Cullen Roche’s macro masterclass on The Bitcoin Layer – podcast notes

Cullen Roche – CIO of Discipline Funds
-Merrill Lynch asset management
-2008 financial crisis transformed his view of world – how macro can dominate everything, while micro doesn’t really matter
Japan had been going through a similar transformation for 20 years – learned a lot from it
-Japan’s financial system modeled after Fed, US – Japan’s lessons taught him that what would happen would be the opposite of MSM narrative
-Beat the drum that post GFC would be sluggish dis-inflation
-At Discipline – hyper focused on financial planning as foundation for portfolio (more bottoms-up); “more Vanguard than Cathy Woods”

Doesn’t believe now will be like 70s style stagflation, more like 2008

Structural trends – globalization, technology, demographics – all long-term disinflationary anchors
Big lesson of Covid – fiscal policy can cause big inflation, it’s the Treasury not Fed that has the bazooka

Cyclical trends – short term inflation bump due to that fiscal policy; will come down if government doesn’t splurge
Debt cycle not consistent with high inflation environment

High inflation can only come from private sector (consumer / corporate borrowing), or public sector (government spending)
Low likelihood of big fiscal spending

In 3-4 years, we’ll realize inflation was transitory

Fed outlook
-they’ve been more aggressive than he expected
-“Fed’s kinda screwed” – look bad coming off 2021 inflation
-should have moved earlier in 2021 – eg, a modified Taylor rule
-too much focus on lagging indicators – eg, employment
Fed is old school monetarists / Keynesians – don’t wanna live thru 1970s again

He believes today looks more like 2008, not 1970s
Big worry of real housing market downturn

Monetary policy will function through housing market and mortgage rates
As rates > 5%, “something’s gotta give” – not enough housing demand at that level

Last 10 years was one cycle, a blowoff / FOMO effect
Economy now digesting this excess, the bust component

Housing is slow moving animal
Concerned Fed will create more downside than we expect

If in 2023, inflation ticks steadily lower, housing falls fast, unemployment rises faster than expected – Fed will walk a lot back, have a mini 2008
Could be 2008 credit style disinflation rather than runaway inflation of 70s

Nik: hyper focused on housing sector, outsized impact on US economy, 3 months of home price declines

10% decline in home prices is like a flesh wound – only takes us back to middle 2021
If home prices are volatile, balance sheets become volatile
Housing has become an important economic asset – more than previous generations
We don’t understand knock on effects – like 2008
Outlier risk of housing prices falling 25%, risks lurking in shadows
“2008 humbled me a lot” – thought he had a bullet proof macro framework

More analysts now forecasting larger price drops in housing – more expected volatility in 2023, 2024

Argument that covid boom was sorta fake – driven by government spending
If housing falls 25%, causes a lot more collateral damage than anyone expects

Nik: in 2007-2008, analysts argued we’ve never seen national housing price declines YoY, only regional declines – surprised everyone

This isn’t like 1987 crash – it’s not a single event
It’s a structural event – because housing is long drawn-out process, and so core to US economy
Construction still in boom period – lots of supply coming online, but don’t have demand or new construction

We’re probably in 4th inning of housing market downturn – still relatively early
Fed sorta oblivious to it, they don’t realize damage that 6-7% mortgage rates do to housing market

No idea what stocks will do in next 6-12 months

His duration framework for investment assets:
-Cash / Treasuries are Zero duration
-Bonds are 5 year duration instruments
-Stock market is 18 year instrument
Bitcoin is 100 year duration instrument (gold is 40 year)

Stock market riskier today – valuations high, less attractive relative to other instruments, still high levels of irrational exuberance
Multiples need to come in / move sideways for longer period
High multiples —> Lower risk adjusted returns
Do you want stocks at 30 P/E with high volatility or 4.5% treasury bill with no volatility?
Stocks in 18-24 months – would be shocked if up significantly

Scenario: housing prices slowly grind down 10-20%, no real credit event —> would have stagnant stock market, and maybe 2025 it takes off
Risk is a real credit event – more like 2008 than 1970s – if Fed reverses, would be because real deterioration in balance sheets and economic environment
Fed will likely slowly walk rates back, ease off language, but rates will remain high and cause demand destruction – maybe late 2023 – likely to be behind curve again
At that point, credit has deteriorated, stock markets fallen 40%
Lots of starts and stops until then
Higher probability of hard landing outcome than Fed finding a soft landing

Bitcoin is a technology – more like VC than equity
Public markets are boring 18 year instruments, companies are more stable boring value
VC is much younger, standard deviations larger, thus much longer duration
Bitcoin is weird blend of digital gold + VC + payment system
Bet is it becomes alternative payment system – will take very long time to come to fruition
Will work in parallel with traditional fiat / credit system
Takes time for people to adopt the new mindset

He works with people who have already made good money, closer to retirement, more conservative
Results in shorter duration instruments (eg, Treasuries, equities)
Bitcoin, like VC, has too much potential downside for them
For a true efficient market theorist – maybe 0.5-1% bitcoin allocation (eg, if you put 1% in bitcoin in 2015, could be 20% of portfolio today)

