The Breakdown

Blockworks
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Aug 12, 2020 • 1h 9min

Joe Rogan for Fed Chair! Feat. Hugh Hendry

Today on the Brief: A public company has switched $250 million in cash reserves to bitcoin The latest in the vaccine rumor trade with Vladimir Putin’s propaganda play  Hong Kongers use the stock market to protest Our main conversation is with former hedge fund manager Hugh Hendry.  After a few years of focusing on a “volatility at the end of the world trade” in property development in St. Barth’s, the constant contrarian Hugh Hendry has returned to the macro world in a big way.  In this conversation, Hugh and NLW discuss: Why Hugh left macro, and why he came back How he lost three years being angry at the Fed How he came to be bullish on equities in 2012  How money managers become trapped by narratives  Why the Fed should actually be less, not more, conservative  Why we need someone like Joe Rogan as Fed chair    Find out guest online: Website: hughhendryofficial.com Twitter: @hendry_hugh  
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Aug 11, 2020 • 20min

The Latest on the Global Economy’s Most Contentious Relationship

Today on the Brief: Grayscale launches national digital asset TV ad campaign Rough times for oil as Saudi Aramco sees 73% decline in revenue Kodak crashes as government grant paused amid allegations of impropriety   Our main conversation is a look at the latest skirmishes between the United States and China, including: U.S. sanctions on Hong Kong leaders including Carrie Lam  Retaliatory Chinese sanctions on U.S. politicians  The arrest of a pro-democracy Hong Kong media tycoon Arrest warrants issued for six foreign Hong Kong democracy advocates  President Trump signs executive orders targeting TikTok and WeChat Twitter enters the race to buy TikTok before the Executive Order ban takes effect Impact on banks, the Hong Kong stock market and Huawei 
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Aug 9, 2020 • 21min

How the Purpose of the Stock Market Has Changed

On this week’s Long Reads Sunday, NLW reads three pieces: Public Markets Don’t Matter Like They Used To - Matt Levine in Bloomberg A look at how public markets are less and less about accessing new capital and more about narrative and liquidity for early investors. Two Reasons Crypto’s Bull Market Is Coming - Anil Lulla on CoinDesk The next bull market isn’t just about the bitcoin-dollar devaluation narrative but about decentralized finance providing a solid place to redeploy existing crypto capital. The Business Behind Marshmello - Kevin Lee on Twitter The unlikely story of the world’s second-highest paid DJ, including a bet on anonymity, a viral billboard making fun of Instagram influencers, and a cultural cooking channel on YouTube.
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Aug 8, 2020 • 11min

The Mounting Evidence of a New Bitcoin Bull Market

This week’s Breakdown Weekly Recap is all about that vibe you’ve been feeling - that inescapable notion a new crypto bull market is afoot.  NLW looks at the evidence: Rising gold price Recirculation of crypto money out of zombie protocols  New growth in small holder addresses Demand from emerging market p2p markets    It’s just possible this new bull market isn’t just starting to be seen in narratives, but is also showing up in numbers.   
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Aug 8, 2020 • 14min

11 Numbers That Tell the Story of the Economy Right Now

Mainstream financial media loves reporting the stock market like it's the only economic indicator that matters. On this episode, NLW breaks down 11 numbers that together tell a much more complete story, including: Record price of gold Square’s bitcoin revenue National debt as a percentage of GDP Fall of the Turkish lira  Price of coffee, sugar and cocoa Housing in auto demand Anti-Chinese sentiment in the U.S.
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Aug 7, 2020 • 1h 20min

