Anthony Pompliano

Why Is Bitcoin CRASHING?!

🇬🇧 EN🇪🇸 ES
57:39 min youtube 2026 Week 23 🇬🇧 EN

Summary

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TTtJBwmmnM  |  Duration: 57:39  |  Uploaded: 2026-06-06

âš¡ TL;DR: Why Jordi Visser still treats the Bitcoin drawdown as an opportunity

  • Jordi Visser says Bitcoin is still in a bear market technically after failing at the 200-day moving average, but he does not read the ~50% drawdown as thesis failure or a sign that the long-term story is broken.
  • He explicitly says he is not selling any Bitcoin, thinks portfolios with 100% Bitcoin are reckless, and argues most investors should still keep at least roughly 2%–3% exposure because the upside/downside profile remains attractive.
  • His key macro claim is that the market is entering a 3–6 month rotation away from the overcrowded AI hardware trade and toward “human software”, tokenization rails, and specialized AI winners like Eli Lilly.
  • Visser argues Bitcoin is becoming less volatile relative to leading equities, and that this matters: if AI is compressing time and making individual stocks swing harder, Bitcoin starts to look more institutionally acceptable rather than less.
  • The non-obvious thesis is his strongest one: if AI agents end up dominating online commerce, then Bitcoin becomes, in his framing, a direct monetary asset for an agent-driven economy rather than just a speculative crypto trade.

â—† What he actually says about the Bitcoin selloff

Visser refuses to call a bottom, but he does anchor the discussion in concrete signals: Bitcoin failed at the 200-day moving average, the stock market kept rising while Bitcoin fell, and the tape still looks bearish until longer-term moving averages turn up. That is the “anchor-first” part of his framework. The interpretation comes second: he thinks the decline reflects a rotation bubble more than a collapse in the crypto thesis. Capital crowded into hardware, semis, and adjacent trades; now it is beginning to look for the next leg.

â–¶ Portfolio discipline over ideology

He is unusually clear on sizing. Bitcoin could still go to zero in the distribution of outcomes, he says, but that does not justify owning none of it. His practical rule is simple: all-in is stupid, zero is also stupid. He keeps buying through the decline, says he has never sold a single Bitcoin, trades MicroStrategy tactically instead, and has also been adding Ethereum because he sees network effects across the crypto ecosystem.

★ Bitcoin as the S&P 500 of crypto

One of Visser’s sharper claims is that even when he builds a broad crypto-themed basket without Bitcoin, the basket still ends up highly correlated to Bitcoin. His conclusion is that Bitcoin behaves like the S&P 500 of crypto: the durable benchmark that outlasts most individual ideas. That matters because he thinks AI will accelerate creative destruction across both stocks and tokens, making the “last asset standing” logic more valuable, not less.

â–º The bigger trade: from AI hardware to specialized software

The second half broadens into AI. Visser argues that the only layers monetizing cleanly today are chips, power, and infrastructure, while enterprise ROI on general-purpose models is still weak. He thinks token budgets, efficiency pressure, and commoditized LLM behavior will push value toward specialized workflows and domain-specific models. His flagship example is Eli Lilly, which he frames as a possible top AI winner because its proprietary biological data can power specialized models in a way generic software companies cannot match.

â—† Search for the alpha

The deepest signal is not “buy the dip.” It is that Visser seems to be rotating mentally from the obvious AI winners to assets that benefit from agents, software efficiency, and biology-as-data. Bitcoin remains in the book because he sees it as the monetary rail for an AI-heavy future; Ethereum stays relevant as an ecosystem bet; and Eli Lilly sits in the sweet spot where specialized AI may produce real economic rents.

The twist: Visser is not really defending Bitcoin as a pure crypto call. He is reframing it as a long-duration claim on a future where AI agents compress time, destabilize traditional equity moats, and eventually need a neutral monetary asset. If that framing is right, the drawdown matters less than whether Bitcoin keeps strengthening as infrastructure for machine-driven commerce.

Generated with algorithm v2.1-anchor-first · model openai-codex/gpt-5.4 · 2026-06-07T11:06:14Z

