À proposConditionsConfidentialitéContact
 
Actualisation
64 épisodes
Audio
Écouter sur Apple Podcasts
64 épisodes
Audio
Écouter sur Apple Podcasts
Date de sortie : 2026-06-26
© Matt Dines
L’épisode le plus récent
SpaceX, FHLB Lending, and the Dollar Liquidity Scramble

SpaceX, FHLB Lending, and the Dollar Liquidity Scramble

TL;DR: Dollar liquidity scramble. 📄 Summary SpaceX Taps Dollar Credit Markets Mine Print Hash Week 26 opens with SpaceX’s $25B bond offering, framed as the latest sign that AI infrastructure is consuming U.S. dollar investment-grade credit capac
Durée : 46:32
TL;DR: Dollar liquidity scramble.
📄 Summary
SpaceX Taps Dollar Credit Markets
Mine Print Hash Week 26 opens with SpaceX’s $25B bond offering, framed as the latest sign that AI infrastructure is consuming U.S. dollar investment-grade credit capacity. Matt says the AI buildout is “in full swing,” while June 2026 issuance is within $2B of the COVID-era record (00:02:00).
* SpaceX raised $87.5B in its IPO, then added a five-part $25B debt deal — a “massive cash liquidity buildup” (00:01:00).
* The proceeds largely rolled over older, higher-yielding debt tied to X and xAI via a bridge loan (00:05:00).
Why The Bond Structure Matters
Matt explains that SpaceX used 144A / Reg S offerings, a faster institutional/offshore route than a full public bond process (00:06:00).
* The deal was “massively oversubscribed,” showing deep institutional demand (00:07:00).
* SpaceX paid a 40–60 bps new-issuer concession versus BBB communications peers, but Matt compares its likely path to Netflix, Uber, and Meta moving toward public IG index inclusion (00:09:00).
Digital Euro, Digital Yuan, Stablecoin Dollar
The discussion shifts to monetary rails. Matt argues each bloc is evolving: Europe toward a CBDC-style digital euro, China toward cross-border digital yuan settlement, and the U.S. toward asset-based stablecoin rails (00:13:00).
* The digital euro is still a 12-month pilot aimed at reducing reliance on U.S. card networks (00:16:00).
* China’s CBETS system has 26 financial institutions signed on, putting it further along than Europe (00:18:00).
* Matt’s most bullish U.S. signal is Circle beginning cross-border settlement work with Nomura in Japan — “real private sector adoption” (00:20:00).
FHLB As “Second-To-Last Resort” Liquidity
Matt connects Japan, carry trades, insurers, private credit, and FHLB data. He has noticed rising liquidity requests for FHLB bonds — a quiet “page A32” signal before the story reaches the front page (00:23:00).
* FHLB acts like a “fast cash ATM pawn shop,” advancing dollars against eligible collateral before borrowers reach the Fed (00:26:00).
* Q1 2026 saw record advances to life insurance companies, echoing the near-record IG issuance backdrop (00:28:00).
* FHLB is tied to SOFR funding, with Matt estimating roughly $3.2T of SOFR-indexed floating-rate debt issued (00:31:00).
Private Credit Stress Moves Into View
Matt argues rising FHLB borrowing reflects private credit stress inside insurers and non-bank financial firms. Apollo’s Athene is highlighted as the system’s second-largest FHLB borrower, with advances above $20B as of 2025 (00:33:00).
* Middle-market borrowers are increasingly using PIK interest — effectively IOUs — when they cannot make cash interest payments (00:35:00).
* Matt says this rhymes with 2008 “Big Short” stories, but private credit is a smaller share of the total dollar-credit bubble; losses may be severe for exposed players without matching 2008 scale (00:38:00).
Bitcoin Treasury Companies As Frontier Credit
The final link is MicroStrategy and Bitcoin treasury companies. Matt compares MSTR with Blackstone, KKR, and Apollo, arguing they reflect the same non-bank dollar-credit cycle, with MSTR at the highest-beta frontier (00:41:00).
* Bitcoin’s drawdown since Q3 2025 and stress in perpetual preferreds are presented as early signs of broader liquidity pressure (00:44:00).
* Matt’s throughline: SpaceX, FHLB advances, private credit insurers, hyperscalers, and Bitcoin treasury firms are all “preparing for something bigger that’s coming down the pike” (00:45:00).
🔑 Key Takeaways
* AI/hyperscaler funding needs are moving into U.S. IG credit markets.
* Monetary rails are splitting into CBDC euro, digital yuan settlement, and U.S. stablecoin dollars.
* FHLB advances are a key liquidity stress signal for insurers exposed to private credit.
* Bitcoin treasury companies are the high-beta frontier of the same dollar-liquidity cycle.
📱 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
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com
Id. d’épisode : 1000774249232
GUID : substack:post:203616486
Date de publication : 26/6/2026 à 00:26:40

Description

The weekly podcast from Matt Dines and Cameron Otsuka, where our team dissects the week's most important news and their impact on capital markets. From macroeconomic trends and policy decisions to geopolitical events and sector-specific developments, join the team for timely analysis and thoughtful conversations to help you form a narrative for the rapidly evolving capital markets landscape.
www.mineprinthash.com

Apple Podcasts : Avis des utilisateurs

Pas d'entrée