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cover of episode Tariffs, Trump, & Bitcoin Endgame | Jeff Park

Tariffs, Trump, & Bitcoin Endgame | Jeff Park

2025/2/5
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David
波士顿大学电气和计算机工程系教授,专注于澄清5G技术与COVID-19之间的误信息。
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Jeff Park
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David: 我认为特朗普政府的政策导致加密货币与宏观市场出现重大交汇,甚至超过了新冠疫情的影响。特朗普对加拿大、墨西哥和中国的关税政策,是美国货币和财政政策的逻辑结论,最终会导致10年期国债收益率极低和美元贬值,从而利好比特币及风险资产。 Jeff Park: 关税会造成市场混乱,而比特币在混乱中反而会蓬勃发展,因为比特币能够提供稳定性。关税还会导致财政赤字增加,加速美元贬值,从而利好比特币。财政赤字会降低主权债务人的信用评级,而比特币则被视为规避全球货币体系风险的工具。关税具有经济上的浪费性,会导致财政赤字问题,并可能导致通货膨胀和美元贬值。特朗普的目标是通过多边协议削弱美元,这类似于广场协议2.0。广场协议2.0的目标是通过多边协议削弱美元,类似于1985年的广场协议,以应对美元过强对美国经济造成的挑战。特朗普的关税政策可能是为了达成削弱美元的多边协议的谈判工具。特朗普真诚地希望将美国的制造业和工业产能回流美国,并希望降低10年期国债收益率。目前全球环境比八年前更加混乱,中国也比八年前更弱,这使得美国处于更有利的地位。下一步将是类似广场协议2.0的全球协调行动,以降低美元汇率。特朗普的目标是降低10年期国债收益率,因为这有利于他的房地产投资。美国财政部实际上控制着长期利率,而美联储只能控制短期利率。特里芬悖论是指美元既是美国本国货币,又是全球储备货币,这导致美国需要持续的财政赤字以满足全球对美元的需求。特里芬悖论导致美元过强,这不利于美国经济。特朗普的目标是降低10年期国债收益率,这将利好比特币和其他风险资产。 特朗普对加密货币的积极态度并非巧合,因为他理解他的政策将有利于比特币的价格。特朗普最初反对比特币,可能是因为他更重视受监管的房地产资产。但现在他可能已经意识到,比特币和房地产可以形成互补的投资组合。比特币与风险资产在短期内存在相关性,但在长期内则趋于脱钩。比特币的波动性是其主要价值主张,因此当传统市场出现剧烈波动时,比特币也会出现剧烈波动,因为投资者会将资金转移到更安全的资产。从长期来看,比特币与风险资产的相关性较低,因为比特币的价格取决于人们交易的意愿,而不是任何价值模型。由于比特币ETF的推出,投资者现在可以通过比特币工具进行杠杆投资,这可能会减少对山寨币的需求。狗狗币的去中心化程度很高,并且其社区文化对加密货币行业有积极作用,因此Bitwise申请狗狗币ETF。狗狗币ETF的获批将代表加密货币行业跨越了一个新的文化门槛。 supporting_evidences We're recording this episode on the back of Trump's 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico and 10% tariffs on China. Absolutely. They're connected at a very intuitive sense. Sure. So a fiscal deficit is a way to gauge the credit worthiness of a sovereign backer. So ultimately, tariffs are creating deficits because at the core of it, tariffs are wasteful. In your article, Jeff, you wrote, "Recognize that tariffs are an often a temporary negotiation tool to achieve a goal." Sure. So most of the monetary system as you and I know it, and the current generation has been a world in which the dollar has been backed by the words of the US government, There are a few people who believe these tariffs might be a permanent fixture of the economic landscape going forward. I think Trump is extremely sincere about several things. I think what's different now is the picture has become clearer in the direction and the tailwind of the mood of the world, Yeah. So I think the next game is, and it's not going to be tomorrow, it's not going to be next week, but I do think there is going to be a globally coordinated Plaza Accord 2.0 type of event. You said in your article, I have shared before that Trump's number one goal is to lower the 10-year yield rate, Yeah, it is the reality that the Fed and the Treasury work together to enact one agenda for American dollar and foreign policy. Can you explain that a little bit more? So let's go back to the Triffin dilemma. And that is actually the core of the problem. Yeah. So many people today are concerned about the path dependencies and the second and third order effects of what these tariffs are going to do and how China is going to respond and yada, yada, yada. Do you think that this is why Bitcoin has become just like living in Donald Trump's brain? Yeah, this is a fascinating question. But let's talk about and really just precisely talk about risk assets generally. Yeah, I think everyone has imagined one day that Bitcoin would be untethered from correlation to our risk assets as we know it. But it's only really those extreme movements and not the down 1%, down 50 bips types of market. Yeah, I I love my altcoin bags as much as the crypto bro next door. Yeah. At the most simple sense, Doge is as decentralized as any asset could come from the construct of what we want to think about the ethos of crypto. Yeah, yeah, I couldn't agree more.

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Bankless Nation, Terrace, Griffin, and Trump, how the end game sends Bitcoin vertical. This is the title of a short article written by Jeff Park, who is the head of alpha strategies from our friends over at Bitwise. Jeff thinks that the incentives and actions of Donald Trump and his administration is creating one of the biggest intersections with crypto and the macro markets that we've ever seen, even greater than COVID.

