I predict, a straight line up and to the right
with a lot of noise in the middle.
The noise tends to be more micro-driven.
What is the government doing?
What is the Federal Reserve doing?
What are bond markets doing?
The average person doesn't understand those things, in, what is the government doing, what is the Federal Reserve doing, what are bond markets doing.
The average person doesn't understand those things, so they look at the news as the next
best thing to try to interpret what's really going on.
But outside of a president getting shot or going to war, like really big macro shocks,
the daily news is not the biggest driver of these micro movements up and down.
It's things that the average Joe public investor doesn't understand, right?
Which is why I always say your time horizon should be as close to forever as you can make
it because historically this, by the way, I don't know if you know this, people think
Warren Buffett is the best investor in history.
He's not.
In my list, he's number three. Number two is politicians where illegal insider trading for us is legal for them.
And number one is dead people who actually their families don't know that their investment
accounts are still open.
Find the investment accounts 20 years later and they're up and to the right because they
can't screw with them.
That's so funny.
Right.
So that's my point, right?
It's like if you have the right time horizon the noise dissipates your own worst enemy
Yeah, and and so the it's really returning to the fundamentals of what Bitcoin is and believing in it and ignoring the news
And ignoring what's going on?
Is the right is the right mindset then to basically just accumulate over time?
Do you see people with strategies where I'm going to take 10% of my paycheck every month
and put it into Bitcoin and just hold on to it?
We see three things.
There's the active traders and let's put those people aside.
That is not something that I would, even if I was giving investment advice, I would recommend that you not do that unless you really know what you're doing
because your chances of losing money are very high.
Then there's the people who already have accumulated wealth and people who are in the process of
accumulating wealth.
And usually the piece of people who have wealth are also accumulating more wealth, either
via cash flow or whatever.
And what we see now is more and more people who have accumulated
wealth saying, okay, I get it, what percentage of my wealth should be in Bitcoin?
Well, let's answer that question. What's the advice that people are giving? I don't
want to necessarily put you on the spot, but is there an ethos out there?
So I look at it this way, right? I don't perceive risk the way the average person does I'm well
educated I have an engineering degree you know I don't entrepreneur for 30
years so I don't see risk the way the average investor sees risk and I think
most people have risk defined incorrectly so let's put that aside for
a second so I'll try to leave my personal bias out of this.
The older you are, the more dependent upon dollar-based cash flow you're going to be,
you know, unless you're, I guess you would say, unless you're under 60 and maybe you'll
be alive still when we reach longevity escape velocity.
But for other people, they have a cash flow concern to live out their remaining years. And so, you know, putting 10%
of their wealth in Bitcoin is a relatively safe bet in my opinion. And if you had done that over
the last 15 years, it would have had a huge outsized impact on your investing portfolio.
And in my opinion, the younger you get, the more you should be considering putting Bitcoin
or potentially something like a Solana, but let's just focus on Bitcoin for now, in your
portfolio.
And I think that given that we're in this what I call late-stage debt cycle and that
Bitcoin is actually less risky now, to me, the biggest risk with Bitcoin when I was having
the same exact conversation with others eight years ago was technology risk.
And so that technology risk as it relates to Bitcoin has been mitigated, in my opinion.
We could talk about quantum computing and stuff like that, but I think even that will
be addressed over time via other encryption schemes and digital signature schemes.
So as you get younger, I actually think the percentage of your holdings that you should
put in Bitcoin goes up.
And obviously between 10 and 100.
And if you're a computer scientist, a math-oriented person who can really dig in, do the thousand
hours of digging in that Michael Say and and you know others have talked about
it's gonna be very hard for you to become unconvinced that you shouldn't be putting a
You know a big chunk of your net worth in this the young well put differently
It should be the place that you are storing your net worth
Holding your net worth in Bitcoin versus anything else. I think about my net worth in terms of number of Bitcoin now not dollar value
I think that's an important point. I have to say I do too. It's my single largest holding
other than the equities in my venture
companies and
My venture company my venture funds investments, but to me personally, it's my single largest holding and I think about that
I think about what I could have done if I had started 15 years ago
But you know my time machine is broken
You were just at you were just in Nashville to hear RFK and Trump talk about Bitcoin. Let's jump there
What how much did that surprise you?
Bitcoin, let's jump there. How much did that surprise you?
And how meaningful is that to everyone listening here, anyone who's a Bitcoin holder?
Let me talk about RFK first, even though I think it's obviously, well, not obviously,
a million things can happen between now and November, but it's highly unlikely that he
would win.
But having the first presidential candidate speak was astounding.
And the reason that it was astounding is he was not pandering.
I mean, this guy has gone deep.
He has a huge Bitcoin holding personally.
He was describing the technology.
I have friends that have spent time with him on this.
He's done many podcasts in my kind of crypto sphere where he's gone deep on broken money
and you know, it's truly astounding the degree to which he has dug in on not only the history
of our fiat system and how Bitcoin works, but how Bitcoin can complement the dollar
or any fiat system for that matter or other commodity-based system.
And he's gone super deep.
And his presentation and his recommendations for the government to hoard Bitcoin were not
realistic by the way.
But if we got a fraction done of what he was talking about, it would be astounding.
His idea, which is bold, and I love bold ideas, I know you do,
was we should basically have equal percentage of the world's Bitcoin in the US reserves as we do
in the world's gold. I actually don't agree with that, which I can explain why, but my opinion is
less important. What's important is, to your question, we had a viable presidential candidate saying that for the first time.
Now the first person who was on a presidential ticket of any kind that I heard talk about
this was also there and that's Vivek Ramaswamy.
A lot of your audience may not even know who Vivek is.
He is among libertarians, he's a hardcore libertarian.
And a very persuasive speaker.
I mean, unbelievable.
I mean, I am mesmerized when he talked and i am not easily
mesmerized that it's truly is like his knowledge of american history i've never
heard anything like it's amazing
uh... i wish i have a minor in history science i wish that my my knowledge of
of scientific history was was one twentieth of
of his knowledge of americans. Anyway, he has been talking
about fixing, you know, ending the Fed, fixing the money. And the problem is, is that these
all seem like crazy ideas to the average American who's just not informed on this stuff. And
they're really not that crazy ideas. We didn't have a Federal Reserve for the first half
of the existence of the United States. and we survived just fine without trillions of dollars worth of debt.
So you could actually make a case, well, maybe we were better off without a bunch of private
bankers.
By the way, the Federal Reserve is run by private bankers, right?
So they do report to Congress, but it's basically private bankers who basically decide to increase
and decrease the money supply, largely to their own benefit. Right?
So, anyway, so the third person who was on a presidential ticket that spoke was obviously
President Trump.
Now, behind the scenes, myself and a few others, full disclosure, donors, whatnot, have been
talking to him, courting him to say, look, you know, I hate to make this all about politics,
but our space, our industry has been attacked to no end the last four years.
I've never seen anything like it.
I've been involved in venture capital investing since my Netscape days.
Even when I was at NASA, you know, I had friends who were doing VC, so I knew about it.
I knew how it worked.
So, so I'll give myself a little credit and go back 30 years.
