

The Breakdown
Blockworks
The Breakdown dives into the deepest topics in crypto, blockchain, and the macro forces shaping markets and power structures. Each episode breaks down complex ideas into clear, grounded analysis — separating signal from noise across crypto, finance, and geopolitics.
Hosted by David Canellis, The Breakdown features explainers, interviews, and conversations with the people building, regulating, and challenging the financial system.
A Blockworks podcast.
Subscribe to The Breakdown newsletter: https://the-breakdown.carrd.co/
Hosted by David Canellis, The Breakdown features explainers, interviews, and conversations with the people building, regulating, and challenging the financial system.
A Blockworks podcast.
Subscribe to The Breakdown newsletter: https://the-breakdown.carrd.co/
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jun 24, 2020 • 1h 16min
Oil 101: How Easy Money Enabled the Shale Revolution, Feat. Tracy Shuchart
Today on the Brief: PayPal and Venmo reportedly adding crypto buying and selling Trump executive order temporarily suspends H1-B visa program Continued growth in bitcoin derivatives Our main conversation: Tracy Shuchart is an oil- and commodities-focused trader in the private equity space known for her wide-ranging insights on financial Twitter (FinTwit). In this conversation, she and NLW discuss: Why the shale revolution of the last 10 years shifted the power balance in global energy among the United States, Russia and Saudi Arabia How easy money in the wake of the Great Financial Crisis enabled the shale revolution as much as new technology Why after the 2014-2016 oil crash it was inexperienced private equity firms that picked up where banks left off with shale How a growing focus on dividends and cutting costs was creating structural problems for shale even before the COVID-19 crisis How COVID-19 coincided with a contentious negotiation between Saudi Arabia and Russia that ultimately sent prices to less than $0 Find our guest online: Twitter: @chigrl
On the web: chigrl.com

Jun 23, 2020 • 47min
Macro Investors Sound Off! Featuring Ari Paul, Spencer Bogart and David Nage
Today on the Brief: New Federal Reserve research suggests reaction to Facebook’s Libra basket approach was overblown Italian Banking Association pushing to test a digital euro U.S. housing has worst month since 2010 Our main conversation: Earlier this month, Messari hosted the Mainnet virtual summit. At that event, NLW moderated a session called “Macro Investors Sound Off!” featuring BlockTower Capital’s Ari Paul, Blockchain Capital’s Spencer Bogart and Arca’s David Nage. The discussion included: The evolution of the Fed put and how it shapes the markets How the collision of Bitcoin’s halving and the Fed’s reaction to COVID-19 created a powerful narrative moment Why the “Money Printer Go BRR” meme was so effective Why the Paul Tudor Jones letter was hugely influential within family offices Why these investors expect to see some significant announcements around bitcoin exposure from traditional investors in the months to come Find our guests online: Ari Paul: @AriDavidPaul Spencer Bogart: @CremeDeLaCrypto David Nage: @DavidJNage Watch the rest of Messari’s Mainnet 2020 sessions.

Jun 21, 2020 • 12min
Fight the Fed or Love the BRRR? [Long Reads Sunday]
A reading of two pieces How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Money Printer by Jill Carlson | CoinDesk + Fight the Fed Jesse Felder | The Felder Report

Jun 20, 2020 • 11min
A Dozen+ Statistics Proving Millennials Are F%#$&D: The Breakdown Weekly Recap
The big narrative in financial media for the last few weeks has been the insurgent Robinhood rally, led by the AC/DC-blaring Pied Piper Dave Portnoy, owner of Davey Day Trader Global Global (DDTG Global). As people try to make sense of the strange retail trading phenomenon, one perspective is the participants (average age of 31 on Robinhood) are reacting to a market that has left them behind. In this view, they are assaulting the market with otherwise outrageous and ludicrous strategies because, otherwise, how will they get their piece? This week’s Breakdown Weekly Recap looks at this in the context of some surprising (and frankly depressing) stats about the millennial generation’s current wealth, as compared to where boomers were at the same time in their careers.