Transcript

0:00 There are more AI agents on HTML sites
0:03 than humans. This is where we're headed.
0:05 So if you think the world of human
0:07 beings is going to dominate commerce,
0:09 it's not. It's AI agents. So if you ask
0:11 me what is a direct play on that, I
0:13 believe Bitcoin is a direct play on
0:15 agents dominating humans going forward.
0:18 What's going on guys? Today we got a
0:19 great conversation with Jordy Visser. In
0:21 this conversation, we talk about what's
0:22 going on with Bitcoin. Why is it selling
0:23 off? Is Jordy worried? And is he going
0:25 to sell his Bitcoin? On top of that, we
0:27 talk about what's going on with Eli Liy,
0:28 why he is so convicted that it could be
0:30 the best AI name for the AI trade. And
0:32 then we get into a bunch of other second
0:34 and third order effects of what's going
0:36 on with the infrastructure buildout,
0:37 artificial intelligence, so much tokens
0:40 being consumed, and then how does
0:42 Bitcoin fit into all this? All that much
0:44 more in this conversation with Jordy
0:45 Visser. All right, Jordy, Bitcoin is
0:47 down 50% from its all-time high. People
0:49 are freaking out. Michael Sailor sold 32
0:51 Bitcoin this week, and people think that
0:52 maybe he doesn't believe anymore. What's
0:54 your take as to why Bitcoin has fallen
0:56 so much and is it over or will Bitcoin
0:58 recover?
1:00 >> So, I learned my lesson that last year
1:02 not to predict levels on the upside. I'm
1:04 also not going to predict levels on the
1:05 downside. Um, last week in my weekend
1:08 video,
1:10 I highlighted the difference between a
1:12 bull market and a bare market. And
1:14 that's what charts are good for. um
1:17 we're still in a bare market until that
1:18 changes and until we start seeing some
1:20 moving averages start to either point
1:22 higher, but more importantly, we failed
1:24 at the 200 day moving average a few
1:26 weeks ago. We started to go down again
1:28 all while the stock market was going up
1:30 nine weeks in a row. So, the good news
1:32 is Bitcoin's not correlated to the stock
1:34 market anymore. The bad news is uh it's
1:37 down 50% off the highs. I wrote a paper
1:41 last week to yeah last week um in
1:44 Substack about taking a stoic approach
1:47 to everything in life. But it's really
1:49 important with with markets and I think
1:51 for people that are either a frustrated
1:53 or b people that are really happy and
1:56 pounding on X and the bearish thing,
1:58 this bubble's going to unwind, strategy
2:00 is going to go bust. This is the way it
2:01 all ends. None of that's true. um in my
2:05 opinion uh I also don't believe that
2:07 Micron can continue to go up every
2:10 single week. So on one side we have this
2:13 whole recognition of hardware everything
2:16 should be bought. We had software go
2:18 down. Now you've had some of the
2:19 software names go up. Most of them so
2:22 people realize are not true software
2:24 names. They are AI software names. So
2:26 cyber names and the Bitcoin uh miners
2:28 and things like that. So I think
2:30 Bitcoin's been lumped in. Um,
2:33 I'm starting to write about this more.
2:35 Uh, you're going to see a lot more from
2:36 me. I believe we're at a rotation point
2:38 that's going to last for at least the
2:40 next 3 to 6 months. And that rotation is
2:43 we're kind of at a I don't want to say a
2:45 market stock market bubble. What I'll
2:46 say is a rotation bubble. We've had one
2:50 group winning and most groups have been
2:52 losing.
2:54 Starting to see a rotation. And I think
2:56 software is going to have a bid. But I
2:58 don't think when people recognize what
3:00 I'm going to say with software, it's
3:01 going to resonate with them. But the
3:03 software is not going to be the
3:04 traditional SAS software. So I think
3:06 people are going to have to think
3:07 outside the box on human software and
3:10 also the financial guardrails with
3:12 tokenization and everything. And that's
3:14 where my attention is focused. So I
3:15 think Bitcoin's fine. Let it break
3:17 through the 60,000 level. Maybe it goes
3:19 down even below that. I don't really
3:22 care. You told me months ago four-year
3:26 cycle basically was like uh male
3:28 astrology, right? You're just like, why
3:30 why does this four-year cycle exist? Who
3:32 made this up? Why does this thing uh
3:33 anyone pay attention to it? Are you a
3:35 believer yet?
3:36 >> No.
3:37 >> Why not?
3:38 >> Again, um first of all, I don't do the
3:41 same thing with the stock market. One
3:42 thing I will say is this is the first
3:44 time in that quote unquote four-year
3:46 cycle that stocks are going higher at
3:48 the same time that Bitcoin's going down.
3:50 And I don't know whether that's good or
3:51 bad. My whole belief has been that the
3:53 only time that crypto can go through the
3:54 growth that I believe it will
3:57 go through which is the transfer of
4:00 wealth from the fiat system into the
4:02 crypto side or at least a merging of the
4:03 two. That was the whole reason why I
4:05 focused on AI and focused on crypto for
4:08 that to occur you need to run to a point
4:10 where believe it or not they have to be
4:12 uncorrelated to some degree. And I think
4:14 we're at that phase now. So that's the
4:16 positive side. The negative side is and
4:17 again the thing that has always
4:18 protected me in life. We all have views
4:21 on assets. We all have views and we're
4:22 all wrong at some period of time. I
4:25 don't want to get heavily involved with
4:27 playing Bitcoin or any crypto stuff on
4:30 the upside until someone else is doing
4:32 it. I'm not a momentum investor, but at
4:35 this point, we're not talking about
4:36 momentum. It's down 50%. So, let it
4:38 start to base. Let it look like supply
4:40 and demand have met a place where it's
4:43 positive and then let it break a
4:45 long-term moving average. There was
4:46 something um this week about Charlie Mer
4:50 uh talking about if I could just have
4:53 one thing in hindsight, it was the fact
4:55 that find good companies that you
4:57 believe in long-term that get back to
4:59 their 200E moving average. That's the
5:02 way I'm focused on Bitcoin. I don't
5:04 remember where the 200WE moving average
5:05 is, but the 200WE moving average is a
5:08 really important thing. And again, if
5:09 you lock it in to what you said, what is
5:11 the 200WE moving average? Well, that's
5:13 kind of a 4-year moving average. So, if
5:15 the four-year cycle is this, it's fine.
5:17 I've done a couple interviews in the
5:19 past week, and I just want to say this
5:20 to everyone. Um, I believe that the IPOs
5:24 that are coming, what Google did this
5:26 past week, which I'm sure we'll talk
5:28 about all of these, but I think these
5:30 are a sign of something important. It's
5:32 not a stock market bubble to me, but it
5:34 is a sign that people need a lot of
5:36 capital right now for what is happening
5:38 with inside the AI world. And that's an
5:40 important story. On the flip side with
5:43 what's going on with crypto,
5:45 I think if you would have looked in
5:47 hindsight for a what would be a sell the
5:49 news event, very similar to what I think
5:51 might be happening in the hardware side
5:53 for the time being, an ETF launch, we're
5:56 still above where we were trading at the
5:58 ETF launch. Number two, the US
6:01 government basically decides that crypto
6:03 is good and the president of the United
6:05 States says okay and he launches a
6:07 memecoin. If you would have taken those
6:08 events which basically occurred in 24
6:11 and 25 and said what would that be?
6:13 Well, that will be a sell the news event
6:16 and yet Bitcoin went higher into those.
6:18 But I think if you look at it and you go
6:20 back to how many OGs have been selling
6:22 and what's been going on, I do think
6:23 there's been churn that's been happening
6:25 now since 2024. So, for people that are
6:28 looking for hope, until the charts start
6:31 giving you hope and you get a it going
6:33 higher on bad news type thing, I'm not
6:35 going to get too into it. I'll still
6:37 stick with the the the the main thing I
6:39 said, which is we right now have
6:41 three-month rates that are below
6:42 inflation.
6:44 Just wait for the next trend higher in
6:45 Bitcoin. And I think this will be the
6:47 one that gets very important.
6:48 >> What could convince you to sell your
6:50 Bitcoin?
6:53 I I know this is going to um
6:56 not be the answer people want want to
6:58 hear, but um there's a reason why all of
7:01 my eggs are not in one basket.
7:03 >> I have plenty of things. So does
7:05 everyone who's investing own things that
7:07 are probably going to zero. And everyone
7:09 might sit there and say, "No, that's not
7:11 true. If you own the S&P 500, trust me,
7:14 you own some things that are going to
7:15 zero." Bitcoin is not everything in my
7:18 life. So, I believe on where crypto is
7:21 going to go. I have plenty things in my
7:22 portfolio that I'm going to own forever.
7:25 I really do. Uh, do I think Bitcoin
7:28 might go to zero? Sure. It's part of the
7:30 distribution of outcomes. Do I think
7:32 quantum is going to do it? Do I think it
7:34 I think it's a very low probability. So,
7:36 again, everything in my mind is always
7:37 based on what my father taught me, which
7:39 is what do I think the upside is versus
7:40 what do I think the downside is? And
7:42 then what percentage of the bets do I
7:43 want it to be? It's not everything for
7:45 me. So, if people are sitting there and
7:46 they have 100% of their wealth in
7:48 Bitcoin, I think that's very stupid. If
7:50 they have less than 1%, I think that's
7:52 very stupid. I believe that it should be
7:55 at this point in everyone's portfolio at
7:56 least 2 to 3% regardless of what they
7:59 believe in. So, that's the way I'm going
