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Central banks are expanding money supply again while telling you policy is still tight.
Across the six largest economies, the data is moving in the same direction at the same time.
- China is at $49.96T and up 2.73% this month
- Europe is at $19.4T up 2.71%,
- US is at $22.67T up 1%
- Germany and the UK are already at new highs, with Japan being the only major economy still recovering.
When you combine all of this, global M2 is now pushing to new highs again.
This is the same liquidity setup that has driven every major market cycle.
M2 is simply the total money in the system. When it expands, more capital enters financial markets and starts chasing the same set of assets, which pushes prices higher.
When it contracts, liquidity is removed and assets reprice lower. This relationship has already played out very clearly over the last few years.
In 2020 and 2021, M2 expanded aggressively, and that period led to a broad rally across stocks, crypto and real estate.
In 2022, central banks tightened, M2 contracted, and almost every major asset class corrected. Now the direction is reversing again, with US M2 back at all-time highs and growing.
The more important driver right now is China. With nearly $50T in M2 and continued expansion, China has been injecting liquidity consistently for months.
That liquidity does not stay within China, it moves into global markets through commodities, emerging markets and risk assets, adding to overall financial conditions.
What makes this more important is that this expansion is happening even while central banks continue to talk about restrictive policy and inflation control.
In reality, the data shows that liquidity is already increasing again across most major economies, with Japan as the only exception.
Historically, global M2 leads asset prices. Stocks and gold tend to move alongside it, while Bitcoin usually follows with a lag of around three to four months.
That means the liquidity being created now has not fully reflected in market prices yet.
If this trend continues, the next move in risk assets will be supported by expanding liquidity, not just short-term narratives. While the market remains focused on geopolitical developments and policy headlines, the underlying driver is already in motion.
Global liquidity is rising again, and that is what ultimately moves markets.