I didn't know what a Wells Notice was until I got into the crypto space.
Even though I've done dozens of venture deals over time, all of which have, you know, are
registered deals with the SEC, you're issuing private stock, it gets registered with the
SEC, companies go public, register with the SEC.
Never heard of a Wells Notice.
Almost every major company in the crypto space that I'm friendly with has either received
a Wells Notice, has received a subpoena threatening a Wells Notice, or is in the process of being
investigated potentially leading to a Wells Notice, or has already passed that point and is now fighting in quarter
So all right, so tell us what a Wells notice is a Wells notice is basically the SEC's
Informing you of their intent to sue you for some securities violations, and I'm not a lawyer
So I'm giving you the bill speak on this
and and
Mathematically, okay. What are the odds?
That our one space has found every fraudster, every evil CEO, every law breaker, and managed to put them all in one space and wait for 35
years when all of tech in Silicon Valley where I've grown up, physically grown up because
I've been here most of my life now, has never heard of a Wells notice.
I would say the odds of that are zero.
So clearly there's something else going on here.
How do you spell witch hunt?
Right.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And so, you know, strange bedfellows, right?
So now we come back to President Trump speaking in Nashville and behind the scenes.
And by the way, Nashville was the Bitcoin conference.
Yeah.
It's the largest.
There are multiple Bitcoin conferences in the US around the world.
Bitcoin is not a company.
It's not owned by anyone.
So there are lots of them.
This happens to be the largest run by Bitcoin magazine.
David Bailey's been a longtime friend.
Great, great guy.
He was instrumental, by the way, in what we call in our world orange-pilling President
Trump.
And not only basically arranging for influential donors like the Winklevoss twins and others
in our space to spend time with him, but to explain to him and to actually get his feedback
in a very engaging way on why this has been a problem,
why we're being attacked, why this has to stop.
So he got on stage and he didn't really know how, I guess he was coached, you know, SEC
has been a problem, like I guess he can relate to that.
But you know, he went on stage and said on day one, now he's had a lot of things, okay,
about crypto, about Bitcoin. Some of the now he said a lot of things about crypto,
about Bitcoin.
Some of the Bitcoin maxis don't like the word crypto, by the way.
They don't want to be mixed up in the crypto shitcoins, right?
And I don't agree with that.
It's a word.
And so it's meaning, it's intent, its context is what matters.
But anyway, so he got up there, said a lot of interesting stuff, was clearly prepared and he rambles a little bit like President Trump is known to do. And then he
says, and on day one, I will fire Gary Gensler. And the crowd of 8,000 people literally goes
bananas and loses their mind. Now, he had no idea. He was like, I don't even know if
these people know who Gary Gensler is because I'm guessing
right now a lot of your audience is Googling who is Gary Gensler.
Gary Gensler is the chairman of the SEC.
The SEC, I believe, is run by a commission of five commissioners and presidential appointees,
I believe, and one is based upon who is in power in the executive office, his main commissioner.
And so he's the senior executive for overseeing the securities industry in the United States.
And so, you know, he is basically, for all intents and purposes, an Elizabeth Warren
appointee hell-bent on killing our industry.
And again, I'm not here, it's not about politics, it just is.
I don't want this to be true.
I've voted Democrat before in my life.
I don't really care that much about the difference, but they both print money ad nauseum.
So for me, it's about why are you killing this technology that is the future of money
and banking?
And so he was blown away.
I think it was so blown away that he said it again just to get another reaction and
Yeah, he was taken back. Like I said, he probably believed when they told him to say it
Are you sure these people even know who this guy is? I'm curious. I'm curious in your opinion for both RFK for Vivek and for
Trump is
It the size of the population holding Bitcoin that they're
of the population holding Bitcoin that they're focused on getting the attention of or is it the long-term benefit for
America and humanity of Bitcoin how much what's the mix there? Okay, let's I think it's three things and and and and I'm
I'm gonna be brutally honest. Some of it is money, right? I mean it you know, like he's got large donors in my world now
Right and Vivek did last year as well when he was running on the primary for president, you know, he was the first person willing to stand up for us and it got
him a lot of attention, which I think helped propel him into Trump's arms. And I wouldn't
be surprised if he has a cabinet position or an economic position in Trump's cabinet.
I hope he does.
So, but I think it's three things, right?
I think the first is money.
I think the second is, you know, I think that the Democratic Party underestimated the number
of crypto holders who not only hold this, but truly care about this and believe it's
important.
So what is that number right now you think?
Well crypto holders in the US is probably 50 to 70 million.
50 to 70 million individuals.
Individuals.
That's a lot.
It's a significant amount.
It's a lot.
And thank Robin Hood for some of it, right?
Coinbase obviously, you know.
I mean we don't deal with the small dollar retail but they've done a fantastic job in
making that available. even PayPal, right?
That is easily—now, for all those people, they're not single issue voters, right?
But you can only push a cat into a corner so far before it's going to try to scratch
your eyeballs out.
And so I think that when you factor in the other issues that matter, the percentage where
this is single issue voters, I think we represent three to five percentage points.
I really do.
That's insane for an space that didn't exist a few years ago.
They totally underestimated that.
Now the third part is, and honestly for me, there's another announcement that happened afterwards
that was just as important as the president speaking, but for me it's clearly about the
future of money in this country and the world.
I mean, the United States basically has the global reserve currency and as a result, the
military industrial complex to support it.
That's coming to an end whether we wanted to or not
There's a lot more conversation. Yeah, right. Sure. The question is what is it going to be replaced with?
It is going to be replaced with something
All right, and how does that replacement happen if you read Ray Dalio's book his last book?
It's not a very pretty picture
Historically, it's replaced via wars.
And I don't want that to happen.
This isn't just about, you know, this is cool technology to me.
So long-winded way of saying, you know, people are starting to get it.
And of the three, clearly, RFK had the most impassioned kind of plea for why this technology
matters.
However, when they were done, immediately, Senator Lummis, the senior senator from Wyoming,
got on stage and blew us all away.
She introduced legislation that would cause the United States, for the first time, to
start adding Bitcoin effectively to the country's balance sheets or reserve assets.
Has she always been a strong proponent?
Huge.
Is this recent or it's been for some time?
A few years.
So Wyoming has very interesting, unique bank license regimes specifically for digital assets.
Most states and the federal government have existing bank charters, money transmission
charters where they've kind of made crypto and digital assets a part of those existing
regimes which is complicated.
A lot of these laws go back to the 1930s and 40s.
What Wyoming did, and she was part of this even though she's a national senator, is they created legislations specifically
contemplating digital asset banks.
And a few of those licenses have already been granted.
And so she's gone knee deep on this issue for years.
She's appeared on crypto podcasts, Fox talking about crypto, CNBC talking about crypto, etc.,
etc. talking about crypto, CNBC talking about crypto, et cetera, et cetera.
And so clearly this had been in the work for months, if not years.
And you can see the legislation, if you just go to her Twitter feed, Senator Lemmis, you
can actually go to the webpage and read the legislation.