8:01 to answer the question. It could go to
8:02 zero. I'm not selling any because it's
8:04 not that important in my lifetime. If it
8:06 was, I'd probably be going through it.
8:08 One thing I have said, I've never sold a
8:10 single one in it, single Bitcoin. I have
8:14 traded Micro Strategy many many times.
8:16 Got in, got out, got in, got out. I will
8:19 trade, but I trade more in uh in Micro
8:22 Strategy and I really didn't own much
8:24 Ethereum at all. I've been buying
8:26 Ethereum during this whole drop. So, I'm
8:28 happy it's going down because I'm
8:29 putting bits and pieces in. If we start
8:32 to trend higher, I'm going to treat this
8:33 like I did Micron last year. I bought
8:35 Micron from 105 down to 60 all beginning
8:39 part of last year and look where it is
8:41 today. That's the way I view Bitcoin for
8:43 next year.
8:43 >> Jordy, you can't come into the church of
8:45 a podcast and talk about Ethereum. Why
8:47 are you buying Ethereum if Bitcoin is so
8:49 cheap?
8:50 >> Well, I'm buying Bitcoin as well. Um, I
8:53 the Ethereum thing again is more of a uh
8:56 an ecosystem thing at this point. I I
8:59 really am betting that the network
9:00 effects are going to be the big story
9:01 for next year, for the next 12 months. I
9:03 think Bitcoin is going to be a
9:05 participant in this whole situation. I
9:08 don't know if you saw
9:10 I sent you something. So I am working on
9:13 having a weekly YouTube that is
9:15 specifically geared towards crypto. Now
9:17 to do that I want to convert for the
9:19 traditional finance crowd how they can
9:23 look at the crypto ecosystem in the same
9:25 way they look at the S&P 500 which means
9:27 some sort of sectors or themes with
9:29 inside. And so for me Ethereum is a
9:33 better proxy for that in terms of I want
9:34 to bet on the ecosystem. I'm not going
9:36 to bet solely on Bitcoin. But the
9:38 reality is when I create an equal weight
9:40 of 40 separate companies, 34 of them
9:43 being
9:45 cryptocurrencies or tokens, six of them
9:47 being public stocks, all as one index,
9:50 very similar to my uh agentic thematic
9:52 portfolio,
9:53 magically it's extremely correlated to
9:56 Bitcoin, even when you don't include
9:58 Bitcoin in it. So for me, that means
10:00 that the ecosystem is acting the way I
10:02 think it should. It also means that
10:03 Bitcoin is what I think it is, which is
10:04 the S&P 500 of the crypto world. So, at
10:07 some point,
10:08 >> the king,
10:08 >> it's it's the S&P 500. It's the only
10:10 thing that lasts at the end of time. And
10:12 I don't know if we've talked about it. I
10:14 don't believe any idea or innovation in
10:16 the history of mankind has ever lasted.
10:18 There's always a new thing that's
10:19 better. There's always a new way of
10:20 doing something that's different. Well,
10:22 that is what stocks are. That is what
10:23 tokens are. They're ideas. They're
10:25 innovations by human beings. And if AI
10:27 is now going to be creating all of the
10:28 ideas, that means they're not going to
10:30 be around that long. There'll be
10:31 something better that comes up. You're
10:32 going to start seeing this far more
10:34 rapidly. That's why when people say well
10:36 what's the bare case on memory I went
10:37 very easily you think human beings are
10:40 going to solve the memory side I don't I
10:42 think algorithms are going to solve the
10:43 memory side when is that going to happen
10:46 I don't know but within 5 years I know
10:47 it will in my head so when Goldman Sachs
10:49 says 5 years from now we'll be at this
10:51 I'm like I don't really care that's why
10:52 I stick myself in the AI world so I I
10:55 just think for this whole thing when
10:56 people really think about crypto and
10:58 they really think about this you have to
10:59 make a decision on whether you believe
11:00 still in the long-term story and if you
11:02 don't you should be out if you still
11:04 believe in the long-term story, then
11:06 it's a gift that you're getting to put
11:07 things down here. I'm not only buying
11:08 for me. I mentioned to you early on when
11:10 we started doing this that I have
11:11 strategic Bitcoin reserves for my kids.
11:14 This is a blessing to me. My business is
11:16 growing and I'm able to put more of the
11:18 profits that I have back into Bitcoin
11:20 for my kids. So, if it doesn't work out,
11:22 sorry guys, you guys lost out. If it
11:24 does work out the way I think it will,
11:25 they're going to be very, very happy in
11:27 few years. It's always um I like old
11:29 school ads because I think that the ad
11:31 creative used to be very uh thoughtful,
11:33 very uh kind of bold, right? Um and one
11:37 of them I think it's uh Philippe PC uh
11:39 has this entire ad campaign that talks
11:42 about it's not your watch, you're merely
11:44 taking care of it for the next
11:45 generation. And this idea that when you
11:47 buy this, it is not only one going to
11:49 last, but two is you were going to pass
11:51 it down. And so now all of a sudden
11:52 emotion, family, and all this stuff gets
11:54 attached to it. very powerful ad
11:56 campaign for obvious reasons. Um, it's
11:58 very luxury positioning. But the more
12:00 that I've thought about that campaign in
12:02 an investment portfolio, especially when
12:03 you have kids, you start to think about,
12:05 well, what if I don't think of this
12:06 portfolio as mine? I think about it as
12:08 theirs and what do I want to allocate to
12:12 resilience and the ability to have
12:15 durability from a a time horizon really
12:18 becomes interesting. Now the reason I
12:20 think of that is because probably the
12:21 smartest investor that I know who who I
12:23 don't want to name uh said to me one
12:25 time that the hardest problem in finance
12:27 is the intertemporal transfer of wealth.
12:31 And I was like yeah that's too smart for
12:32 me. What does that mean? He basically
12:34 say how do you give yourself money 20
12:36 years from now? So this idea again of
12:37 resilience of durability and
12:41 historically I think a lot of families
12:43 real estate has been a great asset for
12:45 them to do but there are cases where you
12:47 know Detroit used to be really popular
12:48 and now all of a sudden maybe the real
12:50 estate prices aren't what they were at
12:51 one point. Obviously CO I think really
12:53 scared the heck out of a lot of um you
12:55 know corporate building owners in New
12:57 York City for example right and it's
12:58 come back but there was a period there
13:00 where people were were questioning it. I
13:02 don't know of an asset more than Bitcoin
13:05 that people have confidence in over some
13:07 very long period of time, 50 years, 60
13:09 years, is going to continue to do that.
13:11 And so that's what I think I hear you
13:13 saying as well is like, look, this is
13:15 such like a long-term thing that there's
13:16 almost nothing that can convince you to
13:18 sell it, but you understand that doesn't
13:19 mean it's going to be successful. It's
13:21 just the thing that you are playing or
13:23 the exposure you're buying is almost
13:25 this like durability in the portfolio
13:26 over a long period. Is that like a fair
13:28 way to categorize it?
13:30 >> Yeah, but
13:32 So over the course of the last year,
13:34 you've gotten to know me and and the
13:36 viewers and listeners have.
13:38 >> You weren't wearing these nice shirts
13:40 back then, you know. Now all a sudden we
13:42 got a fashion icon.
13:44 >> So I I haven't um this is a Hawaiian
13:46 shirt and because I'm in this now
13:49 library.
13:49 >> I think we're going to call it the
13:50 podcast cathedral. That's what I've been
13:52 thinking.
13:52 >> Okay. The podcast cathedral. So I've
13:55 decided that it needs a little Hawaiian
13:56 shirt every day until I head to Maine in
13:58 3 weeks. though. Um, here's here's the
14:01 thing I'm going to say. I I spend a lot
14:04 of time thinking about what the future's
14:05 going to look like and I take bits and
14:07 pieces from a lot of futurists. So, I
14:12 mentioned yesterday that I met Keith
14:14 Keith Gman and we talked about Kevin
14:15 Kelly from Wired magazine.
14:17 >> Kevin Kelly had a huge influence in me
14:19 during the 2014 to 2020 period. I read a
14:22 lot of his books. He's a futurist that
14:24 called a lot of things directly right.
14:26 his angle on this and my belief in
14:28 Moore's law, Ray Kerszswwell,
14:29 singularity, all of that stuff is why I
14:31 believe in Bitcoin. I think it's ironic
14:34 that Bitcoin is as of today, it's a
14:37 trillion half dollar asset. Isn't it
14:40 ironic that we have SpaceX coming and
14:44 it's about a trillion and a half asset?
14:47 How can people justify buying a company
14:50 that not only is not making money right
14:53 now? And forget Elon, let's leave it
14:55 alone. He's great. But to make the
14:58 comparison between Bitcoin and space,
15:00 you're still buying something based on
15:02 your future thought. And when I talk to
15:05 people who love rocket investments and I
15:07 go, "How is that any different than
15:09 Bitcoin? How do you have any idea on
15:12 something that is more than 3 years out?
15:14 How do you know the government won't
15:15 take over SpaceX? How do you know?
15:17 There's there's no way to know what the
15:20 future's going to look like when you're
15:21 dealing with something that's based on
15:22 going to Mars, which has never been done
15:24 before. So, when I think of investments
15:26 and I think of the future, I have a
15:28 belief on what I think will happen. I
15:30 don't think investing in the S&P 500 is
15:32 safe past 2030. I've said that
15:33 repeatedly because I think AI will
15:35 disrupt all companies. So, for me, I
15:39 don't think Apple's safe. I don't think
