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@MICH__ELE

Vires in numeris

เข้าร่วม Haziran 2018
1.1K กำลังติดตาม147 ผู้ติดตาม
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@bramk @_Checkmatey_ @btcjvs @sminston_with @TheRealPlanC What would be really cool would be to interview someone with deep knowledge of market plumbing/structure to understand at what levels of spot “BTC available” the asset has to materially reprice to support the paper market
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@alistairmilne This 100pct is the key point. Structural, uncorrelated and indiscriminate bid for a supply inelastic asset riddled by mass fuckery. At what level of exchange supply do we start seeing fireworks?
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Alistair Milne
Alistair Milne@alistairmilne·
Hot take: Saylor buying from $STRC proceeds may force the Bitcoin MMs to stop their tradfi correlated trading (vs NASDAQ/software stocks) as they may start losing real money
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@Trollstein @Strategy @TNorth Interesting. Even more consequential is what this does to exchange balances given supply inelasticity…
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@AdamBLiv Interesting. At what level of exchange supply is a radical repricing of spot required? Is it 2M, 1.5M or 1M?
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Adam Livingston
Adam Livingston@AdamBLiv·
How much STRC does Strategy have to issue to drive Bitcoin to $1,000,000? Realistically, something like 0.5% to 1.5% of a $300T global debt market is the zone I’d watch, with ~0.6% to 1.2% as a very clean base case. Here’s the logic. Bitcoin is about $71,680 right now, and circulating supply is about 20.01 million BTC, which puts current BTC market cap around $1.43T. At $1,000,000 per BTC, market cap would be about $20.01T. So the gap to close is roughly $18.58T. If you did the dumb, literal accounting version where every fresh dollar of STRC capital only created one extra dollar of BTC market cap, Saylor would need capital equal to about 6.19% of $300T. That is the upper-bound, brute-force answer, and it is way too conservative because markets do not reprice that linearly. The reason the real answer is lower is that Bitcoin has a flow-to-market-cap multiplier. Recent academic work explicitly defines a “crypto multiplier” as the market-cap response to investor inflows and says major cryptocurrencies likely have large multipliers because most coins are held as investments, not used for payments. Separate flow research on spot BTC ETFs also finds that ETF inflows have a persistent positive effect on BTC prices, which reinforces the basic idea that fresh capital can move market value by more than one-for-one. So if you model that $18.58T repricing gap through different multipliers, you get this: 20x multiplier: about $0.93T of net BTC buying, about 0.31% of $300T 10x multiplier: about $1.86T, about 0.62% 5x multiplier: about $3.72T, about 1.24% 3x multiplier: about $6.19T, about 2.06% If STRC-style issuance became a major global fixed-income product, Saylor probably does not need 6% of the debt market. He more likely needs something in the neighborhood of 0.5% to 1.5% captured cumulatively over time, assuming Bitcoin reprices reflexively as float tightens. That range corresponds roughly to a 10x to 5x effective market-cap multiplier, which feels aggressive but not insane for an asset with scarce liquid supply and persistent corporate/ETF demand. There is one more wrinkle. STRC is not a zero-cost funding source. Strategy says STRC currently carries an 11.50% variable annual dividend, payable monthly in cash. If Strategy wanted to reserve, say, roughly 2 years of dividend coverage on new issuance, then only about 77% of gross proceeds would actually go into BTC. Under that assumption, the gross debt-market share needed rises to roughly 0.80% in the 10x case and 1.61% in the 5x case. And just to show how early this still is, Strategy’s site currently shows STRC notional at about $5.355B, which is only about 0.0018% of $300T. So to do this through STRC alone, the machine would need to scale by hundreds of times from here. $1M Bitcoin via STRC alone probably implies capturing around 1% of the global debt market, give or take, not 6%. 6% is the static-accounting answer. ~1% is the reflexive-market answer. High liquidity, low volatility, high yield. There's nothing like it. It's a good thing the best product wins in the marketplace.
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Pierre Rochard