We're recording this episode on the back of Trump's 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico and 10% tariffs on China. Jeff thinks that this is just the beginning, not necessarily with just tariffs, but of what Jeff thinks is the logical conclusion of United States monetary and fiscal policy, which he thinks is extremely low 10-year yields and a devalued dollar.

both things which materially favor Bitcoin and risk assets. I'll let Jeff explain it himself right after we talk to some of these fantastic sponsors that make this show possible. With over $1.5 billion in TVL, the METH protocol is home to METH, the fourth largest ETH liquid staking token, offering one of the highest APRs among the top 10 LSTs. And now, CMETH takes things even further. This restaked version captures multiple yields across CARAC, Eigenlayer, Symbiotic, and many more.

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Bankless Nation, I'm here with Jeff Park, head of alpha strategies at Bitwise. Jeff, welcome to the podcast. Happy to be here, David. Thanks for having me.

Jeff, as you know, on February 1st, Donald Trump announced 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico. This sent stocks tumbling on Monday, but things have seemingly recovered on the news that these tariffs are being paused after both Mexico and Canada expressed desire in negotiating with Donald Trump. Yesterday, Jeff, you wrote this article titled Tariffs, Triffin and Trump, How the Endgame Sends Bitcoin Versus.

Vertical. Jeff, really high level. How do and what do the Trump tariffs have to do with Bitcoin? How are these two ideas connected? Absolutely. They're connected at a very intuitive sense. The first is tariffs create chaos and chaos is not loved by markets. And so while we think that for the short term sentiment risk could feel off.

the reality is Bitcoin thrives in chaos because chaos is actually the moment for which Bitcoin shrines in the certainty that we know for the role that it can serve as a place of stability.

And so that's one. The other thing is ultimately tariffs, no matter how you think what the end game may be, whether it's actually temporary or whether it's permanent, the reality is it will create further fiscal deficits, both on the imposing and the imposed. And when you connect the dots there, we know Bitcoin is the ultimate trade to hedge for future debasement and tariffs are going to accelerate it. And so both of these arrows ultimately point to Bitcoin at the center for which the upward trend

is higher. Okay, fiscal deficit. I'm just going to ask some real one-on-one questions. Why does a fiscal deficit benefit Bitcoin? And why does the recent news of the Trump tariffs, why does that imply that we're going to go into a fiscal deficit?

Sure. So a fiscal deficit is a way to gauge the credit worthiness of a sovereign backer, right? And so when you think about the U.S. having mint grade credit rating, it's because people believe the U.S. will pay its debt back.

Now, that has some implications about having sound fiscal budget policies and the ways that you're managing the duration of the forward pooling of the borrowing in a timely and sensitive way. But if you don't actually think the fiscal deficit is being managed properly,

you get downgraded. And that's actually what you've seen recently with France having been downgraded. You are seeing some other Asian countries being downgraded. And the US has now come into dialogue of whether these ratings have gone to negative outlooks from stable outlooks to the fiscal crisis that we've experienced in the past as well. And so they are related. And in that sense, Bitcoin has been the trade in how people

thought of is removing yourself from the system of the global monetary design. In fact, we talk about Bitcoin all-time highs, dollar denominated as Americans, which we're very privileged by. But the reality is we hit Bitcoin all-time highs in almost every other currency in the world last year. And so while we are kind of anchored to this 100K level, that 100K is an American number. It's actually through the roof everywhere else because dollar strength has been incredible over the last year.

So this is all part of the relation to how Bitcoin is actually the base pair for most people, not the US dollars and how they think about wealth preservation. So ultimately, tariffs are creating deficits because at the core of it, tariffs are wasteful. Tariffs are economically wasteful. This is the reality in which you're introducing friction in the abilities for markets to function. And that is going to create some financial waste. Now,

People also conflate wasteful to mean not useful, but that is not true. And that's actually where I think the lens to tariffs being useful is a powerful thing. And it's not about the deficit at that point anymore. It's about national security and other priorities that you may have that have non-economic values that you have to assign some utility for. But the reason that tariffs are ultimately going to create fiscal deficit issues is, for instance, in the U.S., if these tariffs are permanent,

it is very likely that there will be inflation and prices will go higher. And in general, the way to offset that is actually you would have to provide it with a tax cut.

that tax cut in effect also can be a counteract to the dollar strengthening by the imposition of tariffs, where the rising budget deficit lessens the credit worthiness that you and I just talked about, where therefore American dollars may not actually be as trusted. And so in a very perverse way, actually, the way you think about lowering the dollar is by spending more. And that's why ultimately these things are tied together

And part of the solution here is that you're widening the deficit in some sense to do that tax cuts would be a big portion of it. - In your article, Jeff, you wrote, "Recognize that tariffs are an often a temporary negotiation tool to achieve a goal. The ultimate goal is to seek a multilateral agreement to weaken the dollar, essentially a Plaza Accord 2.0."