15:41 Google's safe. I don't think Amazon's
15:43 safe. So when people look at Bitcoin and
15:45 they don't think it's safe, I understand
15:46 that that's their belief. The question
15:47 is, have they thought a lot about the
15:49 future? Because one of the reasons that
15:50 I think Bitcoin is safe is because the
15:54 consumer, human beings will not be
15:57 consuming more than AI agents in a short
16:01 amount of time. Now, one of the great
16:03 things about I know you you know him and
16:06 you go through, but one of the great
16:07 things about Moonpay is the agentic side
16:08 and being able to talk to someone who
16:10 knows what's happening with AI agents
16:12 and involved. It came out on X this week
16:14 that there are more AI agents on HTML
16:17 sites than humans. Like this is where
16:20 we're headed. So if you think the world
16:22 of human beings is going to dominate
16:24 commerce, it's not. It's AI agents. So
16:26 if you ask me what is a direct play on
16:28 that, I believe Bitcoin is a direct play
16:30 on agents dominating humans going
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17:46 I agree with you that Bitcoin is a safer
17:49 bet than any company just given all of
17:51 the complexities, all the changes, etc.
17:53 over let's say 20 years.
17:55 >> Does that then mean if you get paid for
17:57 the risk that you take that companies
17:59 should be more asymmetric and actually
18:01 Bitcoin should not be asymmetric because
18:03 it is quote unquote safer and therefore
18:05 the return profile should be lower?
18:07 >> Now here here's what I'll say is
18:09 happening in the world today and here's
18:10 where I say Bitcoin actually set the
18:12 framework for this. So what's another
18:14 positive thing in Bitcoin? Well, this
18:15 50% crash has occurred with volatility
18:18 collapsing.
18:18 >> Mhm.
18:19 >> It's not been because of FTX. It's not
18:21 been like the volatility is going down.
18:24 >> Mhm.
18:24 >> So, Bitcoin's bleeding like 2% a week.
18:28 >> It's not going down 15% in one day
18:30 anymore,
18:31 >> but every day we're watching the leading
18:33 stocks in the stock market move 8 to 10%
18:36 a day. Every single one of them. We're
18:38 seeing individual stocks trading at the
18:40 highest volatility relative to index
18:42 vault that we've ever seen. And so this
18:45 is a representation to me that the
18:47 traders of the world which are very zero
18:49 date to expiration option related.
18:51 They're very retail related. It's
18:53 training people to get re to get ready
18:55 more for parabas and bubbles and speed
18:58 crashes as I've written about. That is
19:00 what I think we're in now. That means
19:01 that Bitcoin is acceptable as an asset
19:04 because one of the big negatives was it
19:05 was too volatile. It's not too volatile
19:07 anymore relative to the things that are
19:09 making alpha in the market. So what I
19:11 see happening is this exponential move.
19:13 The agentic move is compressing time.
19:16 And one of the things when I spoke at
19:17 the New York Stock Exchange this week
19:18 that I highlighted to people, you have
19:20 to understand that the MAG7 went from 1
19:23 trillion to 20 plus trillion in
19:26 basically a decade.
19:29 Isn't that a bubble? It's a bubble
19:31 except for one thing. It just happened
19:33 over a longer time period. So if Micron
19:36 can go from 60 to,00 and then it goes
19:40 back to 600 and I'm not saying it's
19:42 going to but if it does was it a bull
19:45 market was it a bare market or was it
19:47 both and that's what Bitcoin then all of
19:48 a sudden maybe these aren't four-year
19:50 cycles maybe these are now 9mon cycles
19:52 and we've compress the time and that's
19:54 what a bubble is. It's price versus time
19:57 and I'll say it again and again. AI is
19:59 speeding up time. The exponential age is
20:01 speeding up time at a pace we've never
20:02 seen before.
20:02 >> So there's a couple pieces of this. Uh
20:04 first of all, we need more bubbles and
20:06 we need more billionaires, which I think
20:07 is uh two ideas that
20:09 >> you're getting both of those.
20:10 >> Yeah. Both of those ideas, I think, are
20:12 very uh counterintuitive to people. But
20:14 the bubbles bring capital and you've
20:16 mentioned that these companies need the
20:18 capital to build out the infrastructure
20:19 for what is going to be the future. Now,
20:22 with Bitcoin, and I think that Micron
20:24 and some of these other companies are
20:25 now experiencing the same thing. And so,
20:27 uh I actually think that there's a very
20:29 interesting historical analysis of
20:30 crypto over the last 15 years or so. It
20:33 may have been the best training ground
20:35 to be an investor in any asset class
20:37 because what you essentially did is you
20:39 compressed all these market cycles into
20:40 a very short period of time. Volatility
20:42 was magnified in in a way that um you
20:46 know the the stat that I always tell
20:47 people is uh 50% draw down in public
20:50 equities in the global financial crisis.
20:52 >> Bitcoin has gone through that every 18
20:54 months for a decade. Yep.
20:55 >> Right. So you just see this stuff over
20:57 and over. Now, the framework that I've
20:59 used for Bitcoin, why does it go up and
21:01 then crash, then go up and crash? It's
21:03 very similar to like a mobile app. So,
21:05 if I created a mobile app with you, we
21:06 want to go get users. We'd run a
21:07 marketing campaign. 100 people come in
21:09 and sign up. Well, some portion of those
21:11 people are not going to stay. They're
21:13 going to churn. So, let's say that 30
21:14 turn out. We're left with a net gain of
21:16 70 people. We run another marketing
21:18 campaign. Another 100 people come in,
21:20 but 30 of those people turn out. Well,
21:21 now we have 140 people who are left,
21:23 right? And you keep doing this. And
21:25 that's basically what we've seen in
21:26 Bitcoin is you get these big run-ups in
21:28 price, a bunch of people pile in, you
21:30 get it kind of bleeds out, some people
21:31 leave, but you've converted new people.
21:34 AI is starting to do this now. And I
21:36 think that's where you see even when you
21:37 get these big moves and there's some
21:39 draw down, some portion of those people
21:41 are not leaving, whether it's passive
21:42 indexing, whether it's just, you know,
21:44 longerterm believers, etc. We are almost
21:47 driving more capital into these
21:49 businesses and they're setting new
21:51 floors even if there's volatility in it.
21:53 And to me that becomes really
21:54 interesting because as the companies get
21:56 bigger and bigger, the dollars being
21:58 invested are getting bigger, but also
22:00 the productivity is accelerating. Right?
22:01 You've talked about Eli Liy and a number
22:03 of these companies where they're just
22:04 they're good capital allocators and
22:06 they're able to accelerate.
22:08 >> And so actually in a weird way, the
22:10 bubbles are necessary in order for us
22:13 not only to build out the
22:14 infrastructure, but it's also necessary
22:16 to get capital to appreciate for the
22:20 investor as well. Right.
22:22 >> Yeah. And and
22:24 so the the worst part about this, we
22:26 we're now at a point where when we say
22:29 AI, let's let's use forever Jensen
22:32 Snuang's five layer cake. And let's just
22:34 say that okay, you got the chips, the
22:35 energy, the infrastructure, the models,
22:37 and the applications.
22:40 The only thing that's been monetized or
22:42 the only thing making money are the
22:44 chips, the energy, and the
22:46 infrastructure.
22:48 There's a problem with that eventually.
22:50 um this is all about the buildout in
22:52 preparation for it and like I said you
22:55 eventually do have to get the revenues.
22:57 There was an interesting interview with
22:59 um the head of the Norwegian um
23:02 sovereign wealth fund and he interviewed
23:04 I don't know the name of the CEO of IBM
23:06 but the IBM CEO and the IBM CEO who's
23:10 obviously
23:12 been involved with AI as long as anyone.
23:13 I mean Watson was before Google was even
23:16 a company. Um he basically said when you
23:20 do the math and he and he went through
23:22 it logically he's like a data center now
23:25 costs and so people hear this in the
23:27 course of basically 9 months a data
23:30 center for 1 gawatt has gone from 50
23:32 billion he was saying it's 60 to 80 and
23:35 Jensen Yuang said in Computex this
23:37 weekend it'll very quickly be 80 to 100
23:41 billion. So you're talking about massive
23:43 inflation in building this stuff. That's
23:45 how bad the bottleneck situation is. And
23:47 it just shows that okay, how are we
23:49 going to keep building this smart people
23:51 are going to solve this. But what the
23:52 guy said is at these costs for the
23:54 gigawatts for they're not going to be
23:57 able to make the revenues. Now I have
24:00 said repeatedly this is not a bubble.
24:02 But what I do agree with is that DeepS
24:06 is in direct competition with the model
24:08 component of this. I'm not sure a
24:10 generalist model anymore you're going to
24:12 be able to make the money. I don't think
24:13 the adoption is going to happen on the
24:14 enterprise side. You brought up Eli Liy.
24:17 The reason I believe Eli Liy, and you
24:20 can mark this down, we can go back to
24:21 see it has a chance to be the largest
24:24 company in the world and the number one
24:27 AI company in the world within 5 years
24:30 is because they're building a
24:33 specialized model. And I think
24:35 eventually people have to realize that
24:36 they have their own data center with a
24:38 thousand GPUs with all of the data that
24:40 Eli Liy has had. There's a hundred and
24:43 what is it 150 year old company all the
24:46 failures all the successes all of that