The History, Present, and Future of Central Banks, Feat. George Selgin

Today on the Brief: Better news in the jobless claims this week A new bitcoin adoption cycle? A check in on Lebanon Our main conversation is with Dr. George Selgin.  Dr. Selgin is a Senior Fellow and Director of the Cato Institute's Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives as well as Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Georgia.  In this eye-opening conversation, he and NLW go deep on the history, present and future of central banks, including: Why the Scottish and Canadian banking systems in the 19th century that central banks aren’t a prerequisite for stability Why the USA’s “free banking” system wasn’t free at all Why the instability in the late 19th century US banking system was caused by regulation, not the lack of a Fed Why the Fed’s first decades were a disaster Why the Fed gets more power when it underperforms  The problems with the Fed’s response to 2008 What lessons the Fed could have but didn’t learn between the Great Financial Crisis and COVID-19  Find our guest online Website: Alt-M.org Twitter: @GeorgeSelgin
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Aug 6, 2020 • 38min

Hedgeye CEO Keith McCullough on Stagflation, Bitcoin and the Devalued Dollar

Today on the Brief: Robinhood doubles quarterly trading revenue Square did $875 billion in bitcoin revenue in Q2 - up 600% YoY ADP report: 167,000 jobs added in July (instead of expected 1.2 million)  Our main conversation is with Hedgeye CEO Keith McCullough.  Before building Hedgeye into a “no-excuses provider of real-time investment research and a premier online financial media company,” Keith worked at hedge funds including Carlyle Blue Wave Partners hedge fund, Magnetar Capital, Falconhenge Partners and Dawson Herman Capital Management. In this conversation, he and NLW discuss: Hedgeye’s “Full Cycle Investing” approach and GIP (Growth, Inflation, Policy) methodology  How the economy was in a period of slowing growth and slowing inflation before COVID-19 How we’ve moved into a stagflation period in response to the money printing prompted by the crisis Why bitcoin, gold, emerging market stocks and commodities are likely to thrive in this environment  Why most narratives are BS  Why the “Old Wall” media distracts rather than educates Check out our guest online: Website: Hedgeye.com  Twitter: @KeithMcCullough  
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Aug 5, 2020 • 1h 11min

Can Social Media Be Redeemed? Feat. Early Facebooker-turned-Investor Bobby Goodlatte

Today on the Brief: President Trump wants a cut of the TikTok deal Previewing this week’s COVID-19 vaccine trade  Dave Portnoy breaks into bitcoin Our main conversation is with Bobby Goodlatte.  Bobby is the founder of Form Capital, a new seed investment firm that focuses on supporting portfolio companies with value-add design.    Bobby was an early employee at Facebook and has been an active angel investor since 2012, with investments that include Coinbase.    In this conversation, he and NLW discuss: The early days of Facebook Why angel investors don’t like new angel investors to get involved How Silicon Valley reflects larger questions of equity valuations  How social media has changed over the last decade Why politics is now “downstream from algorithms”  Why there are still possibilities to build new social networks Why today’s social networks could make different decisions that would be better for the world.  Find our guest online: Website: Form Capital  Twitter: @rsg 
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Aug 4, 2020 • 29min

The Best of the Breakdown July 2020

Today on the Brief: The TikTok-Microsoft Deal The Twitter hacker was 17 A changing of the guard for crypto hedge funds Our main discussion: recapping the best interviews of July 2020 Despite a huge variety of perspectives and experiences, one theme shown through in Breakdown conversations in July: the disparity between the stock market and the real economy and a growing unwillingness of people to accept their place in the order.  This show features clips from: George Gammon - @GeorgeGammon Daniel Lacalle - @dlacalle_IA George Goncalves - @bondstrategist Sahil Bloom - @SahilBloom Tyrone Ross - @TR401 Tony Greer - @TgMacro Jill Carlson - @jillruthcarlson Michael Krieger - @LibertyBlitz Sergey Nazarov - @SergeyNazarov
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Aug 2, 2020 • 12min

What Future Are We Building Bitcoin For?

Bitcoin started as a rebellious, anti-establishment technology. In many parts of the world, and for many people, it remains exactly that.  At the same time, however, there is a wave of traditionalists and institutional players moving into the space.  Are they buying into the revolution, or are they trying to capture value while fitting the disruption into a box that maintains the current power structure they lead?  Those are the key questions explored by Meltem Demirors in her new essay “Unintended Architecture.” The piece is our selection for this week’s “Long Reads Sunday.” 

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