Big advocate of re-balancing in counter-cyclical manner to reduce skew – reduce outsized risk in any single instrument
Don’t want golden handcuffs that you can’t sell, too much capital gains, help control your behavior, don’t wanna become a forced seller

Loved Nik’s book Layered Money and its hierarchical thinking approach

Podcast notes – Brent Johnson on the Dollar Milkshake – Bitcoin Layer with Nik Bhatia

Brent Johnson – DLJ, then Credit Suisse, then wealth management
Started Santiago Capital – manage money for individuals
His website: SantiagoCapital.com

Coined the term Dollar Milkshake Theory
-framework for global sovereign debt currency crisis
-name comes a scene in There Will Be Blood
-US dollar and capital markets have advantages rest of world (ROW) doesn’t have
-US will drain ROW’s milkshake of dollars and capital

Dollar will become too strong for global system to function appropriately – lead to a crash, restructuring / new system (eg, new Plaza Accord)

Jim Grant: “return free risk” (when rates were zero)

US Treasuries outlook
-if rates drop, dollar will fall, Treasuries rise
-if rates continue higher, dollar will continue to strengthen
-if govt bonds are rejected globally, US Treasuries will be demanded more than other countries’ bonds

Milkshake Theory is a relative thesis – US assets / Treasuries / currency will outperform

Thinks there will be more QE eventually
In perfect scenario – whole world will return to QE, sovereign bonds globally will be rejected, all excess liquidity flows back to US, into stocks / real estate / USD assets, get a big melt-up
USD in this scenario will still rise – but underperform USD assets (eg, stocks)

Oil runs the world
-Oil mostly priced and traded in USD
-If oil rises 20% and USD rises 20% versus your currency, that’s 40% increase in energy costs!
-If crisis where every country for themselves, US more energy self sufficient than others
-Maybe Russia is stronger position
-Because of US energy self sufficiency, we’re exporting fewer USD to ROW to buy their oil, less supply of ex-US dollars

ROW still trades with each other but primarily denominated in USD
Huge amounts of USD credit between them – France-Singapore, Europe-Turkey, etc

Whole system is game of musical chairs
Chairs = base money (currency, bank reserves)
Credit = people walking around in the game
If more credit, new people enter the game, but same # of chairs
As US tightens monetary policy, not creating new money, taking chairs out of game, system becomes even more levered
Eurodollar market can’t add more chairs, only more people
Music could stop at any moment

Triffin’s Dilemma
A country currency that functions as global reserve currency – eventually situation where domestic needs conflict with int’l needs

Vicious loop
Other countries need to print more of their own money to buy USD / buy energy, and this causes further currency weakening vs USD
A few commodity producing country currencies have held up well – eg, Russian ruble, Brazilian real

Fed won’t stop while US equity is still rallying, unemployment low
Keep going until prices come down, wages come down, some jobs are lost
“Wouldn’t surprise me if it slows down” – dollar would then drop 10, 15%
Over next 2-3 years, dollar will continue to rise
Expects Powell continue to raise more than most expect

Europe already buying periphery bonds; UK with pension fund crisis
Japan doing YCC
Ex-US currencies down dramatically
Nothing ROW can do to make USD go lower that wouldn’t hurt themselves more

China’s gold-backed yuan – silly idea tbh
BRICS launching basket of currencies – not reality
If these things were done, would be even less USD in circulation – would worsen the short-term credit problem, Eurodollar market would lose a ton of assets

If the world moves to new system – process would be violent, may involve military conflict

US has weaponized dollar – doing it on purpose – Putin is doing same thing by requiring Russian energy buyers to pay in ruble

More free market price discovery in US Treasury market today than any other treasury market

Japan outlook
-can’t let rates rise – YCC will flood system with yen, and yen will lose value
-in 2013 and 2015, when yen weakened, led to Chinese yuan weakening
-because yuan and yen are competitive currencies, both exporting nations, yuan must devalue to maintain competition for exports
-think yen will go a lot lower – now around 147 – thinks yen will go to 200 or higher (!)
-will put enormous pressure on Chinese yuan – pull inflationary pressures into their economy to keep export markets strong
-yen could still rally 5-10% in bursts
-yen is big signal

Highlights from Layered Money by Nik Bhatia

An easy to read tour through the history and evolution of money types (from gold coins to today’s fiat paper notes), presented through a useful framework of money layers (that together form a pyramid). Amazon Kindle.

Here are some of my favorite highlights (copied verbatim):

In the second century under the rule of Marcus Aurelius, the denarius coin weighed about 3.4 grams and contained about 80% silver, which was already a reduction from its 98% purity when Augustus Caesar declared himself the first Emperor of Rome three centuries prior. […] By the end of the third century, the denarius had been devalued so frequently that its purity was down to only 5% silver

Historically, precious metal coins were durable, divisible, and portable, but with governments constantly reducing the purity of their coins, no coin existed with multigenerational credibility. The Florentine mint changed that. The florin maintained an unchanged weight and purity, about 3.5 grams of pure gold, spanning an astounding four centuries. By the time the florin denomination was one hundred years old, it had evolved into the international monetary standard for pan-European finance. High salaries, jewelry, real estate, and capital investment were all priced in florin.