24:48 data actually matters I've joked before
24:49 that I don't know if an asset management
24:51 company's data is as valuable as they
24:52 think it is but I know that all of these
24:55 trials and things they started from some
24:57 intelligence place and if you combine
24:58 all this stuff and you combine it with
24:59 Alphafold where they have a partnership
25:01 with Isomorph if you combine it with
25:02 their Nvidia co-inovation lab if you
25:05 combine it with toune lab which is their
25:08 Google X which means they allow people
25:10 to use their data center effectively and
25:13 the only thing they get is the data like
25:16 they get the access to what's going on.
25:18 They are creating an innovation hub of
25:20 using data all for human software. So if
25:22 I think about who's going to get the
25:24 revenues well if a drug company can make
25:26 their entire process of getting the FDA
25:29 approval efficient and at the same time
25:31 they can benefit by selling better drugs
25:33 well they're getting revenue directly.
25:35 That's an easy one for me to understand.
25:37 The other ones I don't understand. So, I
25:39 think people have to realize that in
25:40 this five layer cake, we're kind of at
25:43 the point where every dollar that's
25:44 generating margins in the S&P 500 is
25:47 commodity related that has inflation.
25:49 Until we start seeing the application, I
25:51 think what the IBM CEO said on this,
25:53 people should go listen to. I don't know
25:55 if they're going to be able to get the
25:56 revenues in as quickly as they need it.
25:58 And that's the issue is if you have
26:00 bottlenecks and you're spending all this
26:01 money, you eventually need to get the
26:03 revenues. And we've seen what Anthropics
26:05 ARR looks like. The question is if that
26:07 slows for even a month, what are people
26:11 going to do? You've been involved in
26:12 this a long time. If a company is
26:13 growing rapidly and it's parabolic, if
26:15 they tweak a little bit, think about
26:17 what happened to OpenAI over the course
26:19 of the last year.
26:19 >> Oh, I was going to say OpenAI showed us
26:21 what what happens there. So, I want to
26:23 talk about Eli Lilly a little bit more
26:24 in a second, but um on this general
26:25 versus specialized workflow, um we have
26:27 direct experience with this, right?
26:28 We're building CFO Sylvia. see the
26:30 actual specialized workflows and I'll
26:32 tell you that there are um and I've been
26:34 talking about this for a couple months
26:35 now and I think finally it is cracking
26:36 into the mainstream conversation the
26:38 single most important thing that I see
26:40 happening in the AI industry is that the
26:42 general purpose models were the default
26:44 no one knew how to build specialized
26:45 workflows or any of this stuff and so
26:47 open AI came out anthropic started to
26:49 push claw everyone basically kind of
26:51 mandate from heaven to their teams go
26:53 use AI and people listened and they went
26:56 and we're now seeing reports of whether
26:57 it's Amazon or JP Morgan or Uber They're
27:00 all reporting that they blew through
27:01 their token budgets, you know, in a
27:02 single quarter for the entire year,
27:04 stuff like that.
27:05 >> But people are starting to question, are
27:07 we getting the value for what we're
27:09 spending?
27:10 >> And they are as AI pilled as they come,
27:13 but what they're trying to connect it
27:14 back to is the ROI. And so what we saw
27:17 at CFO Sylvia is that we actually gave
27:21 token consumption to the user. So the
27:23 user was in charge of how much times
27:25 they queried, etc. So you essentially
27:27 could think of that as you have uncapped
27:28 upside for usage of the tokens but we as
27:32 a company had uncapped expenses because
27:34 as much as the users want to use it. So
27:36 then that forced us if we want to keep
27:37 cost under control to go look at how do
27:39 you efficiently consume tokens.
27:41 >> Yep.
27:42 >> We have seen a significant reduction in
27:44 the number of tokens that are used on a
27:46 per query basis for certain things in
27:47 the back end. All this kind of stuff
27:49 >> as we went through that process I
27:51 started talking to many of my friends
27:52 who run companies or have implemented
27:54 some of this stuff. They're all going
27:56 through the exact same thing. Y they're
27:57 all trying to figure out if I'm spending
27:59 hundreds of thousands or millions of
28:01 dollars per year using some sort of AI
28:04 system, how do I get the same output but
28:06 get a cheaper bill? It's human nature.
28:08 It's corporate incentive. And so now
28:10 what I'm starting to see is all of these
28:12 companies are becoming successful at
28:14 doing it and they're all sharing some of
28:15 the best practices and and the engineers
28:17 are all talking to each other. So in a
28:19 weird way it makes Anthropic's revenue
28:21 growth even more impressive that they
28:23 are growing at the rate that they're
28:24 going at the same time that every single
28:25 one of their customers is trying to
28:26 become more efficient using their
28:28 service right so you have like a per
28:29 customer per token revenue basis is
28:32 coming down but your overall revenue is
28:34 growing so rapidly because the demand is
28:36 just you know insatiable so when I look
28:38 at that it does split the world into
28:41 general purpose versus specialized
28:42 workflow I think that finance I think
28:45 that healthcare I think there's very
28:47 specific areas where it's going to be
28:48 incredibly difficult. And I think that
28:50 the general purpose models have waved
28:52 the white flag. They're admitting it
28:54 because what are they doing? They're
28:55 creating JVS. They're creating internal
28:57 teams. And they're basically saying, "We
28:59 need a biotech team. We need a team
29:01 that's going to go and we're going to
29:02 partner with a bunch of PE firms and go
29:04 do accounting rollups or whatever. And
29:06 they're essentially saying that their
29:08 general purpose models are not going to
29:09 be able to compete on a specialized
29:11 basis. And so a company like Eli Liy
29:13 that has a data advantage, has technical
29:14 capabilities, they've got the
29:16 infrastructure, it's not hard to see
29:17 them beating whatever general purpose
29:20 models are out there for their specific
29:21 use case, right?
29:23 >> Yes. And everything you said gets tied
29:25 up into the same thing. So
29:26 philanthropic, the cost of building the
29:28 ability of providing the tokens is going
29:30 up dramatically. So they have to raise
29:31 the cost. So users who are very smart
29:34 are like, "Wait, wait, wait, wait. I I
29:36 I'm not paying for this." So then you
29:38 start figuring out ways to not pay for
29:39 it. So Davin Baker on an interview about
29:42 a year ago, sorry, about six months ago,
29:46 it's amazing how fast this is. He
29:47 literally said the bearish argument for
29:51 all of the model providers is eventually
29:53 going to be the edge.
29:56 So the problem with the edge is the edge
29:58 is coming sooner than what people think.
30:00 The data center buildout and the the
30:02 borrowing of money and the building of
30:04 this stuff. This is why I keep saying
30:06 there is risk for every one of them.
30:08 when you when we talk about enthropic
30:10 and we're like it's 44 it's not 44
30:12 billion that's the ARR so like I want to
30:15 make sure people realize going like this
30:19 for 3 months does not ensure you'll be
30:21 doing that for another 3 years and
30:23 there's a lot of factors and you're
30:24 naming if you go through all the factors
30:25 you're saying so let me get their cost
30:27 of providing that's going higher the the
30:31 clients using it are like wait my
30:33 budgets are too high this is too
30:35 expensive I got to figure ways to do it
30:36 oh magically I don't need as any tokens.
30:39 Anthropic doesn't care cuz they have a
30:40 wait list for tokens. So, they're still
30:42 growing. But the issue is you're still
30:44 playing with this game of like, well, we
30:46 need more compute and they're out there
30:48 racing to Colossus and to Google and
30:50 trying to get all this stuff. It just
30:52 seems I very clear to me that there's a
30:55 problem with bottlenecks and shortages
30:57 and oh by the way, the straight of
30:58 Hormuz is still shut. And I can't say
31:00 this loud enough. The one thing about
31:02 prediction markets that people need to
31:03 pay attention to when you hear all these
31:05 things of like the straight will be
31:07 reopened by whatever. If you believe
31:08 that then go bet on couch sheet because
31:11 right now for the straight to completely
31:13 reopen to normal by right before the
31:17 midterms is less than 50%. So we're
31:20 getting to the point where all of these
31:22 bottlenecks are building. And as someone
31:24 who's a macro person who's focused on
31:26 the situation of bottlenecks, I want to
31:29 focus on what Eli Liy is doing because
31:31 you know what? They don't depend on
31:33 tokens. They spent the money on a
31:36 thousand black wells to build a data
31:40 center to be able to take their data.
31:43 And so you have to think real hard about
31:45 why do they have an advantage? Because
31:47 they are printing money and they can
31:50 build their own. And so for companies
31:51 like Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs,
31:53 they're going to have to make a choice
31:54 at some point. Do I want to pay
31:56 anthropic or is this a way to get
31:58 started on this because they were
31:59 nowhere seven months ago? And that's
32:01 what I think is happening. There's a
32:02 combination of hoarding on the hardware
32:04 side. There's FOMO on both the model