Can you explain Plaza Accord 2.0? What's the first Plaza Accord? What's Plaza Accord 1.0? And what does it mean to have a Plaza Accord 2.0? And why do we want that? Sure. So most of the monetary system as you and I know it, and the current generation has been a world in which the dollar has been backed by the words of the US government, i.e. there is actually no hard collateral, but that's not true for most of human history.

and actually most of the greenbacks history. So we have to start our journey in 1970, 1971, when the collapse of Bretton Woods kicked off this movement. The Bretton Woods system collapsing meant that ultimately the dollar would no longer be pegged by gold. At the time, it was pegged at $35 per ounce. Once that became free floating, that's when currencies started to have to pair their reference rate to other currencies.

By the way, the reason ultimately why the dollar had to be de-pegged from gold is the Triffin dilemma in itself, which is that there's a conflicting role if one's national currency also serves a role

of being an asset as a global reserve for foreign countries too. So back then, there was a lot of demand for dollars because dollars was the thing that was used for trade. So to get more dollars out there, you actually have to go into deficit. There's no other way. You've got to print the dollars. What the problem now is, well, do you have enough gold to back that dollar? And now you can already see it. The structural need for the dollar for trade is not matching actually the fundamental valuation of the dollar being backed by hard collateral.

And so when Bretton Woods collapses, essentially the dollar weakens and we enter a period of heavy turmoil. And what happens is the emergence of the U.S. as an exceptionally powerful country in which the dollar does become this reserve asset that people still want to hold onto. And the dollar strengthens incredibly, regardless of whether it's backed by gold. And this is an incredible social experiment, but one in which the U.S. emerges as a winner, or so you think. In the 80s,

the biggest threat for the US economy is actually Japan. And Japan at its glory of being an export driven economy was extremely competitive with the technological might that they were developing and able to export more cheaply as a dollar was strengthening. And so the biggest concern

in the 1980s was actually not that dissimilar from the concerns that we are hearing about today in 2025, which is how do we onshore U.S. capabilities to compete in the national and international stage? And you just have to replace Japan with another Asian country today, which is China.

And that's basically the case for the Plaza Accord 2.0. So what happened in Plaza Accord 1.0 is essentially all the countries got together, Japan included, and there was a negotiated multilateral agreement that we would actually find the path to devalue the dollar. And the biggest counterparty that would be at risk to this would have been Japan. And you had to therefore wrangle the motion in getting them to acquiesce to these demands.

And you can now get a sense for how strategic these conversations are, how delicate and meticulous they are in the complexity of trading partnerships, and one that requires a little bit of wisdom beyond just following textbook models that you learn in Macroeconomics 101. And what now, the case for the dollar strengthening, the case for the dollar as a result, making it challenging for U.S. to onshore their economy in the

manufacturing and industrial capacity we might want to participate is extremely similar to 1985.

And then how did the Trump tariffs on Canada and Mexico suit this end? How does the tariffs actually relate to a Plaza Accord 2.0? There are a few people who believe these tariffs might be a permanent fixture of the economic landscape going forward. I tend to believe that it is more of a tool for negotiating at this moment in time to seek other concessions that will exert military and economic might onto other countries in the future from the

from the US's perspective. And so without deciding what you think those tariffs represent today, you can actually have a lot of different conversations about the end game and its impact.

I think Trump is extremely sincere about several things. But the thing that is most sincere is he does want to bring back some of the exported capacity of American manufacturing and industrial sector home. He wants to bring jobs home. Yeah. He does want to bring jobs home. It's why he's in office.

a big chunk of his constituents are reversing the globalization movement. And so this is, I think, something that he does mean sincerely wants to happen. Now, the reality is, as we've said,

Tariffs are wasteful and there are things that are beneficial to having comparative advantages where you can specialize and trade and do things in a way that is more capital efficient. But it's also possible that the era that we're entering is one that is not driven by that shared vision. Right. And that fracture is real. And and the and the.

And the multipolar powers emerging through Russia and China is actually real. And so in that sense, you might have to give some room to the reality that tariffs might be a fixture in a permanent way.

But it's also very bad for markets if that's the case. And the other thing Trump really cares about is actually the markets. He's very, very honest when he tells you that he looks at the stock market every day and he just wants to see it go up. And so when you just zoom out, know nothing about tariffs, and you just know those two things, I think you'll hopefully come to the same conclusion that this is just a negotiating tool.

which is, I think, what you saw in the past few days. You've seen him kind of back play a little bit and just test the water on how aggressive are my trading partners coming back at me. And even yesterday, the demands that China has made on the back of the 10% tariff that Trump had imposed, you could already sense that China is behaving much more carefully than they were eight years ago in the ways that their demands are actually not

equal in the pushback and they're acquiescing a little bit to the might of the US. Interesting. Okay. So the news that came out on Monday was that Trump is imposing all these tariffs, or maybe it was on Friday. The market responded on Monday and also Mexico and Canada also responded on Monday. As the news today is that the tariffs on Mexico and Canada are being delayed, paused for 30 days.

because my sense is that Trump is winning some negotiations with Canada and Mexico. They have both said that they're going to send troops to the border. I don't know if the United States, Donald Trump is getting everything that he wants, but he has paused tariffs for 30 days.

