Advertisement|Remove ads.

Bitcoin (BTC) sat on the sidelines this past year as artificial intelligence (AI)- linked stocks and gold quietly reached record highs. Porter Stansberry, ex-CEO of MarketWise (MKTW), said on Tuesday that the recent weakness was a temporary detour, not a structural break.
In an interview with ProCap’s Anthony Pompliano, Stansberry attributed Bitcoin's recent weakness to the shift in where speculative capital had been flowing.
"All of the fast money has gone into tech stocks, and it had to come out of somewhere," he said. "So I think we're seeing a great opportunity today in Bitcoin, certainly the best opportunity I've seen in Bitcoin in a decade."
His proprietary model pegged Bitcoin's fair value at $134,000, making the current dislocation, in his words, as large as he “had ever seen.”
Stansberry rejected the popular framing of Bitcoin as simply "digital gold," arguing that the two assets were driven by entirely different forces.
"Gold is directly related to the total amount of global credit," he said, citing a model taught to him by Austrian School economist Kurt Richebächer. "Bitcoin is directly correlated to banking system liquidity, so M2 and other forms of money, and that is why Bitcoin will react faster to monetary intervention."
He pointed to the COVID bottom as evidence. Stansbettery stated Bitcoin moved almost immediately on Fed liquidity, while gold took roughly 18 months to respond as the credit system reignited.
Stansberry's argument was based on what he called an unavoidable American fiscal reckoning. He repeatedly cited the Social Security funding shortfall as a slow-moving catalyst for what he called a “monetary reset,” not an actual default on bonds, but a stealth default engineered by the debasement of the currency.
Stansberry said he saw the return of “Nixon shock” dynamics on the horizon, a nod to President Richard Nixon’s 1971 decision to sever the dollar’s link to gold, which unleashed a decade of inflation and a parabolic move in precious metals. Stansberry said a similar reset was looming, only this time it was being driven by exploding entitlement spending, debt service costs, and the political unwillingness to cut either one.
"In 1971… our foreign creditors were demanding payment in gold for all of their trade receipts, and so that's when Nixon defaulted," he said. "He said, 'We're not going to pay you what we promised we would pay you. Instead, we're going to print dollars and pay you in dollars,' and that, of course, set off a huge inflation in the 1970s."
He argued that bankrupt governments have historically done "very, very bad things to their creditors" and that the largest creditor of the U.S. government today is the American retiree.
Stansberry, despite the 31% drawdown, was still very bullish on Bitcoin’s multi-year setup. He said the asset class had matured and would become less volatile as the market gained a better understanding of what it tracked. The fact that bitcoin has underperformed gold over the last three years reflects a specific monetary backdrop: central banks tightening monetary aggregates while credit continues to boom, he said.
In his view, that was different, with the Federal Reserve resuming bond purchases in December.
"It's very obvious to me that the Fed's purchases of our government's bonds are going to have to increase dramatically over time in order for them to achieve their financing needs at rates that won't strangle the economy."
Bitcoin’s price was trading near $75,768, down around 1% in the past 24 hours, with retail sentiment on Stocktwits remaining in the 'bearish' zone and chatter at 'normal' levels. However, it was one of the top trending tickers on Stocktwits.
Read also: WULF Stock Gets Twin Price Target Hikes Day After Muskie Campus Acquisition
For updates and corrections, email newsroom[at]stocktwits[dot]com