32:07 side, but also on the enterprise side
32:10 because Goldman doesn't want to fall
32:11 behind Morgan, doesn't want to fall
32:12 behind Bank of America or JP Morgan. So
32:14 they all have to start spending money
32:16 because they're like, "We have to do
32:17 something on this. Oh my gosh, Opus and
32:19 Claude make it easier than OpenAI. Let's
32:21 get rid of ChatgBT. But chat GPT
32:23 enterprise was the biggest thing a year
32:25 ago. So I think people are
32:27 overestimating this and that's why the
32:28 IBM interview is so important to me.
32:30 >> I recently saw uh one person uh online
32:34 say that they have completely uh
32:36 eradicated the use of cloud internally
32:38 and they've gone to Deep Seek V4.
32:40 >> Yep. and they believe that not only is
32:42 it saving them a lot of money, but they
32:44 also think that it is a better
32:45 performance in terms of accuracy,
32:47 latency, etc. Now, it will be very
32:50 interesting to watch over the next 30 to
32:51 60 days if more people do not start
32:54 saying as part of this, hey, what are we
32:56 getting for the token, you know, bill
32:57 that we're receiving? Can I get away
33:00 with using an open source model that
33:01 maybe we fine-tune a little bit
33:03 >> and get 90% maybe even better
33:05 performance than what I'm getting here
33:07 with Claude? Now, I actually think that
33:10 this is a PI expanding exercise and so
33:14 Anthropic is going to continue to do
33:15 well. OpenAI will continue to do well. I
33:17 think XAI is very underrated in terms of
33:20 their ability to kind of come out of
33:21 nowhere and and start to get adoption.
33:23 Um, I also think that whether it's Eli
33:26 Liy, Revolute is a business that here in
33:28 the United States people don't really
33:29 talk about a lot, but it is kind of the
33:31 Robin Hood of Europe. They probably
33:32 wouldn't like that term, but but just
33:34 think of them that way. Is a retail
33:35 brokerage. they've built their own model
33:37 and they've used their own data to be
33:39 able to do it. And so you go and you
33:40 look at this and you say at the end of
33:42 the day what people are always going to
33:43 be incentivized to do is control as much
33:45 of the stack as possible.
33:46 >> Mh.
33:46 >> And if you have a model whether it
33:49 started as open source that you
33:50 fine-tuned and you trained or you were
33:53 able to actually go and do it probably
33:54 similar to what Eli Liy did, you are
33:56 going to have such a competitive
33:58 advantage. It's no different than why
34:00 are you spending so much money going to
34:01 every college campus trying to find the
34:03 smartest new people. you're looking for
34:04 intelligence, right? Well, what if there
34:06 is synthetic intelligence that is better
34:08 than anybody at any college?
34:10 When I started to think about that, I
34:12 said, "No wonder young people are having
34:15 a hard time trying to find a job."
34:16 >> Mhm.
34:17 >> Because people are saying, "I can go and
34:18 I can get this same intelligence in a
34:20 different way. I don't have to do
34:21 recruiting. I don't have to do all this
34:22 stuff." Now, with that said, the young
34:24 people are getting smart and what are
34:26 they doing? They're learning how to use
34:27 the tools. Mhm.
34:28 >> And so you get this ever moving dynamic
34:30 environment where everyone is trying to
34:32 like take a snapshot of the market and
34:34 they want everything to be black and
34:35 white. Anthropic is winning, open eye is
34:38 losing. Closed source versus open
34:40 source. Young people can't find a job.
34:42 Eli Liy is screwed, right? Like whatever
34:44 the snapshot in time is, people start to
34:46 extrapolate these kind of hardened
34:48 thoughts. And my conclusion over the
34:50 last couple weeks is the single most
34:51 important thing you can do right now is
34:53 to remain with incredible flexibility
34:55 mentally because it is changing very
34:58 quickly and if you try to take that
35:00 static snapshot you are going to be
35:01 wrong 3 weeks later and so you've got to
35:04 stay informed. You've got to continue to
35:05 update kind of your mental models here
35:06 and if you do that that's the best way
35:08 to kind of navigate all this.
35:09 >> Yeah. The only thing I would add and and
35:11 I don't know if you felt this and we
35:12 didn't talk about it but um
35:16 the LLMs are now commoditized and what I
35:19 mean by commoditized the price is not
35:20 zero but the difference between
35:24 and I won't say all of them but I will
35:26 say Claude and Chat GPT
35:31 they're indistinguishable to me in terms
35:33 of now being able to use them. And I got
35:35 into a conversation with someone we both
35:37 know this week who had just gotten off a
35:39 plane and mentioned something they did
35:42 and I said, "Oh, I I don't really use
35:45 Claude as much." And I was the person
35:47 that said, "You really have to use
35:48 Claude, not ChatgPT." So people are
35:50 starting to ask me like, "Are you using
35:52 Codeex and Chat GPT?" And I'm like,
35:54 "Yeah, that's my model. That's it now."
35:56 Now I'm using both of them. But the
35:59 reason I say they're commoditized is
36:01 when you interview someone and this is
36:03 the easiest way for for we've both been
36:05 in the seat. Let's assume that you had
36:08 four piece two pieces of information for
36:10 each of them. Their grades in school,
36:11 they both went to the exact same
36:12 college. They both finished with perfect
36:14 scores. Their SATs exactly the same and
36:18 their IQ exactly the same. Now, you're
36:21 going to pick the person not based on
36:23 that. then you're going to pick it based
36:25 on the nuances that match with you, what
36:28 you're looking for, cuz they're not
36:29 going to be the same person. They might
36:31 have exactly the same scores on
36:33 everything, which is where I believe the
36:34 LLMs are now, at least for Chat GBT and
36:37 Claude. Now, maybe Claude is slightly
36:39 better at coding, but I'm not really
36:41 sure about that anymore either. I'm
36:42 building stuff in codeex every day. And
36:44 I'm working on a very long project, the
36:46 longest one I've ever worked on, and I'm
36:48 doing it in cursor and codecs.
36:51 I I'm I'm just going back and forth
36:53 between the two and it's I'm doing
36:55 because this one is something for the
36:57 subscribers that to me is really cool
36:59 and it it it's breaking it's creating a
37:01 new structure in terms of in terms of
37:02 the way I look at the market but I it's
37:05 indistinguishable. So the reason I've
37:06 chose chatbt 5.5 is because it is the
37:10 better brainstorming partner for me and
37:12 when I meet intelligent people and I
37:15 love to meet someone who can always puts
37:19 things in my head that I hadn't thought
37:20 about. They could speak for an hour and
37:23 only two things enter but those two
37:24 jewels are worth so much to me. Chad GBT
37:27 does it all the time. Claude almost
37:29 never does it for me anymore. And when I
37:31 say never it may sound like an
37:32 exaggeration but for me it's not. I just
37:35 believe that the the critical things
37:38 that make my brain go, "Oh my gosh,"
37:40 happen more in GPT 5.5 and it's not a
37:44 reflection of the model's abilities.
37:46 It's a reflection of how it responds to
37:48 me and can almost feel what I'm looking
37:50 for better than Claude. It said better
37:52 at anticipating what Jordy wants and I
37:54 that's why I've migrated back towards
37:56 it. All right, guys. Let's talk about
37:58 something that's actually moving the
37:59 needle in crypto right now and that's my
38:00 guys over at Arch Public. These guys are
38:03 killing it. They continue to lead the
38:05 way in everything that's got to do with
38:06 agentic trading. And everyone knows
38:07 this. Nothing else is being talked about
38:09 in the market other than let your AI
38:11 agents trade whatever asset you want.
38:13 Now, with the addition of Arch AI, the
38:15 market wave algorithm, and their tax
38:17 harvest tool, they have turned this into
38:19 a true one-stop shop for automated
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38:28 for Arch Public, that is over. They have
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38:32 trading strategies without ever taking
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38:38 Arch Public is an action speak louder
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38:46 get to test it. You run the strategies.
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40:30 Usually people see us come on here and
40:32 talk. They don't get to see the uh time
40:34 before. That's the most fun that we
40:36 have. We get to joke around, you know,
40:38 we talk about what we're going to uh to
40:40 discuss. Um and today you said something
40:43 to me that was very interesting. I'd
40:44 love for you to elaborate, which is
40:46 peptides are the API key for the human
40:50 body. Now I have learned throughout my
40:53 life that there are two types of experts
40:55 in the world. There are medical doctors.
40:57 >> Yes.
40:58 >> And then there are the bros scientists.
41:00 The bros scientists have been very right
41:03 for a long time. They are the ones who
41:06 were talking about everyone should be
41:07 taking creatine. They were the ones who
41:09 were talking about you know saunas and
41:11 cold plunges and you know all of that
41:13 type of stuff. They have been on the
41:15 peptide train for a while now and it
41:18 feels like the rest of the world is now
41:21 saying, "Oh, peptides, that's
41:23 interesting." And the bro scientists are
41:24 saying, you know, "Come into the warm
41:26 water. We've been here a while."
41:27 >> Y
41:28 >> what is a peptide? Why is it the API key
41:31 for the human body?