Now look, if Trump wins, it might have a reasonable chance of getting signed, but we would need both houses because I don't think a Democratic Congress would vote for this right now.
And I'm not even sure the timing is right in the magnitude of numbers she's talking
about.
But the fact that we're now having this conversation, that we've had three people on presidential
tickets, a sitting senator, multiple Congress people,
and from both sides of the aisle, right?
Because you know, Ro Khanna, one of the most technologically astute people in Congress
from here in Silicon Valley, also spoke.
And I give him credit because he took his lumps right now, given his peers' stance
on this.
It's incredible that this is even a conversation.
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All right, let's get back to the episode.
You know, it's interesting years ago. I forget exactly when I was on I
Think was CNBC and talking about
The six the six D's of exponentials, right?
Digitize something in the early days. It's deceptive eventually gets disruptive, but it dematerializes
Demonetizes and democratizes products and services and it's talking about Bitcoin in that regard
And of course, it's exactly what it does. We've digitized money. It's been a deceptive growth. It's now beginning disruptive and it's
dematerialized you monetize and democratized a whole part of the
financial industry and I remember
you know a conversation about what would we be looking for and it was the
adoption of different segments of society
Along the way, right? It's it's going from the entrepreneur to the high net worth individual to the family offices
to and then you know financial institutions sovereign wealth funds and then financial institutions, sovereign wealth funds, and then governments eventually.
Where are we?
Where are we in that progression?
What have we seen?
Obviously, we're seeing this incredible meaningful conversation on the presidential stage, but
we've started to see the financial institutions begin to adopt it and promote it to their customers.
Yes, we've where are we in that?
What are we where we now and what are we looking for next?
OK, so I mentioned earlier that I've been watching Bitcoin play out this kind of playbook from from Hayek's book in the 19th,
Friedrich Hayek, who is considered kind of the one of the founders
of modern Austrian economics wrote this book called The Denationalization of Money.
And it was basic, the premise was we need private money to compete with government money.
And in the US, historically, that's illegal.
You can't do that.
But we have one you can't stop because there's no off switch.
So it's runs and zeros, which turns out are protected free speech, which is a nice interesting way to get around the problem of
making something illegal if you make it protected free speech. The Supreme Court's already opined
on this issue. So that's good, right? We can't stop it, right? So what does it mean from an
adoption perspective to your question? I actually think that having a Bitcoin ETF,
question. I actually think that having a Bitcoin ETF, governments holding Bitcoin, I think these things are interesting from a marketing perspective, but I don't think that they actually
solve long-term real problems for anyone. Obviously, if RFK got his way and the government
bought 20% of Bitcoin, the value of Bitcoin would go up to $100 trillion. And so for those
people who hold Bitcoin, congratulations. That's not the point of Bitcoin, the value of Bitcoin would go up to $100 trillion. And so for those people who hold Bitcoin, congratulations.
That's not the point of Bitcoin.
The point of Bitcoin is that we now have a global system with no off switch that allows
you to store value and move value with no financial intermediary.
That's the value of Bitcoin.
The fact that you can hold it in a vault and trade it via security, which is what ETF is,
is interesting.
It makes it accessible to more investors, which is fine if you're hoarding it.
It's just another way to hoard it then.
But long term, it's not why I got into Bitcoin.
I got into Bitcoin because it solves the problem I'm talking about.
So I think what ultimately matters and what I look at is,
okay, family office is hoarding it, awesome.
Hedge funds, mutual funds, buying it, fantastic.
We're going down that and now with the ETFs,
you get to kind of middle-class retail, IRAs, 401Ks.
Now what I'm looking at are what's happening in Africa, what's happening
in Southeast Asia, what's happening in the poorest parts of Latin America. Venezuela,
which used to be one of the wealthiest countries in the South American peninsula via these moronic, idiotic communist policies has become one of the poorest countries.
Where are we with Bitcoin adoption there?
What Millet has done in Argentina is interesting to me.
He basically saved that country if you look at what's happening economically.
That's where I think Bitcoin adoption and crypto adoption, Bitcoin as money, crypto
as potentially and DeFi as the future of banking, that's where I'm looking next.
Government adoption, I like that for two reasons.
I like government adoption and that discussion for two reasons.
It's great marketing and it takes the heat off of us given everything that we've been
going through for the last five years.
So maybe not the answer you were expecting but for me, if it really is the people's money
and I don't really look at it myself that way but it's a good way to capture the idea.
Does everyone have access?
Can everyone use it?
And right now that's not true.
Not everyone can. But we right now that's not true. Not everyone can
But we're inching closer to that and we've made huge strides in making that happen
Not just with bitcoin as money but this new kind of defi or decentralized finance, which we can talk more about later
As the future of banking. Yeah, and and for me it's the it is the abundance thesis, right? It is
It's the means by which we create global abundance
Accessible accessible to all I want to talk about a little bit of near-term
Elements and then jump in some questions from my I have to still call it my Twitter ecosystem
It's hard to call it. You might X ecosystem because it doesn't sound right. I
Told I told Elon I need a verb Elon. I need a verb. Give me a verb, please. So
The fear meter so I mean we've talked about this before there's there's a meter in the
In the in the economy and in the Bitcoin and crypto ecosystem about fear versus greed
Where are we there in regards to just the investment cycle. Just Bitcoin right now, people...
Oh, fear. I mean, I think the last few days, around the time we're recording this, we went
from euphoria, when the time the ETFs were released, to kind of sideways for a few months,
to fear the last few weeks or last few days.
And a lot of that is coming out of Japan.
So let's talk about Japan.
I want to talk about Japan then in that.
I want to talk about Japan and the impact on interest rates on Bitcoin.
Economies work in cycles.
And one of the most important functions of those cycles, because of the fact that the
government controls the printing and the amount of money in circulation is what the Federal Reserve of the United States chooses to do
as the largest of the world's government banks.
The Federal Reserve basically sets monetary policy, the most important being the Federal
Reserve, the short-term rates, the rates at which banks can lend to each other among other things.
These rates basically can cause money to enter into society at a faster rate or pull money
out of society and they can change the rate of that.
That velocity of money is a huge factor in how these cycles work.
Now, there are a few other things that matter here.
One is that's not the only key tool in the Federal Reserve's toolbox.
They also have the ability to buy assets.
So if you remember during the lockdowns, interest rates got so low that you effectively couldn't
lower interest rates unless you started giving people free money, making them negative.
And so what they started doing is buying assets.
So when they started buying assets, when you buy bonds, you're creating demand for the
bonds artificially.
That drives the price of the bonds up.
When bond prices go up, the rate that the bond provides effectively goes down.
Bond prices versus the rates move in opposite directions.
So by buying those bonds, creating artificial demand, they were actually driving interest
rates down even closer to zero than where they were, right?
In some ways even negative, depending upon how you look at it.
So they have that trick in their tool bag.
They have interest rates, right?
And they can also coordinate with international governments or treasury, right?
So they have some tricks there.