And then you also indicated that China is also being a little bit more flexible and willing to negotiate with Donald Trump more on his terms. Why is now different than we did this? We did this last time Trump was president eight years ago, as you alluded to. We did this whole trade war thing. What's different now that puts the United States in a position of strength more than eight years ago? Or is that not the case?

I think what's different now is the picture has become clearer in the direction and the tailwind of the mood of the world, which is that when eight years ago Trump came to office, it was still a little bit of a dark period as to the questions it raised around the acceptability of that movement.

But since then, you've actually seen the world go into more anarchic chaos with all the ways that power is being battled across multiple arenas. And you are seeing the rise of more protectionist-oriented world leaders out there

And so Trump today fits more of like the mainstream era than once upon a time eight years ago where he might have looked a little bit more like an iconoclast, right? Because you have to put this in the context of then Brexit and all these other things that had unfolded since where now it's been normalized that this is the direction of the world. And here's the beautiful thing about trade.

Trade has to be multilateral, right? You actually cannot make any global monetary design solutions without there being bought in cooperation. And so that directive, I think, has become especially more clear now more than ever. The second thing is, I think China today is in a much weaker position than it was seven, eight years ago. Some of this is on the backlash post-COVID, but the other fact is trade.

China domestically is actually experiencing a serious financial crisis on the back of their housing sector. And so...

The challenge with Xi being able to navigate this internally is a little bit more in the benefit of the U.S. to potentially exert more influence than it was able to do 70 years ago. So where do you think we've landed with this tariff conversation? Like I said, Trump tried to impose these 25%. He's positive for 30 days. But China, or excuse me, Canada and Mexico have played nice. As you said, China is a little bit more...

amenable to United States because they're in a weaker position. Where do you think this goes from here? What do you think is the next step in this tariff game? Yeah. So I think the next game is, and it's not going to be tomorrow, it's not going to be next week, but I do think there is going to be a globally coordinated Plaza Accord 2.0 type of event. That's what's next. Okay. Yeah. Because the reality is the dollar is too strong and tariffs will actually

strengthen the dollar as well. And that is not the outcome that Trump actually would like to seek. And so the way that I'm imagining this could happen is you have to have a new rejiggering of that social contract. And the social contract changes to this.

you basically get China and Japan and other of your trade partners to invest more in long-dated American bonds and essentially play a little bit of the factoring game on the back of that duration being a lot more powerful than the short end per dollar basis. So the reality is a lot of the U.S. Treasury's financing program over the last four years changed to be short-term oriented.

Meaning T-bills are actually a big focus of how the US is now funding itself. But that's actually a pretty dangerous place to be because you're at the whims of repricing every few years and you haven't been able to actually secure long duration DVO one there. And you also need more dollars, right? Because you have to keep turning those portfolios. So the refinancing velocity means there's just constantly more dollars being used for that.

Now, imagine if you could term that out for like 30 plus, maybe 100 years, just term it out. Then you actually don't need those dollars. And the number one thing that we're all trying to solve is how do you get the dollar lower? How do you make these countries not hold dollars as a reserve asset? And one way to do that is yield curve control, right? And that's why I think this idea of like...

Yield curve control, but not yield curve control is becoming more topically entered into the mainstream mindset because liquidity is actually a funny thing. A dollar today and a dollar 10 years from now is still $1, but the velocity of how much you need to turn that dollar over is different. And that's actually the difference between the dollar strength and the long-term yield strength as well.

You said in your article, I have shared before that Trump's number one goal is to lower the 10-year yield rate, the reason being that his own bags depend on it. Real estate. Can you expand on this as it relates to yield curve control without actually being yield curve control? What does it mean to lower the 10-year rate and why does it align with Trump's bags, real estate? Yeah, this goes back to one of the most...

I think perhaps admirable quality of Trump, if there was one thing you can call it as admirable, is that he is blatantly and bluntly honest about what he wants. Now, that honesty also has translated into the fact that he's an extremely self-interested person. I might argue most people are self-interested and Trump is not ashamed to admit it. And so,

He has actually given you the blueprint in telling you exactly what he wants to accomplish. And the things that all of us can benefit from is to be on the same side of the trade of the president. And his biggest backs, without a doubt, is commercial real estate. And he's been wanting to lower rates forever.

You've seen the rhetoric come out when he even challenged Powell's credibility to remain neutral against influences. And you've seen how much he inserted himself into that conversation and made himself known that he will do things outside the general norm of the office to do such things. What I think is really interesting, though, is last week, Trump actually applauded Powell's

for not lowering rates, which is actually kind of paradoxical because you would have thought he would have gone on a rampage like we about like, oh, this guy got to get him out of the office. He's not doing what he wants. Americans are suffering. No, actually, he applauded Powell. So why did he do that? I think it's because he knows

Powell actually can't influence the long-term rates. And that's what you saw in November last year and December, where as rates were coming in, the 10-year didn't come in at all. In fact, it went the other direction. It blew up and the term premium expanded. So I think what Trump has realized is actually the Fed cannot control the front end.

And Powell doesn't have any credibility to influence the long end of the curve, which is why he now knows he must use the power of the executive branch to carve out his own path to control for that 10-year rate, which I think is tariffs in the way that he's navigating this journey. Is this related to what Lynn Alden calls fiscal dominance, where it's actually the government that is really in control of, and it's fiscal policy that is in control of monetary policy and not the other way around?