41:33 >> So to I I want to take a step back from
41:36 just answering this for people at this
41:38 point. Um
41:41 you made a comment which I agree with
41:43 and this is the way Wall Street has been
41:45 separated. Um people who are not
41:46 scientists never enter the biotech and
41:50 pharma world as an investor. Uh and
41:52 because you can't understand the science
41:55 but for some reason we all became
41:57 experts at technology
41:59 and we think like we know exactly what
42:02 goes on in a computer and Moore's law
42:04 and everything else. And the reason we
42:06 became experts at it is because that was
42:08 the way we all made money. So we all own
42:10 Nvidia. We all go through this. So what
42:12 I know I know what a GPU is.
42:15 >> I I I the funny thing is why would
42:18 people know what an API key is? So an
42:22 API key and a peptide are basically ways
42:25 to enter into something with a receptor.
42:29 Meaning I want to do this. I want to
42:31 take my data from this software that I
42:34 pay for. I use my a API key. So, it's a
42:37 door into something. So, the easiest way
42:40 to do this is for people to learn that
42:42 GLP1s
42:44 are peptides. Peptides are growing
42:47 exponentially. So, if you had Chris
42:49 Camilo sitting across from you and he
42:50 was doing all his Tik Tok analysis at
42:52 nighttime and we said, "Are peptides
42:54 big?" He'd be like, "Peptides are huge.
42:56 How do I make money on peptides?" Like,
42:58 it was a lot of private companies. But
43:00 the reality is when you start spending
43:02 time well GLP1 is the king of peptides
43:05 and its growth is enormous but it's only
43:08 serving a very small portion. I can't
43:12 think of a scenario where whatever your
43:14 view is of GLP1s.
43:16 Peptides is now kind of what they've
43:18 been replaced with. GLP1s are a little
43:20 scary to people but peptides everyone
43:22 seems to be migrating towards because
43:24 now they're on every podcast. Now
43:25 everyone's talking about Google Trends.
43:27 It's going through the roof. I can't go
43:28 in any kind of um setting without
43:31 hearing it. I worked out today. The
43:33 person at the desk, I know what her job
43:35 is and she's a health coach. She deals
43:38 with nutrition.
43:40 Before I could finish saying peptide and
43:42 I said, "What percentage of the people
43:44 that you have as clients every single
43:46 day come into you and talk about PEP?"
43:48 And she went, "Everybody." And she said,
43:50 "This is never ending." And she went,
43:52 "If you're talking about GLP1s, more
43:54 than 50% of my clients are on GLP1." Now
43:57 again, this is Manhattan.
43:58 >> Are they doing it for weight loss or are
44:01 they doing it for other non-weight loss
44:03 reasons?
44:04 >> At this point, the majority of them are
44:06 for weight loss. They're not. But she
44:08 does have a lot of diabetic clients and
44:10 she does have a lot of pre-diabetic
44:11 clients. So I don't want to be it's
44:12 people have money that can afford to pay
44:14 for these things cuz they're there, but
44:16 they're growing rapidly. The thing is
44:19 what Eli Lily and the reason this is so
44:21 important. So if the decade of 2009 to
44:25 2020 was about the app store and API
44:29 keys, you could argue that API keys were
44:31 the key to all of the money made by the
44:33 Mag 7. I believe the pharma industry
44:36 with peptides has locked into something
44:39 where again whether it's gene editing,
44:42 any way you want to go, we're getting to
44:43 the software side of the body. We're
44:46 actually getting to the point of
44:47 understanding this does this to to
44:49 someone. So Eli Liy has data that is
44:52 unexplained for them. And if you listen
44:53 to David Ricks, he'll say, "We knew it
44:57 was losing weight. We knew it was
44:58 helping with diabetes. What we didn't
45:00 understand is why is addiction going
45:02 down? Why is this going down? They're
45:04 getting to the part and they've been
45:05 doing metabolic metabolic disease
45:08 focused for 100 years. So now we're
45:11 getting to the point of actually getting
45:13 to the root cause of problems as opposed
45:15 to the treatment of problems. And if you
45:16 get to the root cause of problems
45:18 through peptides and through receptors,
45:20 you're now getting into the point where
45:21 you're putting an API key into the human
45:23 body to deal with something. This is the
45:26 beginning of a massive trend because if
45:28 it wasn't for AI, in my opinion, we're
45:31 still kind of guessing and going through
45:33 a long process, but AI helps speed up
45:35 the process. I'll give you something we
45:37 didn't talk about. So, you know, there's
45:39 different phases of trials. So very
45:42 recently, I think in the last month,
45:44 maybe it was two months, Eli Lilly
45:45 stopped
45:47 disclosing phase one trials they're
45:49 working on, which is when they're
45:50 actually using human beings for this.
45:52 They won't disclose it anymore. Why
45:54 wouldn't you disclose it anymore? Well,
45:56 because it's much easier to catch up to
45:58 IP if you have AI. If you're doing this
46:02 and disclosing it, it was for investors
46:03 because they want investors to be
46:05 focused on it. Well, now what they're
46:06 worried about is competition.
46:07 Competition is about AI. So what we're
46:09 watching in front of our face is human
46:11 software. The TAM market for obesity in
46:15 the in the world is between 200 and $300
46:18 billion.
46:20 That's a big TAM and it's very little of
46:23 it right now is being accessed because
46:25 of the cost of this and the fact that
46:26 you can't get insurance. But if you find
46:28 ways to make them and what they're
46:30 working on is one treatment as opposed
46:31 to every single month pill not shot.
46:35 like we watch all this stuff and that's
46:36 what they're focused on and they are
46:38 buying companies almost every single
46:40 week and in some weeks they're buying
46:41 multiple companies but if you go through
46:43 they're all connected to the parts of
46:47 the diabetes side that GLP1s that
46:50 they've seen some kind of impact whether
46:51 it's kidneys whether it's cancers
46:53 whether it's all this you're talking to
46:54 someone who didn't know any of this 6
46:56 months ago but I wrote a paper in
46:58 October when I get fixated on something
47:00 I keep going and the reason I'm talking
47:02 about it today people is because I
47:04 believe we are seeing signs of a top in
47:07 hardware. Not that they're going to go
47:09 down and not that this is a crash, but
47:10 you look for rotations to where the
47:12 market narrative shifts. And I think the
47:14 market narrative is shifting from the
47:16 chips, infrastructure, energy side of
47:19 the cake and it's moving up to the
47:21 application side and I think the best
47:23 application for this is going to be on
47:25 the human software side. So, one of the
47:26 aspects that uh I became very interested
47:28 in is the second I heard the GLP1s could
47:31 help with addiction. And the data point
47:34 that really hammered it home was that
47:36 some of the hedge funds on Wall Street
47:38 were requiring people to not take GOP1
47:41 >> because it took away some of the
47:42 risk-taking genes, you know, the
47:43 risk-taking uh component
47:45 >> was everyone is looking at GOPs as a
47:49 physical body weight loss, you know,
47:52 etc. impact.
47:54 What happens when this hits the drug and
47:56 alcohol addiction market?
47:58 >> I don't know where people are yet in
48:00 terms of actually being able to do that
48:01 from a a pure medical standpoint. Will
48:03 insurance dollars be able to be used,
48:05 etc. But if you're telling me that there
48:08 is now something that can be injected
48:10 that will help solve that problem and it
48:13 maybe is matched with recovery centers
48:16 or rehab or whatever, that is a very big
48:20 market. That is a market that not only
48:22 would have a profound positive impact on
48:24 society, but there will be very big
48:26 businesses built there. And so I think
48:28 that to me is what's interesting here is
48:29 you're talking about this like API key
48:31 for the human body, but it seems like a
48:34 lot of these peptides, they're not just
48:36 single application. We're starting to
48:39 see, okay, it can do weight loss, it can
48:40 do addiction, it can do what it's one
48:43 single drug, right, or peptide. Mhm.
48:46 >> When we look at the cholesterol shot, my
48:49 guess is it does other things as well,
48:51 right? And has certain impacts on
48:52 people's body. And so as you see this
48:55 kind of roll out here, it feels like we
48:58 understand maybe the first order impact,
49:00 but we yet do not understand what else
49:03 can these things do. And so it's a
49:05 perfect example of a market that
49:07 continues to expand as we better
49:09 understand the technology. As an
49:11 investor, what else do you want? It's
49:12 already a big TAM. And oh by the way,
49:14 you know, it's kind of like the SpaceX
49:16 uh TAM slide, you know, we have rocket
49:19 launch, we have Starlink, enterprise AI.
49:23 >> Yeah.
49:23 >> Right. Same thing's going to happen here
49:25 in healthcare, right?
49:27 >> Yeah. And for people, I mean, we're
49:28 we're we're almost at 20% of uh personal
49:32 expenditures in the country each year
49:34 are healthcare. We're getting close to
49:36 that. Um it grows every single year
49:38 because of demographics and because of
49:39 the health of the country. So we all
49:41 realize it's a huge market. Um, I don't
49:43 think people fully grasp how big the
49:45 market is, but forget housing, forget
49:47 all this stuff like health expenditures
49:49 are what you want to focus your
49:50 attention on. So, if you can get a piece