Japan, as some of your viewers may know, basically had a multi-decade deflationary hangover from
its exuberance from the 80s and 90s, and their interest rates have been near zero for a very
long time. Okay, and and so this created an opportunity for traders
to potentially look at free money because they could go into the Japanese markets and
borrow
Dollars or yen in this case at very low rates, right?
even if they're going to invest in dollars the cost of
Pegging or hedging the interest rate or the currency fluctuations is relatively low
and then invest in other assets that would generate cash flow or potentially Nvidia.
It turns out- Seems like a logical thing to do.
Very logical thing to do, especially if your only goal is to make money.
So this ARB trade is known as a carry trade in the hedge fund world, in the trading world.
And this has been going on for a long time to the hedge fund world, in the trading world, and
this has been going on for a long time, to the tune of probably trillions of dollars.
I've heard numbers as high as 20 trillion.
I don't think it's that high.
I think it's probably a fraction of that, but certainly trillions, single-digit trillions.
That's a lot of money.
So last week, the Bank of Japan announced that they were raising their baseline interest
rate by 25
basis points or a quarter of a percent.
And that sent shockwaves through the investing world because not only were investors taking
advantage of this, they were leveraging themselves.
Okay, so when you are levered, right, a small loss gets magnified.
Yes, yes.
Right?
And so the idea here that all of a sudden, if you're buying an asset, leveraging that
asset to borrow more money in Japan and doing it over and over again, we don't know how
far the leverage went.
But what we do know is that the unwind started last week.
Okay?
And it went into overdrive on the first weekend of August.
So connect that now to Bitcoin for us.
Sure. So as the market
basically becomes fearful and traders, hedge funds, whoever, becoming fearful, this will have an
impact on all risk on assets because people are basically fearful that this unwind is just going
to push people towards cash and cause a flight to safety and everybody's
going to be selling and it just kind of propagates and it becomes its own thing.
And so that weekend, this past Sunday, when in the US, which is morning in Japan and Asia,
immediately we saw a big drawdown, one of the biggest we'd ever seen as a matter of
fact in the Nikkei.
So people are selling assets to get cash to cover their shortfall?
And yes, or they're fearful that they may basically be suffering from the hangover of
what everybody else is doing.
Is there a psychologically a point at which people are then going to flee to Bitcoin?
Eventually, we're not there yet.
That's the difference between being an asset
for a thousand years like gold and being an asset like for 15 years. I think there's the
promise of what Bitcoin will become as this hoarding that I talked about and the creation
of this private money happens over the next decade or two. And we get the benefit of that
for being early, right? Because that will be the stable measure of value 50
years from now, right?
In the meantime, we get the benefit of the fact that it's
on its way there.
It's fascinating how public reactions and fear, I mean,
in the financial industry, traders are watching the
financial tickers and news minute to minute. not not the world I want to live in
and I you know the advantage of buying my Bitcoin you know putting it into
Abra just forgetting about holding it is a psychological peace of mind in that
regard but what what are we going to imagine, what are we going to see over the next few
months as we head into the election cycle? And where do you imagine Democrats are going
to come out on this, in particular on the Democratic ticket? Is there, has there been
any softening in their point of view on Bitcoin?
Let me kind of connect the dots here. So as I said, this kind of moves in cycles, right?
And Federal Reserve interest rates, market liquidity, those are the biggest contributors
to those cycles. And what happens is that sometime early in 2022, because of the inflation that was going
on post-COVID, the government was really trying to force interest rates up and take dollars
out of circulation to basically get prices down because bread was super expensive, going
out to dinner was getting expensive.
Toilet paper was expensive.
Yeah, right.
And so we're still suffering from the overhang of that.
It's just that the prices aren't increasing as fast as they were.
So when people say inflation has come down, what they mean is they don't mean the prices
have come down.
They mean the rate of increase has either slowed or stopped, right?
And it hasn't stopped, but it's back down to probably like one and a half percent for
most staples right now.
There are other things like housing that skew it higher.
Okay. So that's fine. Mission accomplished, but that's a cycle. Okay. So now in late 2022,
the Fed said, okay, we're probably at the bottom of that cycle, right? We think that
inflation is moving in the right direction and it'll take 18 months to get there. And
they were mostly right on that.
So then what you want to do is you want to slowly start loosening the purse string on
the money because if you don't, what's going to happen is people are going to stop borrowing,
businesses will stop growing, small and medium sized businesses which are the heartblood
of new job creation historically are going to stop being created, right?
And so they have no choice but to predict to some degree when these cycles are going
to happen.
So slowly, liquidity was coming back in, which is one of the reasons why Bitcoin and tech
stocks had a booming 2023, if you remember.
Yeah, it was an amazing year.
Right.
And it was the velocity of money, even though conditions were still tight,
dramatically flipped. And from ridiculously tight to a little tight. And again, at the edge,
it's that velocity of money that moves markets. And so that slowed late last year. And so it looked
like Bitcoin was going to be flat for a while. The reason, if you remember early last year, right? And so it looked like Bitcoin was going to be flat for a while.
The reason, if you remember early this year, a lot of assets, except for a few stocks,
were very flat, except for Bitcoin, which was up and to the right.
Why?
Well, that was the ETF.
OK, so the ETF at that moment that liquidity was drying up a little, created incremental demand for the
Bitcoin itself because now 401Ks and IRAs for the first time could allocate.
So for the last few months, liquidity has been very dry because the Fed has been very
concerned about making sure that they really got this inflation under control. Now, it's clear that not only do they have it under control,
at least in the short term, because you can't have it under control forever,
but the economy is slowing dramatically. And again, it doesn't matter in absolute numbers,
it matters about the rate of change.
And it's clear that they've turned the Titanic slowly,
and if they don't basically start thinking about the direction of the Titanic now, it's going to be a problem.
So a lot of people are predicting that you're going to see interest rates come down quickly
over the next few months and then the discussion is turning to, okay, we're seeing unemployment
numbers start to trickle up.
Are they going to be able to steer this Titanic quickly enough to stave off a recession or
is it going to be a small recession or is it going to be a big recession? So stave off a recession? Or is it going to be a small recession?
Or is it going to be a big recession?
So staving off a recession is almost impossible.
If the interest rates do come down, what will that mean to the Bitcoin price?
So historically, like I said, risk on assets act as a liquidity suck for dollars sloshing
around the system, which is why the price of Bitcoin was skyrocketing during COVID,
because it was the fastest we had ever printed money and put money proverbially
in circulation in the United States history, actually world history.
And so it won't be that much money, but we have two problems.
One we have to stave off this recession, which means a lot of money is going to come into
the system and risky assets are going to act as a liquidity stock for that.
Stocks, crypto, I think crypto will be number one in terms of percentage gain, technology system and risky assets are going to act as a liquidity suck for that stocks
Crypto, I think crypto will be you know number one in terms of percentage gain
Technology stocks number two small cap stocks number three, etc. Etc down the pipe so the so is the is the you know the
Word on the street so to speak that it's going to be a strong fourth quarter for yes for crypto and Bitcoin
Yes, let's get back to what do to what are you hearing from the Democratic conversation?
I mean, are they going to come out in favor of Bitcoin as well or are they going to stay
flat on this conversation?
I think they have no choice over time but to soften their stance.