Yeah, it is the reality that the Fed and the Treasury work together to enact one agenda for American dollar and foreign policy.

And the reason is because the Fed can only truly control the front end of the curve. But the back end of the curve is actually controlled by the Treasury because they manage the issuance calendar and the maturity schedule of the bonds to which they seek their trade partners. And so even though we're all taught in school and the general media that the Fed is an independent actor and that they only care about two things, unemployment rate and inflation,

The reality is these things are all intertwined and it goes back to, again, the Trifin dilemma. Because if the conflict is that the currency, which is serving your domestic goals, is directly competing with your international goals of your trade balances, how could it be possible to have a Fed that only cares about domestic policies?

It just cannot be. Can you explain that a little bit more? So let's go back to the Triffin dilemma. The Triffin dilemma is that the United States has its own national currency. It also happens to be that that national currency is the global reserve currency.

And the countries of the world need to receive the currency in order to do any sort of trade either between them and the United States or between them and other countries as well. And so there's this always persistent demand for dollars to be able to go export to the rest of the world so the rest of the world can trade amongst themselves. And so there's this net outflow of dollars, which is what we call a deficit.

And what that's created is that it's actually like hollowed out internal manufacturing because we are printing money and sending it overseas. We're getting things back. We're getting cars back. We're getting products back, things that are made in America. But it's actually cheaper for us to get it abroad because we have this trade deficit. We have to outflow the money. And so we get things. It's like this exorbitant American privilege. We get things on the cheap, but

And that hollows out local American manufacturing because it has to compete with this outflow of money. And this hollow out Pennsylvania, all the manufacturing states that were blue, that flipped red when Trump was elected in the first place. And so this is the Triffin dilemma. And the Triffin dilemma connect for me how it relates back to the yield issue.

and the value of the dollar and how that aligns with Trump's interest on lowering the 10-year yield in his real estate bags. Yeah. So it's related because ultimately the exorbitant privilege is that the U.S. gets to borrow long-term for very cheap.

And in a way, we all benefit from that. It's actually what anchors the US housing market, for example, when we all take out our mortgages, the ability for Americans to have those types of financial access is funded by our foreign creditors. But as a result, you've described exactly the offsetting side, which is that it creates the capital flows in a way that strengthens the dollar. And this is often called the twin deficit, which is the budget deficit in itself now being related to the trade deficit.

And that is actually the core of the problem. The dollar is too strong. This is why there was a Plaza Accord 1.0, and that's why we need another Plaza Accord 2.0. And there will be details about that's different, but the goal is to lower the dollar, to restore the competitive strength and how Americans can actually beat an export economy. I think the perverseness of all of this is that you almost want to self-sabotage your own fiscal credit

to try to get people to not want to have the US as the reserve asset, right? Dollars as a reserve asset. Because today, actually, the dollar's in a really interesting crossroads. On one hand, it's been visible that dollars are growing as a percentage of foreign holdings as a reserve asset, but it's actually been declining as the medium of choice in settling trade and international financial transactions.

which is actually a little bit paradoxical too. You almost want the opposite. You want people to use the dollar for trade, but you don't want them to hold it and hoard it, creating it to go up. And this is one way that I also think that stablecoins has to be a relevant portion of that conversation. And I suspect a lot of this conversation will ultimately go towards the management of the yield curve

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By becoming a layer 2, Celo leads the way for other EVM compatible layer 1s to follow. Follow Celo on X and witness the great Celo happening where Celo cuts its inflation in half as it enters its layer 2 era and continuing its environmental leadership. One of the last lines in your bit, we've talked about this briefly, never doubt the uncomplicated incentives of the transparently profit motive.

motivated and align yourself next to him. You're talking about Trump, of course, we talked about this. But the punchline you're really getting to is how Bitcoin is a vehicle to align yourself with the incentives of Trump. Maybe you can connect those two bits. Out of all of this, everything we've been talking about so far, how does this impact Bitcoin? Yeah. So many people today are concerned about the path dependencies and the second and third order effects of what these tariffs are going to do and how China is going to respond and yada, yada, yada.

We don't know. None of us can know. But actually, what's really easy is solving it backwards by knowing what the endgame is. And the endgame, as I've described and as you've outlined here, is that Trump wants one thing to protect his own bags, which is lower tenure rates.

And that is nakedly obvious in front of anyone who can understand what he's doing. And so actually, if you know that's the end game, it's a little bit easier to solve backwards as to kind of putting things in motion to get to that end conclusion. So if you take for granted that then the 10-year is going to compress, two things are going to happen. One,

risk capital in the US will be on fire again, because there's now a wall of cash coming back into the market with yield lower that's going to be chasing risk. It's going to be great for the stock market. It's going to be great for Bitcoin. And if you actually thought tariffs were permanent, you

we'll know there's going to be a large income tax cut associated with that. Unfortunately, uh, income tax as a, as a tool is regressive in nature, right? Where the removal of it actually then creates more abundance of wealth at the top, which is more capital than that is going to seek risk. So there's actually a profound effect on risk capital. If you thought an income tax would be, would be repealed. So that is incredibly good for Bitcoin. Uh,