49:51 of that pie, it's great. Second thing,
49:53 when when you talked about addiction, I
49:56 people hear the word side effect and
49:59 they think it's something negative.
50:01 Well, these side effects of addictions
50:04 going down, all these are just one of
50:06 the things that are coming that they can
50:08 now go study. So I believe what Eli Liy
50:11 has figured out is side effects now
50:13 become something very useful to go
50:14 investigate as to why this is having an
50:16 impact. This is different than spending
50:18 an enormous amount of years to get a
50:20 drug that treats something as opposed to
50:22 a peptide which is there to make the
50:25 body act differently. And that's the
50:27 thing people have to realize is if they
50:28 go spend the time and for everyone
50:30 listening I I did this on my weekly
50:32 video. I highly recommend listening to
50:34 an interview on YouTube with David
50:36 Ricks, the CEO of Eli Liy and Jensen
50:39 Yuang. They're partners.
50:42 Eli Liy is partners with Nvidia. That
50:44 should be enough for people to be
50:45 interested because he's had a pretty
50:46 high hit ratio. But if you listen to the
50:48 interview, you'll learn more about why
50:50 GLP1s are so important and why peptides
50:52 are so important and you'll get a sense
50:54 as to where Eli Liy is going with this.
50:57 So I think as everyone thinks about this
50:58 more and they get through how big the
51:00 market can be, how it'll go, they're
51:01 going to get back to one other important
51:02 issue. I've never worried about the debt
51:04 of the country despite all the doom and
51:06 gloom that's out there because the
51:07 household net worth of the country is
51:09 five times the size of the debt of the
51:11 country. So yes, the government has a
51:13 bad balance sheet, but the household
51:15 balance sheet is phenomenal. But
51:17 entitlements are a major issue that are
51:19 going to be an issue. But what makes up
51:20 the bulk of entitlements when you get
51:22 through Medicare and Medicaid and you're
51:24 dealing again with the health of the
51:25 country? If we're going to get to the
51:27 point with peptides, but also with gene
51:29 editing, with uh mRNA, e every single
51:32 thing, if we're going to get to the
51:34 point where people are going to die
51:36 healthy as opposed to die sick, that has
51:40 a huge impact on the entitlement issue.
51:42 And that's where again, I don't think
51:43 looking out 5 years, people should think
51:45 that any business that they've invested
51:47 in is safe. I don't think they should
51:48 think that they're going to die. The
51:50 reason I spend so much time trying to be
51:52 healthy today is because I'm not sure
51:54 they're going to be able to reverse my
51:55 age. So, I want to stay the same age for
51:56 as long as I can or at least have the
51:58 delta be be shrinking. So, I think the
52:00 healthc care side is something people
52:01 need to think more about. Watch Eli Liy
52:04 stock just because number one, it is a
52:06 trillion dollar company. Number two,
52:08 believe it or not, it's been kind of
52:09 consolidating to a very high degree for
52:11 the last 18 months. So, you have no clue
52:15 as to what the impact of GLP1s are. And
52:17 neither did I until this past week.
52:20 Victoria Secret
52:22 put their earnings out there. Yep. The
52:24 stock was up 47%
52:26 earlier this week. They reported 15%
52:29 sales growth in uh I think Q1
52:34 directly attributable or in a large part
52:37 to GLP1's people are losing weight.
52:40 Bedroom fashion is back I guess.
52:42 >> Yeah.
52:43 >> The second order effects here on some of
52:45 these businesses. Everyone was talking
52:47 about our fast food company's going to
52:48 come under pressure
52:50 >> but there's the positive stories as
52:51 well. And so it does feel like this is
52:53 going to kind of infiltrate out into the
52:56 US economy in a bunch of ways that maybe
52:58 we didn't predict before.
53:00 >> Yeah. And and I think again the main
53:01 point here for people to think about is
53:03 this is what limited access. So I
53:06 remember when I first wrote something
53:07 about GLP1s which was probably four
53:09 years ago now and it was when originally
53:13 it was becoming kind of a big theme
53:15 where everyone was talking about but it
53:16 was when it was starting to impact the
53:17 consumer staples companies. And I
53:19 remember people asked me the question
53:21 because people will say what do you
53:22 think and doctors were already telling
53:24 me this is like a miracle drug and most
53:27 people thought it was bad and the
53:30 doctors some of which were family
53:32 members were like Jordy you have to
53:34 understand for every 10 people that I
53:37 take care of seven of them can't go on
53:39 trips to Disney they can't do things
53:41 with their family this is changing their
53:43 ability to live their life and are there
53:45 side effects yes but they're going to
53:48 live a healthier life going forward. So,
53:50 what you're talking about now is four
53:51 years later, the technologies have
53:53 gotten better. They're still getting
53:55 better. The weight loss percentage is
53:57 getting higher. The muscle mass loss is
53:59 going down. The ability for people to
54:01 take these less often and not in shot
54:04 form is increasing. And it's only going
54:06 to get better. So, a lot of the things,
54:08 and again, I'm writing a paper on this
54:10 on Eli Liy. I can't possibly describe to
54:12 you all of the strategic purchases
54:15 they've made of other companies. So if
54:17 you go back to what was happening with
54:20 the Mag 7, what were they doing? Buying
54:22 Instagram, buy like they were buying
54:26 companies. They were buying API keys. So
54:28 what's Eli Lily doing? They're making so
54:31 much money from this one drug that
54:33 they're taking the cash to build a data
54:36 center to like this is the greatest
54:39 story you could ever want to hear. And
54:41 like I said, Toune Lab is basically
54:43 Google X. Their co-inovation lab out in
54:46 Silicon Valley with Nvidia. Co-inovation
54:49 lab with Nvidia is to speed up health
54:52 and it's to attract talent from Stanford
54:54 and the people that are graduating out
54:56 there to make sure that when they have a
54:57 choice and they're like, "Do I want to
54:58 go work for a software company or do I
55:00 want to work for a human software
55:02 company?" All of this stuff is happening
55:04 and I can already see the supersonic
55:06 tsunami of healthcare is approaching and
55:08 so I think there's going to be more and
55:10 more Victoria Secret stories going
55:12 forward. What are you going to put in
55:13 your video this week?
55:15 >> Uh, there's obviously going to be a lot
55:17 of uh Eli Lillian teasing out some of
55:19 the things that I said here. There's
55:21 going to be a lot on my belief that the
55:23 IPOs that are coming to the market that
55:25 people are underestimating what they
55:27 signal the Google what the 85 billion
55:31 why Berkshire buying it why that says
55:33 something too that a company that's been
55:35 raising cash decides oh we'll take 10
55:37 billion of a company that's up 120%
55:39 year-over-year. a lot of stuff going on
55:42 in the market that I think people need
55:43 to be paying attention to. And again,
55:45 I'm going to say that this is not a
55:46 bubble. The title of my video last week
55:48 is we will crash, which was a play on
55:50 Andrew Ross Sorcin. Um, but the rotation
55:53 to me is going to happen, and I'd be
55:54 focused on companies there. And I I will
55:56 emphasize one other point, too. We
55:58 talked about the human software side.
56:00 I'm not going to emphasize the
56:02 importance of crypto and tokenization on
56:04 the financial guardrails, but that is
56:05 the other software side that if I'm
56:07 right for the second half of the year,
56:10 when if and when Bitcoin breaks through
56:13 the 200 day moving average, if and when,
56:14 maybe it's two years from now, maybe
56:16 it's three years from now, maybe it goes
56:17 to zero before then, I don't know. But
56:19 once it does, I believe we're entering a
56:22 new phase where the software that people
56:24 are choosing is for the human body and
56:26 for the financial guardrails because AI
56:28 agents are both that part of software.
56:32 >> I love it. We have three asks of the
56:34 audience today. Three. I mean, look, you
56:36 know, it's getting to be summertime. We
56:38 got three of them. The first is go
56:40 search on YouTube for Jordy Visser and
56:43 subscribe to his channel so you can
56:44 watch his weekly video. Every Sunday it
56:46 comes out. It's amazing. He has more
56:49 charts than you can ever imagine. It's
56:50 very in uh informative and I think
56:53 you'll learn a lot. The second thing is
56:54 that we want you to go to uh Jordiv
56:56 Visser 22V research. And how many pieces
56:59 are you putting out a week right now?
57:01 >> Uh I'm putting out two pieces a week,
57:05 but then I'm also putting in a bunch of
57:06 models for trading and stuff like that.
57:08 >> This guy writes so much I can't read it
57:09 all. He's getting out of hand here.
57:11 You're going to have to put a speed
57:12 limit on them. Um, so 22V research Jordi
57:15 Visser or if you want to use AI to
57:18 better manage your portfolio, you can go
57:19 to cfosylvia.com.
57:21 You can sign up there for free. So go
57:23 subscribe to Jordy on YouTube. Go listen
57:25 to or uh subscribe to uh 22V research or
57:28 go sign up for cfosilia.com. If you do
57:31 those three things, we'll be happy guys.
57:32 You know, we we don't ask for much
57:34 around here, but those three things will
57:35 be very helpful. And uh we'll see you
57:37 guys next week. See you.

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