Bill Ackman Profile picture
Nov 26, 2022 25 tweets 5 min read Read on X
In a recent thread on crypto, I argued that crypto and tokens enabled the formation of businesses that heretofore could not be created. Some responded that cash could be used in place of tokens, and therefore the ‘innovation’ of crypto was not meaningful. I beg to differ.
Others assumed that I was advocating or perhaps even ‘pumping’ specific tokens, but I was doing no such thing. Rather I was trying to make the case that crypto and tokenization were useful technologies for business formation. I will try to make the case clearer here.
Stock options have been a powerful tool for business formation and growth as they enable the recruitment and alignment of incentives of a talented workforce for a startup with limited cash resources. But options have their limitations.
They generally can only be granted to employees, directors, and consultants to an issuer. They cannot be given to a global army of unaffiliated actors to incentivize behavior (see Helium & Dimo examples given in my previous thread). Options may also require an issuer to register
with the SEC, giving up the issuer’s private status, unless the options are non-tradable and the issuer meets other requirements. There are also significant information requirements that must be made to the option holders even if the company remains private.
As a result of the above, options are not a useful tool to recruit a global army of unaffiliated actors to help advance a business. Enter crypto and token-driven business models. Tokens are not equity interests in a company, but rather commodities that are created by miners
who achieve business objectives of a company or project, and for which demand is created as the tokens must be ‘burned’ to purchase goods or services from the company. As such, tokens can be used to incentivize behavior and as a currency to pay for goods and/or services.
Blockchain technology allows token holders to have confidence in their tokens' basic parameters including their total current and eventual supply, and recognition of the holder’s ownership. Unlike stock options where access to corporate records is needed to evidence ownership,
blockchain provides public proof. So the combination of this public record and the less restrictive nature of token distribution allows tokens to be used by businesses to incentivize a global network of participants to achieve specific corporate objectives.
These unique features of blockchain and tokens are what allows for the formation of new crypto-based businesses that could not previously be executed using pre-blockchain business tools. This is the power of crypto and why I believe in its potential for transformational impact.
But there are problems. The ability to issue a speculative tradable currency that is difficult to value creates temptations on the part of the issuer. The higher the token is valued in the market, the more attractive the apparent economics to miners.
In the Helium example I previously used, HNT tokens are mined by Helium hotspot owners and purchased by companies who wish to use its global Wi-Fi network. I was widely criticized for using Helium as an example as it has yet to produce meaningful revenues
or a profitable business model, and according to some press reports has made overstated claims about who is using its network. Nonetheless, it is remarkable how the incentives of HNT mining motivated 1,000s of unaffiliated users to build out a million-node global Wi-Fi network.
High valuations of HNT tokens drove demand for Helium hotspots as the initial payback period for mining was a matter of weeks. In retrospect, HNT was overvalued as the Helium network has not yet generated sufficient demand to justify the high initial HNT valuations.
As a result, thousands of miners have earned minimal returns on their investments in hotspots, which likely explains the blowback I received on @Twitter for using Helium as an example. Crypto projects suffer the same basic laws of economics as other businesses.
Without adequate demand for their products or services, the tokens will have little if any true value. The key to success for miners is to identify the projects that have the greatest probability of long-term success. The analysis to determine outcomes is largely the same as
with conventional businesses. Management, product and service offerings, competitive dynamics (Michael Porter’s Five Forces analysis can help here) must be assessed and will ultimately be determinative of the success or failure of a crypto project.
In the dot com bubble, investors gave pets.com and Webvan massive valuations before they eventually went bankrupt as enthusiasm about internet-based business models drove enormous speculation and fraud. The same is happening now with crypto.
Which of the new crypto-based businesses are Webvan versus Amazon has yet to be determined, but I wouldn’t be so fast to conclude that crypto is a worthless technology simply because of some bad actors and some underperforming businesses. But you need to be careful.
Crypto remains the Wild West as the same protections of registered security offerings don’t exist. Therefore, the character, reputation and track record of the management teams and sponsors of crypto-based businesses are extremely critical in choosing which projects to back.
I invested in Dimo because I like the management team, the data collection service they are offering, and the limited investment required by participants relative to the value they receive. In short, miners purchase a device which collects their car’s data and saves the data
to the cloud. The data are useful to the car owner and to auto suppliers and manufacturers, insurers, municipalities, infrastructure providers etc. But I have no idea whether Dimo will be successful. It is an early-stage bet on a good idea using crypto to collect data.
