Matthew Joynes
Yeah, yeah, no, no, well, they'll be back. They form a company in America because nobody gets to see what you do. Nobody knows anything and you can do whatever you like with them and you can even have no fiduciary duty. So this currency business went off and grew very big. So I learned a lot about trading and how that market is manipulated. I suppose the biggest takeaway I have from my days as being a figure in London trading, was knowing that you could corner markets. So if you don't think gold's manipulated, you're wrong. If you don't think silver's manipulated, you're wrong. Because they could even manipulate the currency market. This is the largest market in the world. It's a trillion dollar a day market. And I know four guys that managed to manipulate it. Three of them did end up in jail. It's a matter of public record. But one of them got away with it.
So yeah, if you can manipulate a trillion dollar a day market, how easy is it to manipulate the price of stock in Nvidia or whatever it is? And if you don't think the Blackstones and the world are not doing it, and even the President of United States is doing it, you you can make a political statement and your share price will go up or down like the knickers of a whore in a whorehouse. You know, I believe that they're doing that.
And that's where you get into this wider conspiracy theories which tend to be actually quite accurate. In terms of how currency is developed, will tell you Bitcoin is the big question everyone asks me about. Everyone thinks Bitcoin has been adopted. I've never seen one person buy one thing with a Bitcoin. So what is it? It's just a commodity.
It's a scarce commodity like gold or something. It's not digital gold because gold actually has other uses. There's actually a use case. A stock of Nvidia can give you a dividend, has a use case. Bitcoin, no use case, nothing. It's just one giant scheme that's managed by a small bunch of whales that control a few exchanges. And all these young people have got themselves into this, it's going to be a million dollar coin out there. It's just not. It's never going to happen. You know, each one of these coins eats so much energy, it makes no sense. Nobody uses them. It requires other people to believe in something, you know, that's got no underlying linkage to anything.
And at the end of the day, it's relative to the dollar. So if the dollar goes down, Bitcoin goes down. It's not de-correlated from inflation. If inflation is going up, well, fact, Bitcoin is not going up as fast as inflation. If inflation is going down, does it go down with inflation? No, it's an uncorrelated asset driven by sentiment. Very few market participants, even fewer exchanges, are people taking advantage of people's naivety or lack of access to investment products, which I think is more of the truth. I think it was easier to access these products, but now Robin Hoods have come along and other things have come along and people can now access investment-grade products more rapidly. I think Bitcoin has been used mostly by criminals, drug dealers, all across the Middle East. Terrorism is funded.
I think anyone who's really supporting it doesn't realise they're supporting I would advocate everyone to sell now. I I can see it going all the way back down the ladder. Will it go to zero? No.
So there'll be always people that will disbelieve their eyes and believe in the hope. But that hope is held by a lot of people around the world because this is their only chance to even transfer money in the middle of Africa. But there are better technical fintech products on the way and out there. You know, just so much better than Bitcoin. I think the underlying knowledge structure is great. I think you know, cryptography of Bitcoin is going to be smashed in a second with these quantum computers. You know, but there are some really great products coming out for Africa and countries that are challenged. So, this idea of what a currency is, it's really fundamentally important. Is Bitcoin a currency? Not in my view. Is it a commodity? Yes. Should it be taxed like a commodity? Yes. Should it have capital gains tax? Yeah.
But it's not a medium of exchange, nor is it a store of value, possibly. If you want to store value, go buy gold, because gold has outperformed the S&P statistically every year for the last... forever years. Gold's your best asset if you're looking to store wealth.
There's no single doubt about it. If you want your wealth to have compound relationship with your investment, go buy Nvidia stock or Apple stock or Amazon stock. You know, on a compound basis, they'll outperform gold. But on a straight S&P price of gold per ounce to the S&P's performance, yeah, the gold will win. So if you can stock pick pretty decent stock, you'll outperform gold. But everyone will outperform Bitcoin because it's been down to three grand.
It's been up to nearly a hundred. All those people that just put in at Christmas at hundred. What a loss in three months! I mean, come on. Yeah, no, this isn't something anyone, unless you're very wealthy, should be playing in. And I remember the SEC asking me, as you know, I speak to them quite a bit about various, I've talked to the WTO and I've talked to the Chinese finance ministry about currency.