They're losing court cases right now, like important court cases.
And that's why we got the ETFs.
They tried to fight the ETFs.
They denied the applications for six or seven years.
And finally, which is what we predicted, somebody, I went on CNBC and said this, BlackRock filed
and took, you know, Grayscale took them to court and said, �Hey, you have to allow this. This
is perfectly legal. There�s no legal reason for you to deny this.� And the court agreed
with them. That�s how we got the ETF.
So I think what happens here is when you start losing these court cases, it does send a message
because the lawyers making these decisions are also people. They don�t want to get their asses kicked regardless of what their subordinates are telling them to do time after time
Right, so I think that is trickling down now to Congress people who are also hearing it from their constituents, right? So there's these
Draconian rules in the US right now that make it extremely difficult for banks themselves to hold
Crypto on their on their kind of
let's call it the bank's balance sheet, which is crazy.
It's just an asset, right?
And so there was legislation introduced a few months ago to undo this SEC rule that
made it difficult for banks.
SEC should have nothing to do with what banks can hold in their balance balance sheet by the way. Nothing as far as I can tell. But they have this they
managed to create this rule that prevented banks from doing it even
though banks are overseen in theory by different regulators. The legislation
was passed but it was vetoed by President Biden. I think if this happened
again under a different administration, Democrat or Republican, it would have a
very good chance of getting signed. I think they regret not signing it, actually.
And so that's a long-winded way of saying, I do think the tides are
changing, both because we're now just not, you know, just taking it on the chin and
we're fighting, but also because they're getting tired of losing. And they're
also seeing, they're also seeing in the donations that
are coming in.
Which way is the wind going, right?
Exactly. And so it's just common sense that at some point, I don't know if you remember
this whole clipper chip nonsense from the 90s with the encryption back when it's gave
days, the Clinton administration was trying to backdoor the ability to read encryption in all new hardware
Yes, I do remember that. Yes. Yeah, and we lost our collective minds in Silicon Valley
I was working on SSL, you know HTTPS back in my Netscape days and right we just couldn't believe it
We're like well this defeats the purpose of everything
We've been trying to do to create e-commerce online and they eventually figured it out and they got it and they acquiesced and everything was fine
This isn't that, unfortunately.
It's going to be a harder fight.
But eventually, one, it's not going to matter long term anyway.
It's just not.
Yeah. Bitcoin will outlast a multitude of administrations.
Me, you, presidents, whoever. Doesn't matter.
And by the way, we're 300 million, 400 million people out of what? 8 billion. So what countries what countries are the biggest Bitcoin holders by percentage of population?
You know, I don't know the answer to that exactly, but I think I have anecdotal evidence.
It's interesting.
It's places like Nigeria, Philippines, Argentina, the US.
Historically, I think India.
Let's see what else comes to mind that I know.
Interesting.
UK.
So it's an interesting mix.
Argentina has always been – look, if you're in Argentina, this is a very interesting,
a very easy discussion to have because if you're over the age of 40, you have lived through so many currency failures,
so much corruption, that this is just obvious.
Right, that's why Miele's a hero now.
Right, because he took the Vect Playbook,
which is look, the only way to stop this corruption
is to shut it all down.
And he did.
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All right, let's go back to our episode.
Let's look forward.
I have to ask this question.
It's the most popular question asked, you know
Five ten twenty years from now. Where's the price per Bitcoin going to you know trend towards?
You know, it's it's hard to answer in dollar terms because I do think that a Bitcoin will equal one Bitcoin, right?
Obviously, yeah, that's that's the easiest and most important answer. I hope yeah, but but as we approach this so-called forth-turning
Right. What is what is the dollar? It becomes easier to define what a Bitcoin is than it does what a dollar is.
So now let's assume nothing changed and the chances of that is zero, but I don't know
how else to answer your question.
So if we keep increasing the money supply by 6% a year on average, which is more or
less what we've done since the 50s.
And what is gold increase?
Gold increases by some percentage points from mining.
Yeah, it more or less matches price inflation plus a couple of percentage points over time
is my understanding.
But if you look at stocks over time, right, and I know Michael Saylor talked about this
on other outlets as well, if you look at the rate of average increase of stock prices over
decades, it matches the rate of increase of the money supply. Is that a coincidence? I
don't think so.
Wow. Wow.
And so, what does that tell you? I mean, it's kind of a scary thought, right? So anyway,
whether it's scary or not, if nothing changes, at a minimum, it should stabilize in terms
of exponential adoption
at some point.
And then the question is, what are we measuring?
Well, if we're measuring it in dollars, it should at least go up 6% to 10% a year because
we're adding 6% to 10% more dollars every year.
Right?
So if you do that math and basically assume that, you know, for the next 10 years, it
goes up by 20% to 25% because we're still getting the exponential adoption.
And then after that, it basically starts to become a slightly better liquidity suck than
equities because you can always create more equities, right?
People create companies, they can make more shares, right?
Can't issue more bitcoins.
So bitcoin should do better, right?
So let's say it's 10%, right?
So you do that out for 20 years, the numbers are astronomical.
You know, no company has ever grown that fast for that on that sustained basis in, in corporate history.
I mean, the way, you know, others look at it is, um, it should be equal to half
the value of holdings and gold or 10% of real estate or whatever the case might be.
Um, I mean, the question becomes ultimately how much has the global economy inflated or 10% of real estate or whatever the case might be I
Mean the question becomes ultimately how much has the global economy inflated at the same time?
But but remember we increase the the supply of gold we find we don't increase the supply goal We find more gold that's usable at the rate of about 2% a year, right?
In commodities we call that the stock to flow ratio of gold
In commodities, we call that the stock to flow ratio of gold. So every 50 years, we double the supply of gold.
In 50 years, the supply of Bitcoin will not have doubled.
We can build up for new property.
So those are assets that, while historically they have been good liquidity stocks for intergenerational
wealth, they're still not optimal.
Bitcoin is optimal for storing intergenerational wealth because you are mathematically certain
how scarce it's going to be.
Let me ask this question that comes over from X from picdoc581.
He says, do you think Bitcoin's price could go higher than what experts predict using
the power law and stock to flow models. Specifically, do you think Bitcoin might see bigger price jumps than usual, parentheses
power law, or that its value might increase more than expected because of the limited
supply?
Yeah.
So there's two ways to look at this.
One is the last question, which implies dollars.
And there I would say, well, what happens if we start printing dollars like crazy again,
because we're trying to deflate our way out of this debt crisis, right?
And of course, at that point, the price of Bitcoin is going to outpace the power law.
It has to, right?
There's just not enough to go around.
The more important question becomes purchasing parity, meaning what am I buying with the
Bitcoin?
And if I was to buy a commodity that
we know more or less what it should be worth.
Starbuck's coffee, a McDonald's burger, whatever it might be.
So if there's the same number of Starbucks, same number of employees, how much Bitcoin
am I using to buy that cup of coffee in 10 years, 20 years, 50 years? I've seen people
do this with the Ferraris in the houses where you see basically how
many Bitcoin it took to buy a Ferrari in 2013.
Well, it took all of them.