With respect to regulation, I am not sure we need new rules. Much of the fraud that is taking place is old-fashioned pump and dump schemes, and failures of custodians to protect customer assets. I suspect that existing anti-fraud and other laws already govern these violations.
We just need more enforcement.
Regulators need more resources to police the bad actors. Unfortunately, it will likely take years for the regulators to catch up, and they may never get there. The crypto industry therefore needs to self-police and out the bad actors, or it is at risk of being shut down.

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More from @BillAckman

Apr 16, 2023
I like and respect @VivekGRamaswamy but when I suggested that he could be our next president, I did not understand all of his policy positions or what they would become. I think our country needs someone closer to the center to bring us together. Vivek is not that candidate. twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
To be clear, I prefer @VivekGRamaswamy to @realDonaldTrump @GovRonDeSantis and @POTUS and would vote for him if those were the choices. I just think the country would benefit by a candidate whose views and policies were closer to the center where I believe the majority is.
Perhaps with our primary system, we have no hope for a more centrist candidate to make it through to a general election. If that is indeed the case then @VivekGRamaswamy is our best bet for now. Here’s hoping that if he wins, he works hard to bring us together.
Read 5 tweets
Mar 10, 2023
The failure of @SVB_Financial could destroy an important long-term driver of the economy as VC-backed companies rely on SVB for loans and holding their operating cash. If private capital can’t provide a solution, a highly dilutive gov’t preferred bailout should be considered.
After what the Feds did to @jpmorgan after it bailed out Bear Stearns, I don’t see another bank stepping in to help @SVB_Financial.
The gov’t could also guarantee deposits in exchange for a dilutive warrant issuance and other covenants and protections. If @SVB_Financial is indeed solvent, this would buy time to enable SVB to restore the franchise and raise new private capital.
Read 5 tweets
Feb 15, 2023
I am going to make a bold and early call. @VivekGRamaswamy will run for POTUS and win. I think the country is ready for his message. He is young, smart, talented and will attract the center to the right to win. He speaks hard truths which many believe but fear to say.
He is a very talented and successful entrepreneur who understands business, economics, healthcare, politics, history and geopolitics. You won’t likely agree with all of his views, but you will respect his candor, acumen, discipline and energy. One to watch.
And let’s remember that the improbable candidate often wins. Think Clinton, Obama, and Trump. Most people laughed at the thought of any of the previous up until months before the election.
Read 4 tweets
Jan 27, 2023
In late 2012, we shorted @Herbalife and delivered our initial 342-page deck centerforinquiry.org/wp-content/upl… . In sum, we said that HLF was a pyramid scheme that was causing enormous economic harm. HLF has declined by 24% since then. The S&P has ~tripled over the same period.
We made numerous other presentations about @herbalife identifying new issues and addressing false and misleading statements that HLF made in response to our presentations. The @FTC launched an investigation of HLF in March 2014. In July 2016, HLF settled with the FTC for $200m.
In March 2014, we made a presentation about HLF China. In sum, we said that HLF was violating China anti-pyramiding law and had inaccurate SEC filings. HLF said: "The presentation reflects Mr. Ackman’s continued failure to fundamentally understand Herbalife’s business model."
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Jan 13, 2023
Many have expressed surprise about my interest in the FTX situation and my openness to the possibility that @SBF_FTX may be telling the truth as I have no economic interest or relationship with any of the parties. Perhaps some background on my life experiences will help explain.
20 years ago on 12/9/02, I released a white paper entitled ‘Is MBIA Triple-A’ where in 55-pages I questioned the AAA credit ratings of the largest bond insurer. I disclosed on page one that my firm, Gotham Partners, held a short position in the company.
A few weeks later, then-NYAG Eliot Spitzer launched an investigation accusing me of market manipulation. As a high profile hedge fund manager and with this being Spitzer’s second major initiative after his successful Wall Street analyst investigation, it was front page news.
Read 23 tweets
Jan 2, 2023
My issues with KO/PEP are more with their advertising, health disclosures (not), and the buying off of critics. The harm is born by less health-aware consumers who are disproportionately kids or from low income groups. When was the last time you saw an obese person in a Coke ad?
And then think about all of the negative externalities. What have Coke/Pepsi contributed to our health care costs? And think about all of the plastic bottles in the ocean. Why haven’t KO/PEP invested some of their massive profits in developing a truly biodegradable bottle?
In reality, neither company is as profitable as their public filings suggest because the real costs, if they were properly burdened with their negative externalities, are much, much higher than reported. The problem is that society, rather than Coke and Pepsi, bears these costs.
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