The Bitcoin Treasuries Podcast
Wall Street Veteran: Saylor Has The Largest Preferred Structure On The Planet — And Nobody Talks About It
- Sovereign debt crisis & currency debasement: US debt-to-GDP has risen from 80% (2008) to 126% today. Mark argues the only exits are currency debasement or default, making Bitcoin a "terra firma" to step onto while systems rebuild.
- Federal Reserve structural changes: Repeal of the supplemental leverage ratio (SLR) will allow banks to hold unlimited treasuries at effectively zero cost, shifting risk from the Fed's balance sheet to member banks without solving underlying debt problems.
- Treasury funding runway under stress: Foreign demand for US treasuries has dried up; hedge funds stepping in are unreliable holders in times of market stress and will likely sell at the worst times, echoing 2020 COVID dynamics.
- Glass-Steagall repeal as inflection point: The 1998–1999 repeal allowed commercial and investment banking to merge, creating systemic structural fragility that downstream manifested in 2008 crisis and ongoing bank risk-pricing failures.
- Bitcoin as portfolio diversifier & macro hedge: A 3% quarterly Bitcoin allocation in a 60/40 portfolio increased returns ~35% while reducing downside deviation; Bitcoin has positive skew and low correlation to traditional assets even in downturns (2017, 2022).
- Mining decentralization & network resilience: As mining becomes more distributed away from centralized data centers, Bitcoin's security and resilience strengthen, supporting higher valuations for Bitcoin-backed financial instruments like Saylor's preferred equity offering.