You can see how much Bitcoin it takes to buy a Ferrari now and the number is just going
down because it's a deflationary asset.
It's the opposite of the way we're taught to think, which is the value of money should
go down because you're inflating it.
We made that up.
We literally made it up.
And so what we did is we made up something which is more sound, right?
So the answer to that question should be I think Bitcoin follows the power law relatively
closely over time.
So it's a good question. And what that implies to me is that it's purchasing power
should increase versus other things
that you would want to buy with it.
Dollar is a different story because we
can't trust the government to responsibly do anything
with the dollar, and they'll just inflate it to infinity.
And so as a result, the price of Bitcoin on a dollar basis
could go to infinity.
What does that mean?
Here's a couple of questions. I find fascinating. This one is from MAGA 10 4 2 4
Bitcoin doesn't create a source of income for retirement
So and I want to talk about that. I mean if you're holding Bitcoin, how do you create?
How do you make it a source of income? Right? So
Let me just finish your question here. So what would be the strategy
to use PTC for retirement? Is it work, borrow, die, or sell a little bit each month?
So that sounds morbid, work, borrow, die. But hopefully it's work, borrow, longevity.
Yes.
Yeah. And so let's assume it's work, borrow, longevity for a second. And I think the answer
to this question becomes even more interesting.
It's the same answer either way, by the way.
I'm not trying to be cute.
I am, but just for effect.
So I think that the future of Bitcoin as it relates to the dollar, and this is part of
why I love Michael Saylor, he is highly incentivized for the dollar not to fail.
And it's partially related to the answer to this question, which is that the right way
to think about how to generate a yield versus Bitcoin is not my cash flow on Bitcoin.
If my purchasing power on a dollar basis via Bitcoin is going up really fast. What I should be doing is borrowing against that Bitcoin.
And if I borrow at a low enough LTV, in theory, I may never have to pay back the loan.
Okay, now let me unwind that one step at a time and explain what it means.
I want to go deep into this personally and for a number of the questions from the community
here.
Yeah.
Okay, let me paint a picture that is relative to historical finance using your home, which everybody understands.
If you have a house that's worth a million dollars and it's completely paid off and
housing prices in your area have been relatively stable, there's a bunch of banks that will
probably lend you 40% of the value of that house.
It doesn't matter if they will or won't.
Let's just assume for the sake of this discussion they will. Okay?
So you have now a loan for 40% of the value.
Historically with housing, the value of the house only goes up a few percentage points
a year.
But let's say you keep the loan and you're making interest only payments on it for a
few years, but you wait like 10 years and for whatever reason the value of the house
is now $2 million.
Well, 40% is now double what it was before.
But you have a loan to pay back from before. What if you could basically reset that loan
with the same bank so that you're now borrowing $800,000 because it's still 40% of the loan
to value?
Okay. So you'd still have to make the interest payments in this case because the price of
the house isn't going up very fast or at least not compared to other assets, but you've now
drawn more money out of the house.
Okay.
Now, let's think about it in terms of Bitcoin for a second.
Bitcoin is historically going up between, on average, 20 to 40% per year if I factor
in the standard deviation.
I predict that, I commit, well, I should say I predict, I make a the standard deviation, I predict that I can make well I should say
I predict I make a good case I think that we could see 20 to 25 percent increases in
value for the next 15 years. Let's say 25 percent I think is realistic. I think there'll
be years where it's higher but then I think it you know kind of goes into that 10 percent
in dollar terms for the reasons we talked about before because of the government money
printing and the fact that things like gold and real estate are in a fixed float. We increase the amount of that float,
whereas with Bitcoin we don't. So it should get a higher rate of increase over time.
So what does that mean in terms of lending? Let's break it down. Let's say I have a million
dollars worth of Bitcoin and I conservatively borrow 20% of that value in dollars.
I borrowed $200,000.
Let's say that my Bitcoin increases in value the next year 25% so I now have $1.25 million.
The loan to value ratio that I have has gone down, right?
So that means that if I want to stay at 20%, right, I can now borrow 20% of 1.25 million.
You follow?
So as the price of Bitcoin keeps increasing, the amount that I can borrow against this
also continues to increase. Now with the traditional banking
system the banks need you to make that interest payment.
That's how they make their money.
That's how they make their money. But that's not the way DeFi works. So with these DeFi
loans you set a loan to value ratio. So think of this as an online marketplace, right?
Where you're practically borrowing from the Internet itself.
All right. We can come back to the mechanics, but basically you're borrowing
from the bank of the Internet, however it works.
All right. You do the same loan that I just described.
Okay. Bitcoin goes up another 25 percent.
So you can actually borrow at least 25% more and keep your loan to value
ratio the same.
With these DeFi systems, if you're borrowing dollars against something like Bitcoin, you
can actually increase your loan to value ratio to something like 60 to 65% such that if the
price of Bitcoin starts to fall, which would make your loan
to value ratio go up, they might automatically sell some of your Bitcoin.
That's what you're trying to avoid.
You don't want to sell your Bitcoin.
So if you kept your loan to value ratio low for the initial loan, let's say 20% to 30%
to keep it conservative, Bitcoin is still increasing.
You can now not only continue to borrow if you want to and maybe make interest payments,
or you can roll the interest payments over into the principle of the loan, which would
increase the loan to value ratio, if that makes sense.
But you're still far away from 65% in most cases because the interest payments today,
the rate might be between 6% and 10% just depending upon the market gyrations.
But you start to see a model which says you can hold a deflationary asset, Bitcoin, borrow
in an inflationary asset, the dollar, and if you have enough of this asset that's deflationary, in theory, you can borrow forever,
depending upon the math between the inflation and the deflation, right?
So we now have clients who have figured this out, you know, and the only reason that they
haven't figured it out from ABRA yet is because not everybody's heard of ABRA.
And so part of my goal is for everybody who's trying to figure out how to manage their money
long term relative to the answer from Maggie's question that they see that this is a viable
model for leveraging your Bitcoin to live and still not have to sell your Bitcoin.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that's one of the important...
I have another friend, Claire, is asking basically
the same thing.
I don't want to sell my Bitcoin, but I want to be able to borrow against it, earn yield
on it to, you know, to fund my life.
So let's talk about what is, what are you doing at Abra to enable that?
We call these lifestyle loans.
And if you're holding, like I said, it's the same example
I gave you if you're holding millions or hundreds of thousands of dollars to millions of Bitcoin
millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin, we will set up borrow facilities for you using our
registered investment advisor.
Basically these are separately managed accounts which are similar to separately managed accounts
you would get in the equities world.
And that's important because you're not giving your Bitcoin to ABRA, you're actually retaining
title to the Bitcoin.
But if you want to borrow against the Bitcoin, you'll place the Bitcoin into a collateralized
contract using DeFi and then receive stablecoins, which you can use as stablecoins or convert
to dollars.
It doesn't matter, They're the same. And again, depending upon how low that loan to value ratio is, you can even roll the
interest payments over into the principal. You can make the interest payments if you want.
And if the price of Bitcoin is growing faster than the rate of interest, your LTV is still going
down, even though you haven't
been paying the interest, which is super interesting, right?
