

Michael Ashton
9.6K posts

@inflation_guy
Check out the Inflation Guy podcast at https://t.co/IkrlMfK1oI . Visit our website at https://t.co/cEgFwkXfwQ!




Another way of saying this is Trump has a “show biz soft put” struck at a 3-5% drawdown to convince you he has a “real deal hard put” not too far below it. In reality, when the soft put breaks, he’ll be nowhere to be seen. He might not act before 2800.



WOW. We have hosted DAS for several years. Multiple cities. Bull and bear markets. We just hit RECORD ticket sales. This will be our biggest DAS in history. In a "bear market". Say it with me... Institutional. Supercycle.


Stablecoins are not stable. we need something better. Robert Shiller has the answer, invented by the chilean gov't in the 1960s. First, Why? Stables reference the dollar. but inflation erodes value of the dollar. There is a solution. Instead of a "Unit of Account" for a currency we need a "Unit of Price". It exists. Robert Shiller calls it his favorite underrated financial innovation. 60 years later, crypto independently rediscovered the need for this product — and getting it half right w/ stables. Right b/c the US dollar is relatively stable. Wrong b/c we need "relatively" as a qualifier. The historical context of the first "Unit of Price". In 1960s, Chile was drowning in inflation. Nobody would sign a long-term contract. Mortgages were impossible. Landlords wouldn't commit to rent for more than a month. On Jan 20, 1967, the government created something radical: the Unidad de Fomento (UF) — a non-circulating unit of account. The UF didn't reference a currency, it referenced the price level. the UF was the world's first "Unit of Price". The UF exists today and is pervasive in chili. The UF solved the cold start problem by referencing it in their own development loans -> then requiring adoption by banks. The biggest switch came from the 1981 AFP pension privatization — which created mandatory institutional demand for UF-denominated assets at scale. Once a critical mass of contracts referenced the UF, more contract types followed suit. The UF exchange rate against the peso is constantly adjusted for inflation so that its purchasing power remains nearly constant on a daily basis. it is NOT a currency (it's not in circulation). You can't spend it. It's a purely abstract unit of account — goods quoted in UFs can only be purchased with pesos. The UF has now replaced currency for most long-term contracts in Chile, and for purchases and sales of large items. - Pension payments - alimony, and child support payments are - offices for sale are often quoted in UFs Shiller's a bit frustrated. The UF was adopted 58 years go. It has been copied in Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, and Uruguay. He tried to design a "Unit of Price" for the US...but it never took off! Ironically, the US's relatively low inflation environment historically means we are more exposed than some high inflation countries. We've never had to invent something that was inflation proof, so we didn't. Instead we choose to trust the dollars value wouldn't get inflated away. Without the pain of extreme inflationary periods, there was no way to build a political coalition to solve a problem we hadn't truly experienced (yes, we've had bouts of inflation, but ppl still had mortgages and long term leases). Now fast-forward to 2025. The stablecoin market is $250B+ and growing. But 99% of that market is pegged to the dollar. USDC. USDT. DAI. They're stable-ish — but silently depreciate with the inflation. A handful of projects are explicitly reinventing the UF on-chain. - Flatcoin designs like Nuon Frax Price Index (FPI) already use Truflation US CPI indices as an underlying source of truth, effectively upgrading "official" inflation to a censorship-resistant oracle — once the decentralized oracles exist, you can finally peg money to purchasing power, not politics (presuming oracles don't get compromised in their own politics or the governments gathering the data don't screw with it or stop *ahem* china or in the US cuts to various federal statistical agencies and economic data collection by POTUS) - Reflexer's RAI tried a different path (since wound down): a non-pegged stablecoin whose exchange rate is determined by supply and demand while the protocol tries to stabilize its price by constantly devaluing or revaluing it Reflexer — essentially a crypto-native unit of account (hard in practice!). But here's what most flatcoin builders are missing, and what Shiller understood deeply: the killer app isn't the token itself. *It's the contracts denominated in it.* Chile's UF worked because it became the standard unit for writing obligations — mortgages, rents, pensions. The token is just a vessel. The durable innovation is the unit of account layer that sits above it, embedded in legal and commercial agreements. So the success of Flatcoins is not their supply (which is likely to be eclipsed by stables), but the extent to which they are referenced. Similar to a LIBOR or SOFR used to credit contracts. That's what took the UF ~20 years to achieve (again big tipping point in 1981 w/ the pension adoption requirement) — but no flatcoin project has cracked yet (and certainly no flatcoin has gotten a government mandate!). The meta-point: Most of crypto's monetary experiments are rediscovering problems that economists solved decades ago — inflation indexation, seigniorage, reserve requirements — but with programmable, permissionless rails and without central banks as the single point of failure. And some of crypto's biggest "innovations" reflect not fundamental "invention" so much as outflanking an sclerotic regulatory state that should be doing these things independently. h/t @RobertJShiller:









This adds to a growing number of papers that point to excess aggregate demand pressures—created by macroeconomic policy choices—playing a key role in the inflation surge. (1/3)
