Ethan Walker
421 posts









$XRP on coinbase has the largest bid skew within 50% seen in nearly a year Nearly a 9:1 bid ratio Translated - It's 9x easier right now to push $XRP to $2.25 than to $0.75

Goldman dropped a report this week putting AI infrastructure spend at $7.6T between 2026 and 2031. That's chips, data centers, cooling, and power - totaling ~$765B in 2026 alone, and scaling to $1.6T per year by 2031. Here's where crypto fits in AI’s $7.6T tab (save this): Most of the noise around this number is focused on the demand question: Will companies and consumers use AI enough to pay for all this? But Goldman's flipping the question over to the supply side - i.e. the actual cost of building the thing. (How much will chips cost? How often will they need replacing? How much will new data centers cost to construct?) Their angle: those costs are way more uncertain than people think - and a few boring assumptions can swing the total by hundreds of billions. The four assumptions doing all the work: 1. Chip lifespan. Accountants depreciate AI chips over 4-6 years. But NVIDIA ships a new architecture every single year with massive performance jumps. If chips hit economic obsolescence in 3 years instead of 6, you're buying replacements twice as often. 2. Data center costs. Old cloud data centers ran ~$10M per megawatt. New AI ones cost $15-20M. Even facilities built 2 years ago may not handle next-gen chips because power density and cooling have moved that fast. 3. Chip mix (GPUs vs ASICs). NVIDIA earns ~75% gross margins on its data center GPUs. Custom chips (ASICs) are cheaper. But Goldman thinks cheaper chips just lead to more compute usage, so the total bill stays roughly the same. 4. Bottlenecks. Transformer lead times, power interconnect queues, specialized labor… these don't change unit costs, but they do stretch timelines. And that last one is a sneaky little bugger. ☝️ If projects keep slipping on their timelines, that supply friction feeds demand doubt, and that's where capital pulls back. (Constricted compute access = higher costs for AI services = a smaller amount of customers that can actually afford it.) The optimistic flip side of it all, goes like this… If the industry pulls off the buildout, history says we can expect cheaper compute to create demand that didn't exist at higher prices. Meaning today's $7.6T estimated build out cost might not be enough for whatever AI looks like by 2031. Sweet, so where does crypto fit in? Three places: 1. Decentralized GPU networks absorb the trailing edge. NVIDIA's older chips (A100s and H100s) still rent at prices that suggest 5-6+ year useful lives. Frontier AI labs constantly upgrade to the newest hardware, but the older chips don't get thrown out. They get repurposed for lighter work like inference (inference = and AI running your prompt) instead of training (teaching the model in the first place). That's where DePIN comes in. Networks like Render and Akash plug older GPU capacity into a global rental market. Bittensor takes it further with subnets that run decentralized AI services on top. Translation: as frontier labs rotate to new chips, decentralized networks become the natural home for those second-life GPUs. 2. Onchain credit for the buildout. $7.6T is a lot of money. Traditional project finance can absorb some of it, but data center and energy operators are hunting for new capital fast. That's where rails like USDAI come in. Tokenized debt and onchain credit let infrastructure projects raise from a global pool without waiting on slow private credit syndication. It's still early, but the build out will require new financing channels to open up - and onchain credit is one of those channels. 3. Stablecoins for agent-to-agent payments. Economists call demand "elastic" when cheaper prices lead to way more usage. Goldman thinks AI compute is elastic. So if chips get cheaper and usage scales massively - agent transactions will likely scale with it. We’re talking millions of tiny machine-to-machine payments across services, models, and data - every minute. Cards and ACH aren't built for that. Stablecoins on fast chains are. Goldman's report in a nutshell: Either the buildout works and unleashes a wave of new demand, or it stalls and keeps demand restricted. My takeaway: Crypto sits within the financing, compute, and payment chokepoints in both scenarios. If/when AI scales, crypto is going to play a part.













🚨 BREAKING TRUMP'S WHALE JUST OPENED $81M BTC SHORT WITH 20X LEVERAGE IF BITCOIN PRICE HITS $83,628 = LIQUIDATION DOES HE KNOW SOMETHING OR LARGE LIQUIDATION SOON?

#Bitcoin Just like in 2022, I’ve called the bottom for $BTC again this cycle. Next, I’ll call the top. But before that, prices will go much, much higher, especially for #Altcoins. We’ve got something big to look forward to, folks.💯

🚨WARNING Rising wedge on $BTC daily. Second one this bear market First one broke down in Dec and led to a -34% drop This one formed its top at the 200-day MA resistance and rejected it Touched $82K twice and can't break through RSI already at 70 and institutional flows turning negative This move down could be faster and deeper






#Bitcoin Bottom is in.











