Podcast: The Truth About the Market
Host: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREF

Bitcoin is melting down.

That is the headline everywhere.

Screens are red.
Crypto traders are panicking.
Everyone is suddenly calling it a crash.

But Jason opens this episode with a simple point:

Meltdown depends entirely on your time frame.

By the time everyone feels the crash, most of the damage has usually already happened.

And that same pattern is playing out in the aircraft market right now.

In this episode of The Truth About the Market, Jason explains why the aviation market is not necessarily experiencing a classic crash.

It is experiencing something more subtle.

A confidence recession.

Buyers have not disappeared.

They have gone quiet.

Sellers have not fully capitulated.

They are still anchored to yesterday’s prices.

Brokers are still listing aircraft.

But deals are harder to close, timelines are stretching, inquiries are down, and participation has weakened.

That is the signal.

Not the headline.

Not the asking price.

Not the chart everyone is staring at.

Volume.

In this episode, we cover:

  • Why Bitcoin’s selloff is a useful comparison for what is happening in aviation
  • Why “meltdown” always depends on the time frame you are using
  • How market damage often happens long before the public starts panicking
  • Why aviation is showing the same behavioral pattern as other asset cycles
  • Why participation dries up before prices visibly break
  • How sentiment cracks before sellers admit the market has changed
  • Why leverage gets flushed out late in the cycle, not early
  • Why headlines usually show up at the loudest and least useful stage
  • Why the real question is not whether the sky is falling today
  • Why the better question is what behavior was telling you three months ago
  • Why Jason sees the current aircraft market as a confidence recession, not a simple crash
  • Why volume tells the story first
  • Why price is a lagging indicator
  • How sticky asking prices can hide a frozen market underneath
  • Why sellers stay anchored to yesterday’s comps
  • Why transactions, inquiries, days on market, and failed deals matter more than asking prices
  • How soft volume and sticky pricing create stalemate
  • Why a stalemate eventually has to break
  • The four things that can break a frozen market: lower prices, seller capitulation, looser financing, or returning confidence
  • Why aircraft market participants often read the data in the wrong order
  • Why volume goes first, then time on market stretches, then retrades appear, and only later do asking prices move
  • Why closed sale prices are often the most lagging data point in the chain
  • Why some experienced brokers going from 10 to 15 annual closings to zero is a major warning sign
  • Why individual broker pipelines may reveal market truth before industry statistics catch up
  • Why averages can lie during transition periods
  • Why the aircraft transaction market is facing a participation problem
  • Why the number of aircraft transactions does not swing as much as the number of people chasing them
  • How the post-COVID boom attracted a flood of new brokers
  • Why low barriers to entry made aircraft brokerage look easier than it really is
  • Why a lower-volume market exposes weak relationships, weak knowledge, and weak business models
  • Why the slowdown will likely purge the easy-money crowd
  • Why the survivors may emerge with stronger client relationships and greater market share
  • Why the top of the aircraft market can still function while the middle freezes
  • Why brand-new flagship jet buyers behave differently than piston, turboprop, light jet, and midsize buyers
  • Why middle-market aircraft purchases are often more sensitive to confidence, cash flow, borrowing costs, and business conditions
  • Why many upgrade decisions are emotional purchases dressed up in business logic
  • Why the same buyer can behave completely differently when confidence falls
  • Why brokers, dealers, and owners should stop staring only at price
  • Why behavior, volume, inquiry levels, days on market, and fall-through rates matter more right now
  • Why this market is not dead, but harder, slower, and more selective

Jason also explains why downturns are not just destructive.

They are cleansing.

They remove the weak players.

They expose who actually has relationships.

They reward discipline.

They punish shortcuts.

They separate people who understand aviation as a capital market from people who only knew the boom.

The bottom line:

This is not simply a price crash.

It is a confidence recession.

The loud part of the market always gets the attention.

The red screens.
The headlines.
The panic.
The public realization that something has changed.

But the real signal comes earlier.

Volume dries up.

Buyers hesitate.

Deals stretch.

Inquiries slow.

Experienced brokers stop closing.

Participation fades.

That is where the market speaks first.

And by the time price finally confirms it, the real move has already happened.

For buyers, sellers, brokers, lenders, and advisors, this is the moment to stop relying on mood, headlines, or stale comps.

This is when the real number matters.

Because in volatile markets, accurate, defensible, data-driven aircraft values are not a luxury.

They are protection.

For accurate, defensible aircraft valuations trusted by lenders, insurers, attorneys, operators, and aviation professionals worldwide, get started with your VREF Online Membership today.

Fly safe. Stay smart.