Bitcoin Is The Purest AI Trade, Says Wall Street Veteran
19 Junho 2025 - 10:00AM
NEWSBTC
Macro investor Jordi Visser has published a Substack essay arguing
that Bitcoin is “the purest AI trade,” a claim he says has followed
him “in nearly every one of my videos, Substack posts, and
conversations with Anthony Pompliano.” The piece, released
yesterday under the title You Don’t Find Bitcoin, Bitcoin Finds
You: Why It’s the Purest AI Trade, sets out a personal and
macro-economic narrative that Visser believes binds
artificial-intelligence disruption to the rise of the world’s first
decentralised digital asset. Visser, who now heads AI Macro Nexus
Research at 22V Research after three decades trading derivatives at
Morgan Stanley, running a global-macro hedge fund, and ultimately
serving as president and CIO of Weiss Multi-Strategy Advisers,
frames the essay as a pre-emptive answer to critics who “don’t see
it or understand it.” “This statement wasn’t born from a single
insight but rather a journey that unfolded across three distinct
steps and four accelerating forces that helped me connect the dots
between monetary policy, exponential innovation, and a world
shifting faster than our corporate, financial, and government
systems can handle,” he writes. The three steps, he explains, were
“personal awakening, macro-economic context, and the recognition of
Bitcoin as foundational infrastructure for the digital economy.”
Why Bitcoin Is The Ultimate AI Trade The four forces Visser
identifies as central to his thesis span the domains of monetary
policy, technology, and sovereignty. The first, he writes, is
“unprecedented fiscal and monetary intervention which I believe
marked the final climax of the global government debt super-cycle
and ultimately the dollar as the global reserve currency.” In his
view, the pandemic-era explosion in government spending exposed the
limits of fiat systems propped up by central bank liquidity.
Related Reading: Buy Bitcoin Now? Not Yet—Analyst Says Time Holds
The Key The second force centers on structural deflation:
“deflationary pressure from exponential technologies.” Visser sees
AI and automation as not just economic disruptors but forces that
drive prices downward across the board—pressuring legacy systems
built on perpetual inflation and debt. The third pillar of his
argument is institutional erosion. “Accelerating institutional
obsolescence through AI,” he warns, will hollow out bureaucracies
and corporate incumbents that are too slow to adapt to exponential
change. Finally, Visser cites “Bitcoin’s emergence as a sovereign
digital asset—independent, decentralised, and not defined by any
nation-state.” In contrast to fiat currencies reliant on state
power and monetary intervention, Bitcoin exists as an autonomous,
verifiable infrastructure layer for the digital economy. Visser
dates his “personal awakening” to early 2021, when the pandemic-era
money print collided with a household epiphany: “Asset prices
jumped and crypto prices were rising daily, and I was struck by the
fact that my 13-year-old son … could explain the space in a way
that I could not understand.” That curiosity pushed him toward
Michael Saylor’s corporate-treasury bet on Bitcoin and Paul Tudor
Jones’s description of the asset as “the fastest horse in the
race,” convincing him that “Bitcoin [was] a rational response to an
irrational system looking for a new one.” The second intellectual
milestone came through Jeff Booth’s book The Price of Tomorrow,
from which Visser lifts the line: “Innovation is always
deflationary for the economy so the baseline for inflation is
always negative.” Booth’s argument, he says, revealed “an Economic
Trilemma” in which a debt-laden industrial economy can only survive
by tapping government balance-sheets, even as a capital-light
digital economy accelerates away. The result, he warns, is a
fragile fiat system propped up by “artificially low rates,
quantitative easing, and fiscal stimulus” that cannot be maintained
indefinitely. Visser’s third pivot came with Marc Andreessen’s 2014
essay Why Bitcoin Matters. Andreessen’s framing of the Bitcoin
white paper as a monetary protocol—“on par with the creation of the
internet itself”—convinced Visser to stop viewing Bitcoin as a
challenger to sovereign currency and start seeing it as “the
base-layer for a new, decentralised economic system.” Stablecoins,
he concedes, may bridge fiat and crypto, but they remain “tethered
to the very institutions they’re trying to outrun.” Related
Reading: $150,000 Bitcoin Is In Play—Unless This One Macro Metric
Snaps The final, self-described “force” is AI itself: “For years,
we’ve said software is eating the world. But now, AI is eating
software and soon it will eat everything in its path.” He argues
that intelligent agents will erode the scarcity premia that support
most legacy assets, leaving Bitcoin—algorithmically finite and
independent of any issuer—as “sovereignty at digital scale.” In one
of the essay’s bleakest forecasts he writes, “AI will destroy
everything eventually—not maliciously, but systematically. And the
economic system we’ve built on top of scarcity, debt, and
centralisation is not equipped to survive it.” Visser closes by
channelling Saylor’s mantra—“You don’t find Bitcoin, Bitcoin finds
you”—to explain why adoption is emerging first in the periphery:
retail investors in emerging markets, smaller firms outcompeted by
big-tech AI monopolies, and early-mover states such as El Salvador.
“This bottom-up foundation is setting the stage for a future
top-down capital rotation as FOMO and greed eventually force more
and more of the doubters in,” he concludes. “That’s why Bitcoin is,
in many ways, the purest AI trade—an opt-out of a system being
reshaped by intelligence no one fully controls. At press time, BTC
traded at $104,816. Featured image image created with DALL.E, chart
from TradingView.com
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