But the other side of it is if you're not an American and you're on the other side of that equation where you are suffering on the back of these tariffs, you're basically sitting at home looking at TV and realizing your elected leaders completely failed you. And now they're basically on a race to the bottom to debase their own currency against a weakening dollar to basically try to sustain their export economy. So they're going to print

like as if there's no end. And what you're going to witness is an acceleration of that depreciation of your non-dollar asset that you as a foreigner are denominated by. If you're that person, ask yourself, what am I going to purchase to protect my wealth in a way that I seem to have no option as a citizen of any of these countries? The beautiful thing about Bitcoin is

And this is the ultimate ethos of what it represents is that it can be bought anywhere, anytime, without any friction in the ways that it gives the sovereignty back to the person, the individual. And so they're going to buy Bitcoin too. So you've got this incredible demand where both sides of the market

For a very different reason. One's for speculation, one's for insurance, but they all come to the same conclusion. You have to buy Bitcoin. And that's why I think this is as easy and clear as it can be for why it's so optimistic. Do you think that this is why Bitcoin has become just like living in Donald Trump's brain? He's the Bitcoin president. He loves the Bitcoin industry, the crypto industry. Granted, we paid him a lot of money to help elect him. So that makes sense.

But also he's like truly leaning into crypto. He launched a meme coin. He's launched NFTs. He has a DeFi app. He's called himself the Bitcoin president. Do you think that this is a coincidence or do you think this is a part of Donald Trump's transparency? He also understands that the effects that he wants to have as president is going to be very good for the value, the price of a Bitcoin. And so therefore he has aligned himself with Bitcoin. Do you think that's a coincidence or do you think he's also in addition to

bullish real estate, he's for the same reason, bullish Bitcoin? Yeah, this is a fascinating question. And one, when Trump was first originally against Bitcoin, it kind of blew my mind because everything about Bitcoin to me represented alignment with his own general belief, which is like a distrust of the state, the intermediation, and actually wanting an asset that could be a little bit removed from

from what he would call as institutional bias, as a personality, right? But then you have to remember, actually, the most protected asset class in this country, in America, is real estate.

It's actually, I would call, the polar opposite of Bitcoin in some sense because it's the most regulated. It's the most compliance-centric asset. And it's a protected asset class in some sense. And he actually does have a bag in that. And so his calculus could have been a little different, which is a tail risk associated with Bitcoin that could then have impact upon him affecting those compliance assets once upon a time may have been a risk too great.

But I think now what you're realizing is that he's barbelling the strategy. You can own a bunch of really nice compliance asset that benefits when 10-year rates go low. And you can also own a bunch of resistance assets that also go up when 10 years go lower. And the thing is, in my Bitwise journey of talking to investors, the largest group of people that I found who intuitively understand the usefulness of Bitcoin have always been real estate investors, hands down.

because they know the importance of property collateral and the way that it actually stores value. Uh, and, uh, and the things that is most discomforting to someone like Trump is that it kind of operates in a gray regulatory area where real estate is actually operated with a hundred percent certainty of the regulatory arena. Uh, so I think over time though, he's come to this view that he's barbelling his portfolio. I think it's actually super smart. And, uh,

And he's preparing himself, I think, to continue to win the mindshare of that resistance movement alongside his greatest bags of compliance assets.

That crypto real estate barbell is something that I've noticed in my crypto journey inside, like citizens inside of the Bankless Discord and even my crypto friends. There's just this general attitude that the only thing that's truly real in this world is crypto assets and real estate. And it's if a crypto person sells their crypto, which they very rarely do, most of the time it's because they want to buy a house or

or invest in real estate. And so there's this natural equilibrium, this natural gravitational pull for the crypto investor to also become a real estate investor. And I think maybe what you're saying with Donald Trump is that we're actually just watching it happen in the other direction. We're watching a real estate investor naturally discover the value and the properties of crypto

digital bearer asset, non-sovereign store of value. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I think it actually kind of helps that we're seeing more financialization in Bitcoin too, in the ways that the ETFs have come forth and MicroStrategy has come out to financialize different risk segmentation for the capital structure that can provide investor risk preferences. Because real estate too is ultimately a privileged asset class

because of that very nature of it. It is actually the hard collateral that then has a multiplier effect on the securitization market that brings the arbitrage opportunities. So real estate investors are not always directional. They're actually investing on the regulatory arbitrage and what is permitted with that asset. And I think Bitcoin entering the mainstream arena with like SAB 121 getting repealed,

like improves the convergence of those worldviews, which is Bitcoin directionally is also useful, but there's going to be so much opportunity in financializing that too, that somebody like Trump, I think could also intuit. And hey, maybe Eric does too now that he's also in support of supporting ETH. Yeah, we're recording this on February 4th, the day after Eric Trump tweeted out a

basically a very bullish coded I have alpha tweet about ETH. Do you know what he meant by that? What was that tweet? Do you have any indication of like what was going on over there? I don't, I don't. I just, I suspect it has something to do with world liberty at some level and the ways that they would like to continue investing into non-Bitcoin crypto ecosystems. But I don't,

