Mine, Print, Hash

Final Nail in the Coffin for 20th Century Global Trade?


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TL;DR: The “old world” system (maritime trade insurance + post-2008 central-bank plumbing) is cracking, and the U.S. is trying to backstop and rebuild the rails.

📄 Summary

Trade System Teardown

Cameron Otsuka and Matt Dines frame the episode around “global trade going back to the old world” and why the real story is the insurance/route infrastructure behind headlines (00:00:24).

* Iran strikes: focus on the chokepoint, not the missiles: They walk through “Operation Epic Fury” and the regional spillover, but argue the market-moving angle is maritime war-risk coverage and the trade routes it enables: “the maritime insurance angle… [is] the key story” (00:01:09).

* War-risk insurance pulled = market failure + energy bottleneck: Matt says insurers can’t price the risk: “We can’t charge a premium high enough… actuarially profitable”, turning the Persian Gulf into a bottleneck for “energy exports, both oil and LNG” to Asia/Europe (00:05:13).

* The Band-Aid: DFC political-risk backstop (and its limits): They cite a Trump-era move to have the DFC provide “political risk insurance and guarantees” for Gulf trade (00:07:09), noting DFC instruments lack the global acceptance (and claims-handling infrastructure) of legacy hubs like London—making this a stopgap, not an overnight replacement (00:08:29).

* Parallel systems + wider geopolitics (Russia/Ecuador): Comparing to the 1980s tanker war, Matt highlights today’s uninsured “black… fleet” moving Russian/Venezuelan/Iranian oil outside legacy P&I markets (00:30:03). They tie this to broader U.S.-led reordering, including “military action in Ecuador against terrorist organizations” as part of Western Hemisphere consolidation (00:35:52).

Capital Markets Roundtable: Rewiring Credit Creation After QE

Topic two shifts to a D.C. roundtable where “the U S treasury… is encouraging commercial banks… [to] upend how credit creation… is done” (00:37:54). The thesis: move away from the “QE framework” (00:40:27), push the Fed back toward lender-of-last-resort plumbing, and modernize the discount window (“We’re moving the discount window”) with pre-registered collateral for faster crisis liquidity (00:42:52).

* Crypto meets the dollar rails: Kraken’s Fed master account: In the “last story,” they say Kraken getting a Fed master account reduces bank “toll road” markups to access dollar settlement rails (00:47:23–00:49:21), improving cost structures for Bitcoin/crypto firms. They extend the logic to stablecoin rails and treasury-bill collateral underpinning tokenized dollar claims—then end with an investing metaphor: old-world breakdowns are “your Sears”… “Cut your losses” (00:55:15).

🔑 Key Takeaways

* Watch war-risk insurance and maritime routes as leading indicators for trade/energy shocks.

* Expect more U.S.-led “backstops” (like DFC) while new institutions/acceptance networks are built.

* The post-2008 QE regime is being challenged; policy is shifting toward bank-led lending + updated emergency liquidity plumbing.

* Dollar “rails” access is becoming a competitive moat (and bottleneck) for crypto/fintech; Bitcoin/stablecoin infrastructure is being pulled into legacy settlement.

📱 Social Media

* Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash

* Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs

* Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka

🔗 Links

* 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss

* 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com

* ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund

* 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com



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Mine, Print, HashBy Matt Dines & Cameron Otsuka