Contractions can result in redemption requests, called bank runs, and eventually financial crises. These crises can be more easily thought of as attempts to climb the pyramid of money, as holders of lower-layer money scramble to secure a superior, higher-layer form of money.

The creation of the Antwerp Bourse in 1531 revolutionized money because it birthed the money market. At the time, the money market described the market for second-layer monetary instruments such as bills of exchange, gold deposits, and other promises to pay precious metal.

Governments and currencies are inextricably linked today because governments established a monopoly on second-layer money and used it to their own benefit, starting with the Bank of Amsterdam in 1609.

Up to a thousand different types of coinage circulated in the new international trade hub of Amsterdam, a monetary situation too cumbersome for a city with the world’s first stock market.

By suspending convertibility to first-layer money, the Bank of Amsterdam proved that precious metal wasn’t necessarily required to operate a monetary and financial system. It depended on its own disciplinary constraint to stay sufficiently reserved, and more importantly it depended on the peoples’ trust in that discipline.

Gold is money. Everything else is credit. —J.P. Morgan to United States Congress in 1912

In Virginia, tobacco became a first-layer monetary asset and the basis of its own money pyramid due to the global popularity of the crop. The pound-of-tobacco unit became an accounting standard, and notes promising the delivery of pounds of tobacco were issued by Virginia as second-layer money that circulated among the public as cash.

the second Congress of the United States of America finally passed the Coinage Act in 1792 to establish the United States dollar as the country’s official unit of account, defining one dollar as both 1.6 grams of gold and 24 grams of silver.

Finally, the Act decreed that the Fed maintain a gold-coverage ratio of at least 35% against the liabilities it issued on the second layer, meaning at least 35% of the Fed’s assets must be held in gold. In actuality, gold represented 84% of the Federal Reserve’s assets upon its founding, a number that would dramatically fall over time. Today, for reference, gold represents less than 1% of the Fed’s assets.

Gold’s disciplinary constraint received an outcry of blame for the economy’s inability to recover and led to dramatic and sweeping changes to the dollar pyramid during the 1930s.

FDIC insurance is a federally guaranteed insurance policy on all third-layer bank deposits.

In 1944, world leaders gathered at a hotel in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire and formalized that all currencies besides the dollar were forms of third-layer money within the dollar pyramid. The Bretton Woods agreement would come to be known as the dollar’s world reserve currency coronation.

Nobody could have ever conceived of a more absurd waste of human resources than to dig gold in distant corners of the Earth for the sole purpose of transporting it and reburying it immediately afterward in other deep holes, especially excavated to receive it and heavily guarded to protect it. The history of human intuitions, however, has a logic of its own.

The dollar had become deeply entrenched as the world economy’s denomination: barrels of oil were priced in dollars, trade agreements were struck in dollars, and international bank balances settled in dollars.

In 1971, the United States suspended gold convertibility for the dollar; the suspension initially was supposed to be temporary, but the dollar never returned to any linkage with the commodity. Two years later, the modern era of free-floating currencies began, officially ending the Bretton Woods agreement.

From a layered-money perspective, there aren’t a lot of places in the dollar pyramid that don’t have an explicit or implicit guarantee of liquidity backstop from the Federal Reserve today.

In gold’s absence, the Fed’s balance sheet used U.S. Treasuries as its dominant asset, and the private sector used them as the omnipotent form of monetary collateral. For banks, ownership of these government bonds wielded the power to create yet another type of dollar called Treasury Repo dollars.

By 1979, the Federal Reserve concluded in a study that the explosion in Treasury Repo transactions was in fact causing an overall increase in the measurable supply of dollars and admitted not being able to make that measurement with exact precision. By 1982, the Federal Reserve fully gave up on managing the supply of dollars because they had veritably lost the ability to keep track of it;

When the prestigious investment bank Lehman Brothers failed on September 15, 2008, a money market fund called Reserve Primary Fund famously “broke the buck” when it posted a share price of $0.97 because it owned a fair amount of newly defaulted Lehman Brothers commercial paper. This drop of a mere three cents from par triggered an all-out financial panic that elicited unprecedented emergency actions from central banks and governments around the world. The reason for the panic wasn’t necessarily the three-cent drop, but the fear that if Lehman Brothers commercial paper could fail, and Reserve Primary Fund’s shares weren’t worth a whole dollar, nothing could be trusted. All forms of bank liabilities lost liquidity, and the financial system froze.

A return to peaceful money markets was unattainable, as the Fed had removed price discovery from the system by disallowing so many third-layer money-types from realizing their ultimate fate.

The most fascinating component of Satoshi’s design of Bitcoin was his intention for it to mimic gold as a first-layer, counterparty-free money. And that meant a supply that does not originate from a balance sheet.

Gold is considered an insurance on monetary disorder and disarray, one that tends to work best during earthquakes in the dollar pyramid. But gold’s physicality falls short in a digital world where Bitcoin thrives. Eventually, Bitcoin will likely replace gold as the most desired neutral money and exceed it in total market value.

All of the above highlights are copied verbatim from the book.