@Jeff Booth I took this excerpt out of a Substack posted by Dan Denning with Bonner Private Research. The link is: Dan and his crew are big time gold bugs. They do recommend clients have a 1% allocation to Bitcoin in their portfolio. Credit-based systems require infinite expansion to avoid collapse. Every dollar of debt is someone else’s asset. In a deflation of financial asset prices–which is what happens when credit stops expanding–the value of those assets either reverts to a long-term mean. Or it crashes (if the asset is backed by cash flows the borrower fails to generate). This point came up in a private presentation I heard this week from Jeff Booth. Jeff made a compelling argument with two main points. The first is that the natural state of free markets is deflation. By that, he meant that if money is sound and markets are free, prices of goods and services will tend to fall over time. This is great for both consumer choice (more stuff and lower prices) and individual freedom. Jeff’s second point, though, was what I mentioned above. Credit based systems (based on paper money) require constant expansion to avoid collapse. This results in either ‘structural’ inflation of 3-4%. Or episodes where the entire price level shifts upward dramatically in a great wave (this happened in 2020 with the huge year-over-year growth in the money supply shifting prices higher by 20%). Long story short, Jeff believes that these two forces—the natural tendency toward deflation in free markets and the requirement for inflation in credit-based systems—are in conflict. Something has to give. They cannot permanently co-exist. If Jeff is right, all assets denominated in fiat/fake money will go to zero. All of them. Anything denominated in the currency of the inflationary regime is at risk. As a consequence, he’s saving and spending in Bitcoin, which he believes to be both sound, secure, and bound by energy limits. It takes a lot of almost religious conviction to take this view. Jeff has also ‘done the research’ and written a book about it. The book is called The Price of Tomorrow: Why Deflation is the Key to an Abundant Future. If I understand Jeff’s argument, it’s that Bitcoin is the current ‘price’ of a future with sound money, in which this fiat regime has failed. What do you think? I’ll be reading more about it this weekend and will have more to say next week. It certainly was a thought-provoking talk. One part that did confuse me, though, is why Bitcoiners always talk about what people need to ‘understand’ or to ‘learn’ about Bitcoin. One of the great virtues of Adam Smith’s definition of free market capitalism is that it doesn’t require book learning or an essay. By acting to improve their own circumstances, and with the help of the division of labor and free trade, individuals improve their own lives AND the lives of complete strangers in Adam Smith’s world. People become a ‘node’ on a freedom network simply by finding out what they’re good at and then providing that service to others. It’s virtuous AND lucrative and mutually beneficial. It’s a win-win deal for everyone. And it doesn’t require anyone to ‘learn’ anything. But maybe I’m missing something. I’ll take a deeper dive into the book this weekend and get back to you next week. Feel free to educate or correct me in the comments below. Until next week, Dan
The kids continue to roll more incredible covers. Amazing talent🌹
Do you know why the Oracle share price exploded with their earnings report last week? This is why: Agents require constant streams of inference compute. They don’t pause; they act. And as they act, they multiply the demand for capacity. This is why Oracle’s backlog ballooned. It isn’t just about serving queries. It is about building the infrastructure for a future where AI agents orchestrate entire workflows. I will bet that within the next decade, GDP will be thrown out as a measurement as the digital economy accelerates and calls for a new index grow due to the continued rise in inequality. Oracle’s earnings are the canary in the coal mine or, more accurately, the thunderclap that should wake people up. Inference is the bottleneck. Enterprise adoption is accelerating. AI agents are coming. And hyperscalers are about to print massive cloud growth. Behind that are autonomous vehicles, flying taxis, and humanoids. Oracle’s quarter is not an isolated event. It is a signal of what is to come, a world where inference capacity, AI agents, and multi-cloud infrastructure redefine how businesses operate and how investors should position. And this time, the orders are not just big. They are the size of GDP growth itself. - Jordi Visser
image USA was always considered a consumer economy. In other words, GDP depended on the consumer. That is not the case anymore. In the first half of 2025, AI spending added more to US GDP than personal consumption did. This was also aided by personal consumption falling off a cliff which is a bad sign of economy strength.
image TREASURIES ARE IT 2022: $0.5B 2023: $2.8B 2024: $31B 2025: $60B+ pace Still think adoption is slowing? Q4 is when things kick off.
The term "Gigawatt AI training cluster" refers to a data center capable of consuming one billion watts (1 GW) of power, a massive leap from the 300 MW used by xAI's Colossus 1, built in Memphis in 122 days with 200,000 H100/H200 GPUs. Energy usage for Colossus II could range from 1 GW continuously, translating to 24 GWh daily, depending on operational efficiency and cooling demands, far exceeding the 2.4 GWh daily of Colossus 1. Estimates suggest Colossus II might house at least 700,000 GPUs, based on speculation of B100 chips with 1,400 kW each, surpassing the 200,000 GPUs in Colossus 1. Compared to other clusters, Colossus II is 5 times larger than Colossus 1 in compute power and outpaces all others by a wide margin... OpenAI's and Meta's planned gigawatt-scale are years from completion. xAI will be (and already is) miles ahead of the closest competitor by then. image
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Global M2 hit another new ATH. We know what follows. Things are looking good for Q4. Ignore the bears and keep stacking sats. image
China’s stock market is booming while the economy slumps.
Consumers are cutting back, home prices are falling, and profits are shrinking — yet stocks hit a 10-year high. The reason is liquidity: with few safe alternatives, investors are pouring money into equities, driving prices up. image
Fed Governor Cook fired. image