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US Money Supply Hits Record $23 Trillion as Critics See a New Fed-Fueled Bubble
The U.S. money supply climbed to $23.05 trillion in May, the first time the Federal Reserve’s M2 gauge has ever crossed the $23 trillion mark. The record lands as critics have accused the Fed of quietly restarting stimulus.
Key Takeaways:
Inside the Federal Reserve’s Latest Numbers
The Federal Reserve’s H.6 money stock release, published yesterday, put seasonally adjusted M2 at $23,052.3 billion for May, up from $22,804.5 billion in April (a one-month jump of $247.8 billion). M2 is the broadest commonly cited measure of U.S. money, covering cash, checking deposits, savings deposits and retail money market funds.
The gauge has now risen every month this year, climbing from $22,429.3 billion in January, an expansion of roughly $623 billion in four months. For scale, that four-month increase alone approaches the annual economic output of a mid-sized European country.
The Fed itself publishes the figures without commentary, and mainstream economists note that money supply normally grows alongside the economy. M2 spent 2022 and 2023 contracting, the sharpest decline since the Great Depression era, before resuming growth. Consequently, part of the current climb represents a return to trend rather than pure stimulus. The pace of that climb, however, is what has hard-money advocates on alert.
The Debasement Trade Gets Fresh Ammunition
For bitcoin investors, the $23 trillion print is less a data point than a thesis since the leading cryptocurrency’s supply is capped at 21 million coins, and its most durable investment narrative (à la protection against currency debasement) strengthens each time the money stock sets a record. Many analysts argue bitcoin’s multi-year cycles have historically tracked global liquidity expansions, though past correlation offers no guarantee of repetition.
Central banks themselves are behaving like debasement hedgers. The World Gold Council reported official institutions added a net 41 tonnes of gold in May, extending a four-year streak of roughly 1,000 tonnes in annual purchases, with a record 45% of reserve managers planning further buying.
The next H.6 release, covering June, is set to arrive in late July and will show whether the streak of monthly increases extends to six. Markets are also watching the Fed’s policy path, as softer U.S. labor data has strengthened bets on easier policy into the fall, which would likely accelerate money growth further.