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Last week, simultaneous falls in US shares, treasurys and the dollar – an exceptionally rare trifecta that macro investor Jordi Visser described as “the system officially broke” – the price action of Bitcoin was remarkably muted. Despite the fact that gold ralls more than 4% in just a few days, Bitcoin has not responded to similar strength, a divergence that attributes Visser to deep -rooted skepticism of institutional financing.
Visser, President and CIO of Weiss Multi-Strategy Advisers and a veteran of more than three decades at Wall Street, sat down for a profound interview With Anthony Pompliano to unpack what he called a historic break in the global capital structure. Central to his statement is that American government bonds for a long time are no longer worn as such as the most risk-free assets in the world. “The top of the global capital structure, the safest assets in the world, is falling,” said Visser, referring to American treasurys who think about other sovereign debt.
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Month to date, he noted, American bonds have fallen by more than 5%, shares have also fallen more than 5%and the US dollar index has been eliminated with a similar size. “The currency, bonds and shares that all go on a panic – that doesn’t happen. The last time I saw that was in emerging markets,” said Visser, parallels with financial crises he observed in the nineties in Brazil in the nineties in the nineties.
What this means for Bitcoin
The implications for Bitcoin in this area are complex. While many in the crypto community expected that BTC would rise in the midst of macro instability, Visser says that Wall Street Bitcoin is still viewing through a share-like lens. “Wall Street does not believe in Bitcoin,” he said about it. “The problem is the display on Bitcoin is that it is Nasdaq, so I don’t think it should cover as gold as gold. That happens when we are switched on the printing press again – it will have to happen.”
According to Visser, Bitcoin’s underperformance compared to gold is not a rejection of his long -term, but rather a reflection of who holds what, and when they can act. “Gold is a different story. Sovereine power funds already have it. Central banks already have it. Hedge funds like to buy gold. Bitcoin? Not yet.” He emphasized that the moment of Bitcoin will probably not be in the midst of the crisis itself, but in his aftermath, when monetary authorities resort to aggressive Stimulans-what he called ‘debasement’, historically the go-to solution in earlier crises.
Visser was determined that despite the price of Bitcoin, it actually does its job: “Bitcoin is the digital active of the digital economy.” According to him, the current unrest marks the transition from a unipolar, dollar-centric world to a fragmented, multipolar world. “We enter a new world and this new system has been decentralized,” he said. That transition, accelerated by both geopolitical fragmentation and progress in AI, is unlikely that it is flexible. Visser predicts increased volatility and falling confidence in older financial infrastructure, which could serve as a long -term in the Battle of Bitcoin.
His analysis closely connects the Bitcoin process with the global liquidity cycles, and notes that much of the world’s fault is expressed in US dollars. As such, a falling dollar increases liquidity paradoxically worldwide, especially for emerging markets and risk assets. “Bitcoin will be four to eight weeks – four to 10 weeks – later,” he said, referring to the lagging correlation with liquidity extensions. “You will look back in eight weeks from now on and say,” I can’t believe I didn’t see that they were going to print to stop this thing. ” They do it every time “
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Yet he was clear about the structural headwind in the short term. Institutional allocers, in particular hedge funds, are confronted with two important restrictions: investor release and requirements of the first broker margin. “Wall Street has an embedded side that prevents them from going through it,” Visser explained. “Retail just buys more on the dip. Wall Street is not possible.”
Even in the light of institutional hesitation, Visser underlined that the worldwide conversation about trade, capital flows and currency trusts has now changed permanently. “Do the US want to be the reserve currency more?” he asked. “From a government official in the market it is no longer the reserve currency. The trade deficit has been placed by the administration.”
The result, he warned, is that the US is now effectively exporting tax deficits to other countries as global trade withdraws. In such a world – where nationalism replaces globalism and continues to erode bilateral trust – Visser believes that decentralized systems will inevitably become more relevant.
“I think the agreement will ultimately be that decentralization will accelerate from here because of AI and because of crypto,” he said. But he warned that while the architecture is being laid, regular acceptance remains led by perception, policy and institutional adoption cycles.
In short, Visser does not see Bitcoin as a failed safe haven, but as an emerging assets that is still waiting for his structural breakout moment. Until Wall Street stops viewing Bitcoin as a risk-on-technical proxy and until central banks inevitably return to monetary stimulus-stays BTC in the shade of gold. But he was unambiguously in where he believes it is going. “We get closer to that day every day,” he said, referring to the moment when the role of Bitcoin in the global capital system finally clicks in place.
As Visser sees it, the system can be broken – but that is exactly how something new is being built.
At the time of the press, BTC traded at $ 84,689.

Featured image of YouTube, Char van TradingView.com