So if you have conviction for these markets the way I do and I think the way you do, this
model makes perfect sense, right?
Michael Saylor has talked about it.
I've heard others talk about it.
I think we're the first ones to come close to perfecting it.
We've worked on this for a long time.
It's still early, still new, but it's working.
In terms of getting yield on Bitcoin, what kind of numbers are you seeing in the marketplace?
It fluctuates.
It's supply and demand.
We've seen anything from there's months when it's zero to months when it's 15%.
And so, I think steady state over time for the next kind of cycle,
the demand will probably put it in the 4% to 6% range, which is pretty good. But again, these are DeFi based systems. So the important message here, because everybody wants
to know about risk, is, okay, well,
what risk am I taking?
Sure.
You're not lending Bitcoin to Abra or another company.
You're not taking corporate counterparty risk.
When you deposit money in a bank, your asset becomes a liability on the bank's balance
sheet.
That's why the FDIC exists, to address exactly that problem.
So this is't a bank.
You are holding your assets.
If you choose to put them into the DeFi marketplace, the risk you're actually taking is technology
risk.
It's not mostly technology risk.
It's not counterparty risk to Abra.
And that's a big breakthrough because all things considered, no offense to my peers
in the banking world, I would rather trust the open internet if I could than the
banks.
And just to be clear, Abro was last man standing in the category that you are today and you
basically redefined yourself.
Can you speak one second about the process you went through because I think it's important
people understand it.
Yeah, sure.
So we were part of the first generation of crypto lending companies.
We were doing the opposite of what I just said.
We were basically, people were lending money to us and then we would generate yield for
that in kind.
And so if you deposited Bitcoin, you would get more Bitcoin back.
And the counterparty to those transactions was Apper.
And my opinion as to the legality of that doesn't matter.
The government didn't agree with all that.
So we're the last man standing because we weren't doing a lot of the shady stuff that
others were doing, in my opinion.
But regardless, just from a regulatory perspective, we had a long to do
with the SEC, which we've settled several states, which we've settled and then we migrated
to this Registered Investment Advisor, which is an SEC registered entity, which then gives
you these individual separately managed accounts so that you're not actually lending your assets
to ABRA anymore. So if ABRA goes away, you've still retained title to your assets
Okay, that's that's the breakthrough. It's just close to the mantra of not your own keys
Not your coins as you can get yeah and still have somebody helping you. Yes. I completely get that
I mean the other option and personally, you know
The way I wait people listening should think about this you can go by ETF says one point
You can do something like what ABRA does you can?
Get yourself a hardware wallet and hold on to it yourself and it's a matter of
How technically literate you are and how much attention you want to pay to this? Yeah, like I have a degree in computer science
Stanford PhD dropout. I'm telling you I still like get cold hands when I sweaty palms when I have to deal with a lot
Of that stuff your hardware wallet shit. I remember I remember these keys
Talk one second about the wash rules one one moment. So people need to know this
If if
Bitcoin drops substantially
You're able to take the loss and rebuy
the Bitcoin
And take the loss on your stocks unlike with a normal
You know stock where you can't rebuy it and take the loss right away on your stock on your on your taxes. So
Do you think that that situation will last for a while longer?
I have seen no indication that it's going to change. My knowledge, you described it
perfectly, meaning you can take the tax. You can get the gain, the tax write-off immediately,
even if you rebuy the assets within minutes. that is my understanding and I'm not a tax expert,
but I know many people have taken, including myself, have taken advantage of it over time.
I suspect at some point they would be incentivized to close that loophole. By the way,
one of the things that Kennedy proposed was that there should not be any capital gains taxes on
selling crypto assets that are commodity assets.
And I agree with him on this.
I think it's ridiculous.
This is a store of value.
So you're effectively getting taxed twice in the same thing.
So basically, we're paying a tax on the fact that you're decreasing the purchasing parity
of the dollar at my expense.
So I've chosen to put my stuff in another digital currency
that doesn't have that problem.
And now I have to pay you extra for the rights
to not have my purchasing parity fall
when I've already paid tax on the wealth that I generated
in order to get the Bitcoin in the first place.
So it doesn't make any sense, right?
I mean, obviously there's a million things
about our tax system that don't make sense,
but this is way at the top of my list.
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You mentioned DeFi.
For those who don't know what DeFi is, can you give us a 101 and what you think about
DeFi on Bitcoin?
Sure.
This is one of my favorite topics.
So DeFi is short for decentralized finance. The basic idea of decentralized finance or DeFi is to take all of the components of banking
and financial services, lending, savings, certificates of deposit, yield, more sophisticated
instruments like derivatives and make all of those capabilities available using this
latest smart contract technology, which
is software.
But what's unique about this software is that it runs on the open internet, just like Bitcoin,
in a way that it can't be shut off.
There's no off switch.
Right?
So there's no company that owns a DeFi system.
So there are DeFi systems now for borrowing and lending, right? So that's the
marketplace where on the one hand I might deposit Bitcoin into the DeFi marketplace to earn yield
and the other side I might be borrowing it but it's over collateralized in dollars so
I'm not losing money and if the LTV gets too high they're automatically converting those dollars
back to Bitcoin for me so I'm not taking a risk of losing my Bitcoin.
So these marketplaces now manage tens of billions of dollars just for borrowing and lending,
yield and borrowing against your Bitcoin holdings.
That was the kind of first generation.
We're already on like generation four of DeFi where these kids are now developing sophisticated derivative systems, sophisticated
yield generation systems, the likes of which the world has never seen before.
We're basically wholesale rebuilding the entire banking stack, the entire stack of capabilities
of the banking system, one layer at of capabilities of the banking system one
layer at a time over the last five or six years. Ethereum was the first system
that we could use to do this. Now we have Solana which is gaining in popularity
because it's more performant than Bitcoin and scales better. So you can
actually in theory with the upgrades coming to Solana, get almost visa-like numbers in
transaction processing.
And remember, banks are open 35 hours a week.
Maybe some are open an extra five hours on Saturday, so 40 hours a week.
These systems are open 24-7, 168 hours.
They don't close.
There's no holiday. And so this weekend when markets went haywire,
people were able to access their Bitcoin. So I think this is the future of banking.
Do you see Bitcoin getting integrated into the traditional financial systems?
It's hard because the way Bitcoin settles is very different than the way traditional
asset movement works.
And so you get into all these hypothecation and it's complicated, I apologize, but these
re-hypothecation issues related to leverage and other things we talked about earlier that
don't reconcile well with banks.
The problem is not Bitcoin.
The problem is the arcane banks.
Bitcoin works just fine.
So yes, you can do it. My concerns are not related to the things that the government
would have you be concerned about. My concerns are more related to the issues with the banks
themselves. But I actually think the banks are going to be rebuilt faster than people
think over the next 10 years leveraging this technology.
The problem that regulators have now is that these systems have no off switch, no borders.
They don't know anything about draconian banking laws.
They've never heard of the Bank Secrecy Act or KYC rules.
They just run.
Right?
I'm all for following the laws.