No, he tweeted out, in my opinion, it's a great time to add ETH. You can thank me later. He then updated that tweet. He edited that tweet because you can edit a tweet in an hour. He removed you can thank me later. So now it just reads, in my opinion, it's a great time to add ETH. But the old tweet you can still view. And this coincided with $175 million of ETH deposited into Coinbase Prime.

whether that's using Coinbase Prime as custody or using Coinbase Prime as a venue to sell. No one really knows because that's hidden behind closed doors. Some people are claiming that it's crime because he's like pumping up the price of ETH as he's selling it. Other people just think he's just using Coinbase Prime as a place to deposit ETH. No one really knows. And to this day, we don't really know. I mean, like 24 hours later, we don't really know why he tweeted out this thing about ETH. But nonetheless, I think we do know that

I think a lot of crypto people were looking at Trump and he's like, and he's just using the crypto industry to get elected. We're like giving him all this free money. He's extracting so much for this industry. And, you know, it's Trump. He's not really going to follow through on his promises.

But I think crypto is different in that, you know, he's actually done stuff on chain. He has issued NFTs. His Barron Trump, you know, trades meme coins. He actually has businesses deployed and making money on crypto. And so it's not really accurate to say that he's not actually intimately interested in the well-being of crypto because his businesses are on crypto. He now has like multiple crypto businesses. And so it's not just this irrelevant thing.

that is paying him a bunch of money to get him elected. Like he's making money from this industry. And so we are naturally aligned with Trump. And as you said, never doubt the uncomplicated incentives of the transparently profit motivated and align yourself next to him. So Jeffrey, just maybe kind of just play this out over the next couple of like we have

you know, four more years of the Trump presidency in like week two, we're in a trade war, a tariff trade war, tariffs are on pause. Uh, but what do you think is like the next steps for the escalation of this, whatever this is to get to what you call inevitable, which is the lowering of the 10 year yield rate? Yeah, I think, uh,

I think it's going to take time to imagine what that path looks like, but the end game will be some kind of ability to stuff long-dated bonds to our foreign creditors. And there's actually a way that I imagine crypto is going to play a role in that explicitly. And I don't know in the timeline in which it could happen, but the reality is that stable coins, again, has to play a role in permitting that possibility too. We all know Tether is actually supremely successful and there's a demand for something like that. Tether has found product market fit. The question is, how do you repeat...

some of those to the benefit of the US. And that is part of, I think, the conversation about stablecoins, right? Because stablecoins too, on one hand, is good in that it gives access to more people to have treasuries and bonds and dollars. But you can also imagine that's actually against dollar policy. Maybe you don't want that many people buying more dollars, actually, unless you're buying the right kinds of dollars. And so-

there's a world in which you could see that converge. You know, at the end of the day, I think the most important thing the risk market cares about is the strength of the dollar and it's the 10-year rate. And my instinct is that trouble do whatever it takes to bring the 10-year rate down. And we've learned actually through the last four years, there's a lot of different ways to do it. You know, people ask like, well, exactly how do you think it's going to happen, Jeff? And it's like, we don't know because actually we didn't even know BTFP was a thing that could happen when Silicon Valley Bank went under. Like,

Like there are things that just happen when there's enough will to make things happen. And the reality is,

America wants lower rates. And that's the thing that he's actually betting the house on. One more thing, just generally, we want crypto to be bipartisan, of course, and I fully stand by the importance of both parties understanding its value system. But if you squint hard enough, you'll realize that in some ways, Bitcoin is more aligned with a lot of the values that are foundational to the Republican Party, right? Because

The belief in self-determination or the belief in having less regulation where you give the right to the individual. Those kinds of things tend to be a little bit more on the base of Republican beliefs. And so I think what you're seeing, Trump, is also embracing that in a way that is constructive to the party that he's leading.

We've talked a lot about Bitcoin in this episode, talking about the impacts of Donald Trump's choices as it relates to the Bitcoin price. But let's talk about and really just precisely talk about risk assets generally. Is Bitcoin and risk assets the same conversation? If Bitcoin goes up, risk assets go up? Or is there a difference, a nuance here that we should parse apart?

Yeah, I think everyone has imagined one day that Bitcoin would be untethered from correlation to our risk assets as we know it. And there's actually a lot of ways to imagine that it already has. And the way you can imagine how it has is you have to zoom out. Day to day, when risk assets sell off very, very violently...

Bitcoin will sell off very, very violently. And I think there's actually a reason for it. The reason is Bitcoin's number one value proposition is its volatility, right? And so if you see incredible sell-offs in traditional markets where your perception of that value gap is wider, then you have to imagine the cost of capital to hold Bitcoin just went up relatively.

So, let's say I'm an institutional investor that loves certain stocks and the stocks I love gap down 30%. The cost of capital to hold Bitcoin unfortunately just went up because I would rather own those stocks that are down 30% with more certainty. So, you have to sell Bitcoin. So, there's always going to be that cost of capital question without Bitcoin having volatility. Just why I always show Bitcoin's volatility is the feature that people demand and will continue to demand.

And in the long run, however, the chart is that Bitcoin is actually representing a moment in time for the price in which people transact. In that sense, there's no cheapness to Bitcoin, right? It's not like when Bitcoin goes down 30%, people think it's cheap.