Pierre Rochard@BitcoinPierre·
We're at a decisive moment, will bitcoin's 4 year cycle break?
Pierre Rochard tweet media
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Ron Sovereignty Swanson⚡️🗝️
If Bitcoin “isn’t a store of value”, then why is it outperforming gold during a war? I guess gold isn’t a store of value either… Who can explain?
Ron Sovereignty Swanson⚡️🗝️ tweet mediaRon Sovereignty Swanson⚡️🗝️ tweet media
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@LawrenceLepard @dmweisberger I hope you are right. But Trump and Bessent have shown a shocking level of ineptitude so far. My money is on them somehow fumbling the bag (yet again)
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Adam Livingston
Adam Livingston@AdamBLiv·
Strategy at current pace (~43K BTC/month) absorbs 3.185x monthly mined supply. That ratio alone is staggering. 20% of the highly Bitcoin liquid supply gets absorbed in under 5 months at current pace. The stress case is survivable with years of dividend coverage, and critically, prior absorption is permanent. Coins don't come back. STRC hitting $333M volume yesterday with one penny of volatility is the clearest signal the instrument is working as designed. What this means for Bitcoin over a 5 year timeframe is staggering. Digital credit is what pushes Bitcoin to $1,000,000.
Adam Livingston tweet media
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@bleighky @TimKotzman @PunterJeff @Z06Z07 @TNorth Sharpe Ratio is an irrelevant metric for an asset whose returns are not normally distributed. But why let facts get in the way? (Before you ask, I do think $STRC is the biggest story in finance today)
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Enea₿⚡️
Enea₿⚡️@EneaDenkt·
This 10 mins price chart will revolutionize BTC. IYKYK
Enea₿⚡️ tweet media
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@dotkrueger I think Luke will buy in just below where he sold. After we conclusively decouple from software and he realises the significance of STRC
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Fred Krueger
Fred Krueger@dotkrueger·
At what point does India Bitcoin Man buy back in? Luke Groman? Andy Eckstrom?
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@Pledditor @jemimajoanna publicly took the piss out of @balajis for saying that when the rules-based order collapses, the code-based order rises. Life comes at you fast
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@RichardByworth @saylor @phongle Yeah, ex Div is on the 14th (in 6 days). Last month, 6 days before ex Div (Mar 6th) STRC bought ~ 2.1k BTC. Interesting to see how much more we do today. My guess is 50pct (~3k including after market)
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@BitPaine Bit you cannot possibly be this retarded. This has been an unforced and unmitigated disaster
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Bit Paine ⚡️
Bit Paine ⚡️@BitPaine·
Trump wins again. Panicans rekt. America haters rekt. TDS retards rekt.
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@DrJStrategy James I am waiting for your big brain, 5D chess take on how Trump’s plan is benefiting the people who voted for him
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James E. Thorne
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy·
In my latest Market Insights I counter the growing consensus narrative that King Dollar is dead and the petrodollar is broken. Far from signaling the end of US monetary hegemony, the Iran conflict and recent moves in Venezuela are consolidating an Americas‑centric energy bloc under US strategic control. As the Western Hemisphere tightens its grip on secure, price‑setting marginal barrels, crude trade, contracts, and hedging are being drawn back into dollar‑centric markets. Contrary to consensus, the war has not dismantled the petrodollar system; it has re‑anchored it in American energy dominance, reinforcing rather than eroding the dollar’s role at the center of global finance. At the same time, China is progressively losing access to the very cheap, heavily discounted oil that underpinned its hedged energy and geopolitical strategy, further tilting the energy‑currency balance back toward the United States.
Wellington-Altus@wellingtonaltus

The New Great Game is taking shape—a U.S.-China rivalry over energy, AI infrastructure, and the dollar. In his April #MarketInsights, @DrJStrategy weighs in on Bretton Woods 2.0, King Dollar, and what it means for investors: ow.ly/FJoQ50YBbHh #Investing

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