Jun 20, 2020 • 1h 9min
Why Monetary Debasement Is Here to Stay, Feat. Dr. Vikram Mansharamani
Today on the Brief: FTX lists two Compound tokens Reddit partners with Ethereum Foundation on Layer 2 scaling Black-In Freedom Festival reimagines Juneteenth Our main topic: Dr. Vikram Mansharamani is a lecturer at Harvard and author of “Boombustology: Spotting Financial Bubbles Before They Burst” as well as the just released “Think for Yourself: Restoring Common Sense in an Age of Experts and Artificial Intelligence.” In this wide-ranging conversation, he and NLW discuss: Why our relationship with experts and expertise is leading us astray How COVID-19 shows the downside of both over-reliance on, and complete rejection of, experts How the economic crisis surrounding COVID-19 is bursting bubbles and moving us from a period defined by deflation to one defined by inflation Why “monetary debasement is here to stay” Why the U.S.-China relationship is the key backdrop for understanding the next 10 years of global economic reality Why inequality threatens the fabric of our economy and our society, and what might be done about it Find our guest online: Twitter: @mansharamani
Website: Vikram Mansharamani | “THINK FOR YOURSELF”

Jun 19, 2020 • 25min
6 Things Jobless Claims Tell Us About the State of the Real Economy
Today on the Brief: Powell says private companies shouldn’t be involved in Central Bank Digital Currencies According to former NSA head John Bolton, Trump told Mnuchin to go after Bitcoin Interest around Compound driving speculation around a DeFi-driven bull run Our main topic: This week’s U.S. jobless report brought bad news. Whereas economists had expected new claims to fall to 1.29 million from 1.57 million the week before, claims fell just 58,000 to 1.51 million. Continuing claims fared even worse. Economists predicted these claims would fall 600,000+ to 19.9 million. Instead, they fell a tenth of that - 62,000 - to leave total continuing claims at 20.5 million. In this episode, NLW breaks down what we can learn from these numbers when they’re combined with the previously released May jobs report.

Jun 18, 2020 • 48min
The Satoshi-fication of Social Media: Why The Future Is Pseudoanonymous, Feat. The Crypto Dog
On the Brief: Big tech vs. the American political right and left Why TikTok users are pretending to love China for clout Decentralizing venture capital Our main conversation: The Crypto Dog is one of crypto Twitter’s best known characters. In this conversation, he and NLW discuss: Mining bitcoin in 2011 The difficulty of hodling across a decade The emergence of the crypto trader in the Ethereum era Trader agnosticism Pseudo-anonymity and social media Developing the character behind the avatar Global nomadism and the acceleration of “work from anywhere” The vibe and feel of Hong Kong today Find our guest online:Twitter: @TheCryptoDog

Jun 17, 2020 • 1h 14min
The Fed's Folly: From Moral Hazard to Business as Usual, Feat. Jesse Felder
Today on The Brief: An unexpectedly good retail sales report drives market confidence Are we in for a second wave of white-collar layoffs? The latest rumblings in central bank digital currencies Our main conversation: Jesse Felder is an independent financial analyst and one of the best financial curators on Twitter. In this wide ranging conversation, he and NLW discuss: The Robinhood rally and what makes it both alike and different from previous manias The illusion of American recovery and the disconnect between markets and fundamentals The Federal Reserve’s role in increasing economic inequality Why the dollar is significantly overvalued relative to other currencies Why financial assets could be poised for a rough decade Find our guest online: Twitter: @jessefelder
Website: The Felder Report

Jun 15, 2020 • 29min
Sorry, Bloomberg: Here Are 6 Reasons Why 2020 Is a Great Year for Bitcoin
Today on the Brief: Stocks down on coronavirus fears Demand destruction The looming retirement crisis Our main theme: Bitcoin is up more than 30% on the year. After a crash alongside equities, it has proved incredibly resilient. There are famous new entrants to the space like Paul Tudor Jones II. So how can a Bloomberg editor argue the year has been bad for bitcoin? In this response podcast, NLW argues that most of the arguments are about narrative, not the underlying fundamentals. He presents six reasons why not only has it not been a bad year, but the exact opposite is true: Demonstrated institutional uptake Demonstrated resilience New champions Narrative fundamentals Need in emerging markets End of economic orthodoxy

Jun 15, 2020 • 15min
BONUS: Rubbish Rallies and Investor Amnesia by the Finance History Guy Jamie Catherwood
After a week where bankrupt Hertz pumped 890%, the question is: what is the historical precedent? Luckily, we have finance history guy Jamie Catherwood to fill us in. In this essay "Rubbish Rallies" (written by Jamie, read by NLW), Catherwood tells the story of an 1820s scam that turned into an 1860s market mania - even though everyone knew it had been a scam the first go around. History might not repeat, but it certainly rhymes. This is a bonus episode of The Breakdown, recorded originally last week as part of a private beta test for new content forms. If you like this type of episode, let me know @nlw on Twitter.