Because the relative benchmark to value is not based on any value mechanism. It's actually a flow asset instead of a state asset. And that's actually how commodities are generally valued. And so the thing that's nice about Bitcoin is you'll see the correlation when there's extreme movements.

But it's only really those extreme movements and not the down 1%, down 50 bips types of market. There, Bitcoin is actually unrelated. And over a long period of time, what you see is that there is a persistent bid for Bitcoin at a price, which eventually when you normalize it to any correlation is actually uncorrelated over a long period of time to these risk assets. And that's the beautiful thing. Bitcoin doesn't have a value model that

perceives cheapness or richness. It just is what it is at the price that people choose to transact and own an asset at a particular moment in time. It seems so simple. I like the mental model of

short-term correlation, long-term uncorrelation, decorrelation. I think that makes a lot of sense. So the first question was about risk assets. But what about specifically longer tail crypto assets? So ETH, Solana, Fartcoin, you know, $20 million market cap coins. What do you think is the kind of the roadmap? If we follow the roadmap that we've discussed for Bitcoin, what do you think is the roadmap for just the long tail of crypto assets? Sure. I

I love my altcoin bags as much as the crypto bro next door. The reality though is I have a feeling that this cycle might look a little different than the last cycle. Interesting. And the reason I say this is because historically people looked at altcoins as a way to play some levered beta or levered volatility to Bitcoin for those who are truly seeking a high level of risk.

But with the introduction of Bitcoin ETFs, and actually as of December, the introduction of Bitcoin ETF options, you now have the chance to create those extremely levered bets using Bitcoin instruments. Using actual leverage, right. Okay. Yes. Which you did not have in the prior cycles, right? You had Deribit, of course, but no one's really trading there at the retail level. But what you've seen that is...

MicroStrategy has capitalized on the same thing. That's why there's a 2x levered MicroStrategy ETFs now that is an all time favorite. The Nvidia 2x lever ETF was actually the best performing ETF last year, believe it or not. It actually out-inched Bitcoin by like 2%, which is funny to see. But it shows you that there's different ways to take those kinds of levered risk on bets with now Bitcoin.

that didn't exist before. And so the one counter argument I have is actually the capital that once upon a time would have gone to those altcoins are actually now going to these Palantir 2x ETFs. They're going to the MicroStrategy options and LEAPs and Bitcoin ETF options, et cetera. That being said, I think

There will always be interest in certain altcoins. I personally think that Dogecoin is here to stay and it's going to have a profound market fit for the future in the ways that it's still the best vehicle to trade cultural capital, in my opinion. And you'll see those types of things continue to nonetheless exist, but it will look a little bit more different in the dispersion of outcomes that it carries. Yeah. Speaking of Dogecoin, since I have you here, Bitwise recently filed for the Dogecoin ETF. Did

Just give us the inside baseball. What was the thought process behind that filing? What was the internal discussions at Bitwise? How optimistic are you guys about this? Just color in those lines for me. Yeah. At the most simple sense, Doge is as decentralized as any asset could come from the construct of what we want to think about the ethos of crypto.

So it's a little different than some of the other altcoins that have a long history of venture backing and fundraising, etc. Doge is pretty clean, in my opinion. However, I think the risk at some level had always been whether people would think it is a serious token and whether it is actually a net negative outcome to think that this is a playful thing.

But over time, I think we've just come to realize that the benefits to what something like Doge does to crypto as a community at large is pretty aligned, which is that we're always thinking about ways to educate our investors on the long term mission of crypto. Of course, things are great when price goes up.

But I think Bitwise's deep value in the end is actually we want to bring people on chain and we want them to think about the world differently and challenge their fundamental assumptions on what that world could be. And Doge is singularly the mindshare of the most beloved meme coin, for which I would argue Dogecoin.

Everything in life and all financial assets are ultimately all memes. And Dogecoin is perhaps the best expression of that culture capital being a source of a community. Yeah, yeah, I couldn't agree more. It's obviously, it's just a huge milestone for the crypto industry to get a Bitcoin ETF out the door. And it does not, well, again, it's huge, it's massive, it's amazing. The Dogecoin, a potential Dogecoin ETF getting approved brings its own unique value

threshold that we get over as an industry that's different and unique from Bitcoin's. Like we're getting over like Bitcoin is a financial asset and Dogecoin is something a little bit more cultural.

It's more of a cultural crossing of the chasm than just simply a new financial technology. It's a new cultural technology that is getting an ETF. And, you know, meme coins, I think by 2025, everyone understands like meme coins are just not going away. In fact, they're only getting bigger. And so it is it's a new it's in addition to Bitcoin. It's like a new thing for the crypto industry, a new hurdle for us to get over. And that would be pretty cool.

Yeah. Hey, it doesn't hurt that Elon continues to love it, which is great alignment. Like I said, always trust the motives of those who are transparent about the things they love. Jeff, thank you so much for joining me on Bankless today. Thanks for having me. Pleasure to be here. Bankless Nation, you guys know the deal. Crypto is risky. You could lose what you put in, but we are headed west. This is the frontier. It's not for everyone, but we are glad you are with us on the bankless journey. Thanks a lot.