I have no problem with following the laws as a company.
I do. I have a team of lawyers that make sure that we do all these things legally. But when
you implement something in software and put it on the internet, they're not asking for
permission anymore. It just runs. Nobody asks for permission to put Bitcoin out there. It
just runs. So these DeFi systems that lend and borrow money and generate yield for people, they just run.
And so this is the future.
So I can't really see a model where the laws and regulations exist the same way they do
today in 25 years.
It's actually not possible.
It doesn't really make any sense.
I think the borders as we know them related to finance are going to disappear just like
they have for messaging on the internet or video streaming or Zoom calls. It's just another protocol. Right?
So we created a protocol for accessing text, hypertext, HTTP. Well, we've now created protocols
for money, first with Bitcoin as the money itself, and then protocols for banking. And
I think Bitcoin is now being integrated into those protocols. The first generation of DeFi or these decentralized finance systems didn't really use Bitcoin.
The next generation actually do.
And the merger of the two is incredible.
That's when you can start to see a world where you don't ask yourself anymore, what is this
worth in dollars, but what is it worth in sats or Bitcoin? You know, switching topics slightly, we've been in the midst of an AI explosion, right?
Anyone who's not been hiding under a couch at the same time that Bitcoin has been making
headlines, AI has been just moving at not exponential, but hyper exponential speeds.
We've seen compute, you know, what was Moore's law 2x every
Every couple of years now 10x every year, you know
Elon was at stage at the abundance summit this year saying he's seeing a 100 X
In a year and expects that for next couple of years and then we have you know
AGI sometime in the next one to five years and then you know digital superintelligence
There's a lot happening there and you've got to be thinking about how AI and crypto
slash Bitcoin, you know
Intersect and transform each other
Speak to what's on your mind there. What do you find you exciting? I mean, are we gonna see AI agents?
Transacting, you know
basically buying and selling and you know, I assume that crypto is the
unspoken
additional layer on top of the internet
For financial transactions. Yeah, let me let me it is let me try to make it real and tangible for people
I'll give you some real world examples.
So I believe we had this idea during the last crypto summer
we had when everybody was going crazy during COVID.
This new concept of a DAO was created.
It's called the DAO is a Decentralized Autonomous
Organization.
And you can literally build an organization in software.
And a lot of these DeFi systems are basically DAOs.
And the system has software-based governance built in.
There's no necessary people involved.
It runs on a set of rules.
It runs on a set of software-enforceable rules based upon who owns potentially the tokens
in the system
and maybe you earn more of those tokens as yields.
There's different aspects to how the governance can work, but what's important is it's not
people-based, meaning there's no...
Once it's a DAO, you can't have a DAO that's a company, but it doesn't really make sense
in my opinion.
People are trying.
The beauty of a DAO is no off switch and it's not run by
politics. No opinions. No opinions. But now merge that with AI and I've spent a lot of time on this
lately. So I think that we're about to enter into a universe where we have billions of DAOs. And
what we defined as a DAO in the first generation and what you're talking about as autonomous agents, which is also the phrase we use at Abra, basically become the same thing and there's Dow's everywhere.
So take Elon, the robo-taxi model that Tesla's close to finally announcing, right?
So I think what you're going to see is you're going to see the corporate version of the
taxis that Tesla owns and you're going to see the ability for people to own taxis because
that's what people can get their arms around right now.
That's not the scalable model in my opinion.
The scalable model is the tax that the car itself isn't owned by a person or a company.
It's actually part of a Dow and it drives itself around.
And you automatically pay using crypto, probably stable coins or Bitcoin via Lightning, whatever.
And there's rules in the DAO via software contracts that decide what the car has to
do in terms of, you know, where do I go to automate getting charged?
If it needs servicing, it goes.
Exactly.
What do I do for maintenance?
How do I distribute the profits to the token people who own tokens?
Right. So all of this is happening right without governance now. This is a lot easier when all cars are
You know automator robot is the biggest challenge with all this right now is people
We get in the way and we screw things up and and so but eventually you see where I'm going with this
I just gave you one quick example
Which was a car that owns itself, and then eventually
it'll end a life itself.
And you've made all your money back as people who invested in the car via this token issuance,
right?
And that's how DAOs are created.
You have a token issuance where you deposit money as stable coins or Bitcoin into the
DAO, and then the software rules determine how it gets used.
Well, it automated buying the car, it automated setting this up, and it automated the token
distribution back to the people.
There's a million other examples.
What if I have autonomous agents that do video content distribution and basically determine
out in the cloud, I created a smart contract out in the cloud to sell my movie and it's
automatically going to give the money to this group of investors that invested in the movie based upon how the distribution
rights work and then at some point the price is going to come down for watching the movie
and then eventually end of life itself and it's just open source content.
Something like that.
I can give you thousands of examples of these.
Crypto and smart contracts become the transactional layer for all of
these autonomous agents, DAOs. I think I was listening to Elon's Lex Freeman interview
where they were in Memphis. These massive compute centers, you need them now. But if
you look at the amount of compute, my laptop here that we're talking from that sits idle, this is all going to become compute in globally decentralized
AI systems.
Remember years ago when SETI was basically letting you install software in your laptop
so that you do...
Yeah, I remember from my NASA days, right?
And so we're wasting so much compute that is eventually going to become part of these decentralized systems.
And it's all going to basically use a smart contract based layer on top using technologies like Solana, Ethereum, etc. etc.
So that these systems can communicate contract to contract.
Having a person who speaks, what did he say, at 8 bits?
Yes, 8 bits per second, yeah.
Yeah, process transactions makes no sense, right? Visa, when every single person on the
planet is, or no, I'm sorry, there's a lot of religions, when every person is buying
at Christmas time, there's a couple of billion people that shop over a one week period. That's
Visa's peak transaction processing.
That is a round-off error compared to what's coming.
Yeah.
OK?
Yeah.
So people can't manage that.
An Oracle database can't manage that.
You need a globally decentralized network
that can process transactions to manage that.
That's what DeFi enables.
It gets us out of the way.
It's going to be an exciting few years ahead, as they say.
Yeah, it's awesome.
There's going to be a second coming for crypto when it merges with AI in the next three to
five years.
We made some token investments in ABRA in this area and I'm really excited about it.
That is the timeframe, right?
It's not 10 years or 20 years.
It's the next five years and maybe even before that with the speed of which which things are moving
Bill where do people go to find you on social?
Where do they go to learn more about Abra? Yeah, sure. I'm Bill Barr X on on Twitter X. Sorry
We do need a verb
Abra comm you can you know sign up you can get more information
I'm on the interwebs all the time, relatively easy to find.
We have our Money Talks podcast every Friday.
I think we're taking this week off for August, but most Fridays we have Money Talks online
via all the normal channels where I give you the kind of macro latest on what's going on
related to crypto and other things related to exponential tech and all this
stuff so so you can check that out but we're pretty easy to find.
Fantastic and Bill love you having being part of the abundance community and
thank you for for joining me cheer and and sharing your wisdom and your
technology and yeah super pumped for our conversation and for where things are
going. I'll see you soon. See you soon. Take care